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390 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
================
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Triaging tickets
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================
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Django uses Trac_ for managing the work on the code base. Trac is a
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community-tended garden of the bugs people have found and the features people
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would like to see added. As in any garden, sometimes there are weeds to be
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pulled and sometimes there are flowers and vegetables that need picking. We need
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your help to sort out one from the other, and in the end we all benefit
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together.
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Like all gardens, we can aspire to perfection but in reality there's no such
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thing. Even in the most pristine garden there are still snails and insects.
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In a community garden there are also helpful people who -- with the best of
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intentions -- fertilize the weeds and poison the roses. It's the job of the
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community as a whole to self-manage, keep the problems to a minimum, and
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educate those coming into the community so that they can become valuable
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contributing members.
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Similarly, while we aim for Trac to be a perfect representation of the state
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of Django's progress, we acknowledge that this simply will not happen. By
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distributing the load of Trac maintenance to the community, we accept that
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there will be mistakes. Trac is "mostly accurate", and we give allowances for
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the fact that sometimes it will be wrong. That's okay. We're perfectionists
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with deadlines.
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We rely on the community to keep participating, keep tickets as accurate as
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possible, and raise issues for discussion on our mailing lists when there is
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confusion or disagreement.
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Django is a community project, and every contribution helps. We can't do this
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without YOU!
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Triage workflow
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---------------
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Unfortunately, not all bug reports and feature requests in the ticket tracker
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provide all the :doc:`required details<bugs-and-features>`. A number of
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tickets have patches, but those patches don't meet all the requirements of a
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:ref:`good patch<patch-style>`.
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One way to help out is to *triage* tickets that have been created by other
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users. The core team and several community members work on this regularly, but
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more help is always appreciated.
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Most of the workflow is based around the concept of a ticket's
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:ref:`triage stages <triage-stages>`. Each stage describes where in its
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lifetime a given ticket is at any time. Along with a handful of flags, this
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attribute easily tells us what and who each ticket is waiting on.
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Since a picture is worth a thousand words, let's start there:
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.. image:: /internals/_images/djangotickets.png
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:height: 451
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:width: 590
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:alt: Django's ticket triage workflow
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We've got two roles in this diagram:
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* :doc:`Committers</internals/committers>` (also called core developers):
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people with commit access who are responsible for making the big
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decisions, writing large portions of the code and integrating the
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contributions of the community.
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* Ticket triagers: anyone in the Django community who chooses to
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become involved in Django's development process. Our Trac installation
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is intentionally left open to the public, and anyone can triage tickets.
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Django is a community project, and we encourage :ref:`triage by the
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community<how-can-i-help-with-triaging>`.
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By way of example, here we see the lifecycle of an average ticket:
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* Alice creates a ticket, and uploads an incomplete patch (no tests, incorrect
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implementation).
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* Bob reviews the patch, marks it "Accepted", "needs tests", and "patch needs
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improvement", and leaves a comment telling Alice how the patch could be
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improved.
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* Alice updates the patch, adding tests (but not changing the
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implementation). She removes the two flags.
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* Charlie reviews the patch and resets the "patch needs improvement" flag with
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another comment about improving the implementation.
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* Alice updates the patch, fixing the implementation. She removes the "patch
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needs improvement" flag.
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* Daisy reviews the patch, and marks it RFC.
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* Jacob, a core developer, reviews the RFC patch, applies it to his checkout,
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and commits it.
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Some tickets require much less feedback than this, but then again some tickets
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require much much more.
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.. _triage-stages:
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Triage stages
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-------------
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Below we describe in more detail the various stages that a ticket may flow
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through during its lifetime.
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Unreviewed
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~~~~~~~~~~
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The ticket has not been reviewed by anyone who felt qualified to make a
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judgment about whether the ticket contained a valid issue, a viable feature,
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or ought to be closed for any of the various reasons.
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Accepted
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~~~~~~~~
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The big grey area! The absolute meaning of "accepted" is that the issue
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described in the ticket is valid and is in some stage of being worked on.
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Beyond that there are several considerations:
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* **Accepted + No Flags**
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The ticket is valid, but no one has submitted a patch for it yet. Often this
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means you could safely start writing a patch for it.
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* **Accepted + Has Patch**
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The ticket is waiting for people to review the supplied patch. This means
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downloading the patch and trying it out, verifying that it contains tests
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and docs, running the test suite with the included patch, and leaving
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feedback on the ticket.
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* **Accepted + Has Patch + (any other flag)**
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This means the ticket has been reviewed, and has been found to need further
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work. "Needs tests" and "Needs documentation" are self-explanatory. "Patch
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needs improvement" will generally be accompanied by a comment on the ticket
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explaining what is needed to improve the code.
