Know the History of Your Source

Finding the history of a file is easy enough, but what about the history of a project? Which branch did you commit your fix to? Did a file get accidentally deleted?

FishEye knows everything about your code: search out source code artifacts, integrate with JIRA, and browse commits, files, revisions, or people.

Pricing Overview

10 users

5 Repos, 10 Committers $10 Starter

10 users

Unlimited Repos $800

25 users

Unlimited Repos $1,200

50 users

Unlimited Repos $2,200

100 users

Unlimited Repos $4,000

Unlimited

Unlimited Repos $8,000
View full pricing details»

Take the FishEye Feature Tour

Activity Streams

Follow exactly what's happening throughout your project in real time with activity streams showing commits, JIRA issues, and Crucible review activities. Activity streams are available across all repositories, from any directory, author, project and even individual files.

Real-Time Notifications

Personalized notifications allow you to work outside of FishEye while staying on top of all the activity in the source.

  • Recieve an email for each commit in a whole repo, or each commit that includes a specific file as well as everything in between.
  • Get an RSS feed on any activity stream, file, person, or commit.

Charts and Reports

Keep all project stakeholders informed about the velocity of your project with manager-friendly charts and code metrics that show lines of code (LOC) committed to the repository over time, top committers, the volume of activity on the project through its history, and more.

People

Code doesn't write itself, you and your team do. FishEye provides a view into people and their activities with cross-repository activity streams, avatars, integrated issue and review activity. These visualizations make it easy to see who's been working on what.

FishEye Customers

3,500 companies in 74 countries use FishEye. Meet our customers.

Latest FishEye Blog

Sten Pittet

Back to school: Using FishEye Commit Graph with JIRA and Crucible

Sometimes it doesn’t hurt to talk again about things we covered in the past. I must admit that before writing this post I was wondering whether or not people would find value in it as the Commit ...

Read more at the FishEye Blog