Today the OpenStack Infrastructure team hosted our first bug day of the cycle.
The steps we have for running a bug day can be a bit tedious, but it’s not hard, here’s the rundown:
- I create our etherpad: cibugreview-july2014 (see etherpad from past bug days on the wiki at: InfraTeam#Bugs)
- I run my simple infra_bugday.py script and populate the etherpad.
- Grab the bug stats from launchpad and copy them into the pad so we (hopefully) have inspiring statistics at the end of the day.
- Then comes the real work. I open up the old etherpad and go through all the bugs, copying over comments from the old etherpad where applicable and making my own comments as necessary about obvious updates I see (and updating my own bugs).
- Let the rest of the team dive in on the etherpad and bugs!
Throughout the day we chat in #openstack-infra about bug statuses, whether we should continue pursuing certain strategies outlined in bugs, reaching out to folks who have outstanding bugs in the tracker that we’d like to see movement on but haven’t in a while. Plus, we get to triage a whole pile of New bugs and close others we may have lost track of.
As we wrap up, here are the stats from today:
Bug day start total open bugs: 281
- 64 New bugs
- 41 In-progress bugs
- 5 Critical bugs
- 22 High importance bugs
- 2 Incomplete bugs
Bug day end total open bugs: 231
- 0 New bugs
- 33 In-progress bugs
- 4 Critical bugs
- 16 High importance bugs
- 10 Incomplete bugs
Thanks again everyone!