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Design Decision Needed
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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This stage is for issues which may be contentious, may be backwards
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incompatible, or otherwise involve high-level design decisions. These issues
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should be discussed either in the ticket comments or on `django-developers`_.
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If a ticket has been marked as "DDN", decisions are generally eventually
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made by the core committers, however that is not a requirement. See the
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:ref:`New contributors' FAQ<new-contributors-faq>` for "My ticket has been in
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DDN forever! What should I do?"
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This stage will often be used for feature requests. It can also be used for
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issues that *might* be bugs, depending on opinion or interpretation. Obvious
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bugs (such as crashes, incorrect query results, or non-compliance with a
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standard) skip this stage and move straight to "Accepted".
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Ready For Checkin
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The ticket was reviewed by any member of the community other than the person
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who supplied the patch and found to meet all the requirements for a
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commit-ready patch. A core committer now needs to give the patch a final
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review prior to being committed. See the
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:ref:`New contributors' FAQ<new-contributors-faq>` for "My ticket has been in
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RFC forever! What should I do?"
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Someday/Maybe
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Generally only used for vague/high-level features or design ideas. These
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tickets are uncommon and overall less useful since they don't describe
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concrete actionable issues. They are enhancement requests that we might
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consider adding someday to the framework if an excellent patch is submitted.
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These tickets are not a high priority.
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Fixed on a branch
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Used to indicate that a ticket is resolved as part of a major body of work
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that will eventually be merged to trunk. Tickets in this stage generally
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don't need further work. This may happen in the case of major
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features/refactors in each release cycle, or as part of the annual Google
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Summer of Code efforts.
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Other triage attributes
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-----------------------
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A number of flags, appearing as checkboxes in Trac, can be set on a ticket:
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* Has patch
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This means the ticket has an associated
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:doc:`patch<writing-code/submitting-patches>`. These will be reviewed
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to see if the patch is "good".
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* Needs documentation:
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This flag is used for tickets with patches that need associated
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documentation. Complete documentation of features is a prerequisite
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before we can check them into the codebase.
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* Needs tests
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This flags the patch as needing associated unit tests. Again, this
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is a required part of a valid patch.
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* Patch needs improvement
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This flag means that although the ticket *has* a patch, it's not quite
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ready for checkin. This could mean the patch no longer applies
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cleanly, there is a flaw in the implementation, or that the code
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doesn't meet our standards.
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* Easy pickings
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Tickets that would require small, easy, patches.
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Tickets should be categorized by *type* between:
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* New Feature
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For adding something new.
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* Bug
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For when an existing thing is broken or not behaving as expected.
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* Cleanup/optimization
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For when nothing is broken but something could be made cleaner,
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better, faster, stronger.
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Tickets should also be classified into *components* indicating which area of
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the Django codebase they belong to. This makes tickets better organized and
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easier to find.
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The *severity* attribute is used to identify blockers, that is, issues which
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should get fixed before releasing the next version of Django. Typically those
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issues are bugs causing regressions from earlier versions or potentially
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causing severe data losses. This attribute is quite rarely used and the vast
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majority of tickets have a severity of "Normal".
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Finally, it is possible to use the *version* attribute to indicate in which
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version the reported bug was identified.
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.. _closing-tickets:
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Closing Tickets
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---------------
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When a ticket has completed its useful lifecycle, it's time for it to be
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closed. Closing a ticket is a big responsibility, though. You have to be sure
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that the issue is really resolved, and you need to keep in mind that the
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reporter of the ticket may not be happy to have their ticket closed (unless
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it's fixed, of course). If you're not certain about closing a ticket, just
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leave a comment with your thoughts instead.
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If you do close a ticket, you should always make sure of the following:
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* Be certain that the issue is resolved.
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* Leave a comment explaining the decision to close the ticket.
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* If there is a way they can improve the ticket to reopen it, let them know.
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* If the ticket is a duplicate, reference the original ticket. Also
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cross-reference the closed ticket by leaving a comment in the original one
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-- this allows to access more related information about the reported bug
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or requested feature.
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* **Be polite.** No one likes having their ticket closed. It can be
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frustrating or even discouraging. The best way to avoid turning people
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off from contributing to Django is to be polite and friendly and to offer
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suggestions for how they could improve this ticket and other tickets in
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the future.
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A ticket can be resolved in a number of ways:
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* fixed
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Used by the core developers once a patch has been rolled into
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Django and the issue is fixed.
