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Request Tracker

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Open source ticket-tracking software
Request Tracker
RT Home interface (RT 5)
Original authorJesse Vincent
DevelopersBest Practical Solutions, LLC
Initial release13 October 1999; 26 years ago (1999-10-13)
Stable release
6.0.2[1] Edit this on Wikidata / 22 October 2025; 3 months ago (22 October 2025)
Written inPerl
Operating systemAnyUnix-like
PlatformCross-platform
Available inMultiple Languages
TypeIssue tracking system
LicenseGPLv2
Websitebestpractical.com/request-tracker
Repository

Request Tracker, commonly abbreviated toRT, is an open source tool for organizations of all sizes to track and manage workflows, customer requests, and internal project tasks of all sorts. With seamless email integration, custom ticket lifecycles, configurable automation, and detailed permissions and roles, Request Tracker began asticket-tracking software written inPerl used to coordinatetasks and manage requests among anonline community ofusers.

RT's first release in 1996 was written byJesse Vincent, who later formed Best Practical Solutions LLC to distribute, develop, and support the package.[2] RT is open source (FOSS) and distributed under theGNU General Public License.[3]

Request Tracker for Incident Response (RTIR) is a special distribution ofRT to fulfill the specific needs ofCERT teams.[4] At this point, RTIR is, at once, a tool specific to incident management, a general purpose tool teams can use for other tasks, and also a tool that can—and very often is—a fully customized system built on layers of user integrations and user customizations.

It was initially developed in cooperation withJANET-CERT, and in 2006 was upgraded and expanded with joint funding from nine Computer Security Incident Response Teams (CSIRTs) in Europe.[5]

Technology

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RT is written inPerl and runs on theApache andlighttpd web servers usingmod_perl orFastCGI with data stored in eitherMySQL,PostgreSQL,Oracle orSQLite. It is possible to extend the RT interface using plug-ins written in Perl.[2]

History

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Jesse Vincent, while enrolled atWesleyan University in 1994, worked for Wesleyan's computinghelp desk and was responsible for improving the help desk and residential networking software infrastructure. This task included setting up a ticketing system for the help desk. Initially he set up aLinux server to run "req",[6] but later he identified that the command line interface was limiting usage. Over the next two years he created and maintained WebReq, a web based interface for req written inPerl. Eventually the req portions were removed and what was left became RT version 1.0. A complete rewrite occurred for RT version 2.0 when Jesse started to work on RT full-time in 2001 and founded Best Practical Solutions. RT was used by Perl'sCPAN, but because of declining use, a sunset date of March 1, 2021, was announced at the Perl NOC on December 4, 2020.rt.cpan.org will sunset on March 1st, 2021. Following a pushback from the developer community, a company was contracted to take over the hosting.rt.cpan.org to remain online.

Interface

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An individual RT ticket in Request Tracker 5.

Organizations of all sizes use Request Tracker to track and manage workflows, customer requests, and internal project tasks of all sorts. Among other things, RT offers custom ticket lifecycles, seamless email integration, configurable automation, and detailed permissions and roles.

RT has many ways to highly customize creating and updating tickets, owners, dependencies, custom everything, and workflows. A web interface is available for both logged in users and guest/customer/end users. Template callbacks allow the modification of the software's web pages without requiring extensive knowledge.

Seamless email integration is another primary interface to RT and is often the only interface many guest users see. The email system includes support for auto-responses, attachments, and full customization of all the rules which govern email. Emails are stored in RT as correspondence on a ticket, and the software can make a distinction between public replies and private comments to show them as appropriate.

A basicREST-likeAPI and a command-line tool are also provided as another way to interact with RT.

Features

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  • RT integrates with Best Practical'sknowledge base application, the RT FAQ Manager ("RTFM").[7] As of RT 4.0.0, RTFM's functionality was integrated into RT itself as Articles, RT's now built-in knowledgebase.
  • Robust charting capacity, a workflow builder, drag-and-drop Dashboard editors, and automation capabilities are all standard.
  • Request Tracker receives and manages all email sent to any of your key email addresses: support@, sales@, helpdesk@, security@, etc. Staff can manage ticket replies via email or by using RT’s full web interface.
  • RT has a powerful transaction query builder allowing searches like "show me all the replies I sent this week" or "show me all of the changes to this custom field on this ticket" or even "show me how many replies were sent by everyone on the Support queue last week".
  • For developers familiar with Bootstrap, it is easy to customize RT's UI or even create new themes using the Bootstrap toolkit as a base.
  • SuperUsers can now take advantage of hundreds of RT’s configuration options by making changes right in the browser as of RT 5.
  • RT also integrates with Best Practical'sIT asset management application, "Assets." As of RT 4.4.0, this functionality was integrated into RT itself. Assets makes it easy to track and manage all of the equipment or intangible assets from within RT.
  • RT supports theNetworked Help Desk API.[8]

See also

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References

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Notes

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  1. ^"Release 6.0.2". 22 October 2025. Retrieved23 October 2025.
  2. ^abRich, Amy (June 2003)."RT: Request Tracker, Part 1".Sun Microsystems. Archived fromthe original on 2009-11-15.
  3. ^"RT FAQ: What is RT?". Archived fromthe original on 2016-04-10. Retrieved2015-08-10.Request Tracker (RT) [...] is available under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL).
  4. ^"RTIR: RT for Incident Response". Retrieved2015-08-10.ready out of the box for your CERT or CSIRT to use
  5. ^"REQUEST TRACKER INCIDENT RESPONSE (RTIR) SOFTWARE TO BE UPGRADED AND EXPANDED"(PDF).TERENA. 2005-10-05. Retrieved2015-08-10.
  6. ^Evard, Rémy (September 1994)."Managing the Ever-Growing To Do List".USENIX. Retrieved2015-08-10.
  7. ^"RTFM: The RT FAQ Manager". Archived fromthe original on 2015-09-06. Retrieved2015-08-10.
  8. ^"GitHub - bestpractical/rt-extension-nhd".GitHub. 2011-08-10. Retrieved2016-05-06.

External links

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