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

Mercurial & Git Support

Git or Mercurial? Mercurial or Git? Use what you like: FishEye supports both!

FishEye allows you to have repositories in Git, Mercurial, Subversion, or any of the other supported systems -- all configured within a single installation.

Connect to popular source hosting tools like Bitbucket and GitHub.

Ease the Migration

Making the switch to Git/Hg? Have multiple Git and Subversion repositories? Use FishEye to keep everything in the same spot - browse, index and search all your source, all from one tool.

  • Single unified view into source regardless of repository type
  • One interface to browse and search any supported SCM
  • Activity tracking of multiple usernames from multiple repositories
  • The ability to keep old source while migrating to a new SCM

Commit Graph

Visualize your repositories and commits with a graphical representation of the source. The FishEye Commit Graph delivers:

  • Changesets in their respective branches using configurable "swimlanes"
  • Key information such as branching and merging

And gives further context into:

  • Where changesets have come from and where they ended up
  • Commits with JIRA issues
  • Reviewed and unreviewed commits

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