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* invalid
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Used if the ticket is found to be incorrect. This means that the
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issue in the ticket is actually the result of a user error, or
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describes a problem with something other than Django, or isn't
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a bug report or feature request at all (for example, some new users
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submit support queries as tickets).
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* wontfix
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Used when a core developer decides that this request is not
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appropriate for consideration in Django. This is usually chosen after
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discussion in the `django-developers`_ mailing list. Feel free to
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start or join in discussions of "wontfix" tickets on the
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django-developers_ mailing list, but please do not reopen tickets
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closed as "wontfix" by a :doc:`core developer</internals/committers>`.
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* duplicate
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Used when another ticket covers the same issue. By closing duplicate
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tickets, we keep all the discussion in one place, which helps
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everyone.
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* worksforme
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Used when the ticket doesn't contain enough detail to replicate
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the original bug.
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* needsinfo
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Used when the ticket does not contain enough information to replicate
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the reported issue but is potentially still valid. The ticket
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should be reopened when more information is supplied.
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If you believe that the ticket was closed in error -- because you're
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still having the issue, or it's popped up somewhere else, or the triagers have
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made a mistake -- please reopen the ticket and provide further information.
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Again, please do not reopen tickets that have been marked as "wontfix" by core
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developers and bring the issue to django-developers_ instead.
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.. _how-can-i-help-with-triaging:
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How can I help with triaging?
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-----------------------------
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Although the core developers make the big decisions in the ticket triage
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process, there's a lot that general community members can do to help the
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triage process. Really, **ANYONE** can help.
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Start by `creating an account on Trac`_. If you have an account but have
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forgotten your password, you can reset it using the `password reset page`_.
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Then, you can help out by:
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* Closing "Unreviewed" tickets as "invalid", "worksforme" or "duplicate."
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* Promoting "Unreviewed" tickets to "Design decision needed" if a design
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decision needs to be made, or "Accepted" in case of obvious bugs or
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sensible, clearly defined, feature requests.
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* Correcting the "Needs tests", "Needs documentation", or "Has patch"
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flags for tickets where they are incorrectly set.
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* Setting the "`Easy pickings`_" flag for tickets that are small and
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relatively straightforward.
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* Checking that old tickets are still valid. If a ticket hasn't seen
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any activity in a long time, it's possible that the problem has been
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fixed but the ticket hasn't yet been closed.
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* Contacting the owners of tickets that have been claimed but have not
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seen any recent activity. If the owner doesn't respond after a week
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or so, remove the owner's claim on the ticket.
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* Identifying trends and themes in the tickets. If there a lot of bug
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reports about a particular part of Django, it may indicate we should
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consider refactoring that part of the code. If a trend is emerging,
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you should raise it for discussion (referencing the relevant tickets)
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on `django-developers`_.
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* Set the *type* of tickets that are still uncategorized.
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* Verify if patches submitted by other users are correct. If they do and
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also contain appropriate documentation and tests then move them to the
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"Ready for Checkin" stage. If they don't then leave a comment to explain
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why and set the corresponding flags ("Patch needs improvement",
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"Needs tests" etc.).
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.. note::
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The `Reports page`_ contains links to many useful Trac queries, including
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several that are useful for triaging tickets and reviewing patches as
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suggested above.
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You can also find more :doc:`new-contributors`.
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.. _Reports page: http://code.djangoproject.com/wiki/Reports
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However, we do ask the following of all general community members working in
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the ticket database:
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* Please **don't** close tickets as "wontfix." The core developers will
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make the final determination of the fate of a ticket, usually after
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consultation with the community.
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* Please **don't** promote your own tickets to "Ready for checkin". You
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may mark other people's tickets which you've reviewed as "Ready for
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checkin", but you should get at minimum one other community member to
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review a patch that you submit.
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* Please **don't** reverse a decision that has been made by a :doc:`core
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developer</internals/committers>`. If you disagree with a decision that
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has been made, please post a message to `django-developers`_.
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* If you're unsure if you should be making a change, don't make the
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change but instead leave a comment with your concerns on the ticket,
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or post a message to `django-developers`_. It's okay to be unsure,
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but your input is still valuable.
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.. _Trac: http://code.djangoproject.com/
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.. _django-developers: http://groups.google.com/group/django-developers
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.. _i18n branch: http://code.djangoproject.com/browser/django/branches/i18n
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.. _`tags/releases`: http://code.djangoproject.com/browser/django/tags/releases
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.. _`easy pickings`: http://code.djangoproject.com/query?status=!closed&easy=1
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.. _`creating an account on Trac`: http://www.djangoproject.com/accounts/register/
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.. _password reset page: http://www.djangoproject.com/accounts/password/reset/
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