Re: A new axis for bugs? (was: What are our problems?)
- To: debian-devel@lists.debian.org
- Subject: Re: A new axis for bugs? (was: What are our problems?)
- From: Philip Hands <phil@hands.com>
- Date: 08 Oct 1999 10:50:59 +0100
- Message-id: <[🔎] 87zoxuji4c.fsf@sheikh.hands.com>
- In-reply-to: <19991006023420.F7775@ecn.purdue.edu> (Branden Robinson's message of "Wed, 6 Oct 1999 02:34:20 -0400")
- References: <19991005175509.E295@ulysses.dhis.org> <199910051706.NAA11481@mixing.qc.dfo.ca> <19991006000044.A359@akela> <19991005212745.E19626@justice.loyola.edu> <19991006023420.F7775@ecn.purdue.edu>
Branden Robinson <branden@ecn.purdue.edu> writes:
> I like this idea, but I think it is orthogonal to the existing bug
> categories.
>
> I don't know what you would call it, but I imagine a 4-way status switch:
>
> unreproduced
> reproduced
> possible fix
> known fix
>
> Basically I see bug fixing as proceeding sequentially down this list.
> There's a state above "unreproduced", which is "not a bug", and you close
> it almost immediately. There's also the state after "known fix", which is
> implementation, and is reflected by closing it or setting its severity to
> "fixed".
>
> Bugs would start out "unreproduced" automatically. To change the status
> you be strongly encouraged to add an explanation of why, e.g.,
>
> reproduced -> "with IMPS/2 protocol but not PS/2"
> possible fix -> (patch attached)
> known fix -> "package needs to Replace: binutils (<< 9.8.7-6)" (or, for
> other kinds of bugs, a patch that has been tested and known
> to work)
>
> I don't know about anyone else, but I would *love* this for the X bug list.
This is an excellent idea. There are times when I just don't have time
to examine all my bugs, so being able to list all the ones that had
been promoted to one of the ``* fix'' statuses would allow me to use
the limited time available on useful work.
I know that I've missed patches in the past simply because I wasted
the time I had wading through a load of fairly worthless bug reports,
and so didn't spot the useful one including a patch etc.
This would also add a really effective mechanism for non-maintainers to
provide useful help, by finding fixes and promoting bug for the
maintainers attention, thus spreading the workload a little.
Cheers, Phil.
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