Disabling whoopsie by default in the 12.04.1 release

Evan Dandrea ev at ubuntu.com
Thu Aug 9 08:22:23 UTC 2012


On Mon, Aug 6, 2012 at 11:04 AM, Evan Dandrea <ev at ubuntu.com> wrote:
>> - it's not possible to filter out issues which have been resolved from the
>> list (so it's hard to know what has been worked on and what needs work
>> still)

*snip*

> In the iteration of the website that's in the process of being
> deployed (RT 54702), on each problem page you can see a table with the
> breakdown of version numbers and the number of instances of that
> problem. If the version you just uploaded does not ever appear, then
> you know the problem is fixed.

*snip*

>> - it's not possible to say what issue happens to what version and get stats
>> of instances of the bugs by version, i.e to get datas on whether the
>> situation improved or not for a bug
>
> As mentioned above, this is landing with RT 54702.

This has now landed:

http://errors.ubuntu.com

- On the average errors per day graph on the front page there are now
lines for each Ubuntu release, rather than one line for both 12.04 and
12.10. This still uses the old calculation of total crashes seen total
divided by total unique users seen today. However, my update of the
database to include the information we need to implement the 90 day
moving total of unique users
(https://bugs.launchpad.net/daisy/+bug/1033913) finished overnight. So
I'll hopefully land a better graph today or tomorrow.
- The individual problem pages now have their own graph, showing the
number of instances of the problem over time.
- These pages also have a table showing the version by version
breakdown of instances of this problem.
- Brian Murray made it so that visited problem pages use a different
link color. A small but sorely needed change.
- You can now specify a date range for the most common problems table.
This is a bit fiddly at the moment. I'm working on fixing it.
- Problems that failed to retrace appear in the most common problems
table. There appears to be an issue with the retracers at the moment.
I'm looking into it.

There were a few stumbles around getting the dependencies for
python-tastypie built for lucid. A massive thanks to jjo, who did much
of the heavy lifting there.



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