Meeting Minutes of First BugSquad meeting
Daniel Holbach
daniel.holbach at ubuntu.com
Tue Mar 28 11:42:55 BST 2006
Hello everybody,
we just had our first BugSquad meeting and everybody was pleased with
the results of our discussions. We had participants of teams like the
Kubuntu team, the X Swat, the Desktop team, the MOTU Science team and
newcomers who made the discussion diverse and produced good results.
The first item on the agenda was about improving the current situation,
this involved
* the current workflow,
* how to make the best out of the weeks before relase,
* how to make it easy for newcomers to get involved.
While this sounds boring on first sight, Daniel Robitaille (who couldn't
attend) made some statements to illustrate the situation [1], one of
them was "we seem to be gaining ~100 open bug per week (9500 2 weeks
ago, 9600 last week, 9727 tonight). We are fighting a losing battle it
seems :)"
[1] http://wiki.ubuntu.com/BugSquad/Observations
A lot of proposals were made to remedy that.
Fabio di Nitto mentioned that it might make sense mass-close old bugs on
certain dates and make it part of a "Release schedule" for the BugSquad.
The "Release schedule" part of his suggestion was welcomed, but the
general audience was more conservative about "mass closings". It was
agreed that closing 'Needs Info' bugs which have no new input for
three-four weeks can be closed with a nice response. [2]
[2] http://wiki.ubuntu.com/Bugs/Responses
Baishampayan Ghose had the idea of assigning 'Ubuntu' bugs (without a
package) to the BugSquad, but the idea was rejected, since it was too
much traffic and would probably have the same effect. The decision was
taken to figure out a way to have a mailing list, where all the first
posts of bugs without a package go. We are going to improve the list on
the wiki [3] where the most prominent maintainer teams are listed to
ensure that this process becomes more fluent.
[3] https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Bugs/Teams
Fabio identified the areas of work as following: 'new incoming bugs',
'bug triaging (UNCO & unassigned)' and 'old bug junk'. We decided to
have 'themed' Hug Days meaning that we concentrate on something else
every two two weeks. (Watch out for the next announce for HugDay on
Friday!)
Another approach was discussed, namely to add a package for each section
of the Bug Squad for each work and focus on it. The DesktopTeam section
of the BugSquad might want to attack evolution, while the Kubuntu guys
look at the amount of kdeedu and amarok bugs. From these bugs we could
write reports and make sure we rotate over different packages every
time.
We considered asking for a BugSquad mailing list, which was for
discussion and organisation only and would be a point to start for
BugSquad newcomers and to discuss general plans of action.
At the end of the meeting everybody was charged up with energy and
determined to make the next UbuntuBugDay [4] a blast.
[4] http://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuBugDay
If you want to contribute in one of the easiest ways, start here:
http://wiki.ubuntu.com/BugSquad
Have a nice day,
the BugSquad
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