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Date:      Thu, 08 Feb 1996 12:21:45 -0800
From:      "Jordan K. Hubbard" <jkh@time.cdrom.com>
To:        Paul Traina <pst@shockwave.com>
Cc:        committers@freebsd.org, freebsd-bugs@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: What's up with bug assignments? (please read) 
Message-ID:  <14644.823810905@time.cdrom.com>
In-Reply-To: Your message of "Thu, 08 Feb 1996 10:14:03 PST." <199602081814.KAA04730@precipice.shockwave.com> 

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> A while back, I spoke with several people about bug assignments,  and Jordan
> asked me to play bug czar to clean out our backlog.  We've got a ton of
> bug reports, most of them are ancient history and simply need to be closed.
> 
> I don't have complete knoweldge of every fix applied, so I'm passing them
> along to other folks to act as responsible parties.

I just wanted to voice my support for this effort and publically thank
Paul for his work.  Yes, we are a volunteer effort and having to
respond to bug reports (much less wade through hundreds of them, as
Paul has) is evil, nasty, boring, thankless work but, as the saying
goes, somebody has to do it.

Our #1 trump card to play against Linux (and I've been told this by
more than a few people) is our level of organization, and if having to
occasionally do annoying work like this is the price to pay for
keeping our OS alive and preserving its reputation, it seems a small
enough one.  Everything Paul suggests here is right on target, so
please do what you can to help him out!  Even if you've only time to
analyse one bug report a week, that's something!

Thanks!

					Jordan


> 
> ---- Finding Bugs ----
> 
> The current bug list:
> 
> 	http://www.freebsd.org/cgi-bin/query-pr-summary.cgi
> 
> 
> Find all bugs assigned to pst:
> 
> 	http://www.freebsd.org/cgi-bin/query-pr-summary.cgi?engineer=pst
> 
> List all assigned bugs and whom they're assigned to:
> 
> 	http://www.freebsd.org/cgi-bin/query-pr-summary.cgi?engineer=summary
> 
> Find all bugs in state feedback:
> 
> 	http://www.freebsd.org/cgi-bin/query-pr-summary.cgi?state=feedback
> 
> ---- Bug states ----
> 
> 	open		A bug report has been submitted.
> 
> 	analyzed	Someone from our group has verified the problem
> 			and/or added suggestions for fixing it.
> 
> 	feedback	A fix has been *committed* to the repository
> 			(and, if necessary, patches sent to the user)
> 			we're awaiting feedback to insure the fix does the job.
> 			Do not use this state if the repository isn't fixed
> 
> 	closed		A fix has been *committed* to the repository
> 			OR, we will not be doing anything with this bug report.
> 
> 	(duplicate)	If you come across a bug report that is a duplicate
> 			of another report, you may choose to close it.
> 			The reason for closing it should be
> 			"Duplicate of xxxx/###"
> 
> 
> 
> ---- Bug triage ----
> 
> You can edit a bug report using the "edit-pr" program.  There's no man-page
> currently, but the program-use is pretty obvious.
> 
> Pull down the current bug list:
> 
> * Has something been fixed?  Close it, the reason is: "Fixed."
> 
> * Is a bug report bogus?  Close it, explain why in a sentence.
> 
> * Is the bug "open" but not "analyzed" ?  Can you contribute an analysis?
> 
> * Is this bug in your area of expertise?  Assign it to yourself
>   or the person you feel most appropriate.
> 
> ----  Bug assignments  ----
> 
> Bugs assigned to freebsd-bugs are not assigned to anyone.
> 
> Bugs not assigned to anyone will be assigned, by me, to the person who I
> think is responsible for a particular area of code.  This is an entirely
> subjective process on my part (well, I do some research on each bug).
> If you think I screwed up, please take responsibility for getting the bug
> to the right person.  I'm not perfect.
> 
> There will be times when I assign a bug to an individual because I think
> they can make a better choice of assigning it to the proper owner.
> (For instance, davidg gets most generic VM related problems because he
> can triage them and keep or send them on to dyson/bde/nate et al).
> 
> You may assign bugs back to "freebsd-bugs" as a last-ditch effort,  however
> you then cause everyone to re-triage the bug from the start.  It's far better
> to assign a bug to the proper person.
> 
> Anyone is welcome to assign bugs.  In fact, it would be best if certain
> folks would step forward and assign bugs for an entire area of code (e.g.
> wollman could become bug czar for all networking related code).
> 
> ---- Kiss of death ----
> 
> There is _no_ excuse for sitting on a bug that you don't/can't/won't fix.
> 
> Either assign it to the proper person, or send me e-mail and I will work out
> what to do.  Sitting on a bug in silence will earn you negative karma points
> from all FreeBSD team members.
> 
> Yes, I know we're all volenteers here (so am I).  I'd like to thank you all
> in advance for putting up with this little bit of bullshit so that we can
> help make the most usable OS in town.
> 
> Thanks for your understanding,
> 
> Paul




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