Trac ticket workflow: Difference between revisions

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{{OLPC}}
[http://lists.laptop.org/pipermail/devel/2008-July/016278.html First draft]
{{developers}}


This page discusses the workflow which [[Trac]] tickets move through. It presents the [[#Workflow States|workflow states]], a toy [[#User Story|user story]], and a brief discussion of the [[#Approval for Release|requirements]] which must be satisfied to move tickets through a delicate portion of the workflow. Questions about this workflow can be recorded on the [[Talk:Trac ticket workflow|discussion page]]. Finally, be aware that this workflow differs from any previous one and will probably change again during the this release cycle.
Here is an approximate common path, subject to circumstances.
Set the 'Action Needed' field in Trac sequentially to:
diagnose,
design,
code,
package,
add to build,
test in build,
qa signoff,
finalize.


== Workflow States ==
After testing in a build, the developer tags the bug with the results, e.g.:
joyride-2126:- or joyride-2126:+


Here is an approximate common path, subject to circumstances, followed by a toy [[#User Story|user story]].
( '-' means bad result, try again, whereas '+' means good result )


A [[Trac]] ticket's position in the workflow is recorded in its '''Action Needed''' field. This field can contain the following values:
:I presume this is after the "test in build" state, which I presume means the developer who coded the fix tested it in a build. That could be clearer. Then, what does the developer do? Just set it to "qa signoff"? Assign it to some QA person? At what point does it get tagged into the 8.2 release stream, and should it be assigned to someone to ensure that? --[[User:Morgs|morgs]] 09:59, 17 July 2008 (UTC)


(everyone should):
The purpose of the finalize state is for the release team to provide any user-facing documentation or to conclude that no documentation is necessary.
'''reproduce''' -- first we need to know how to reproduce your issue
'''diagnose''' -- then its root cause needs to be diagnosed
'''design''' -- at which time we can design...
'''code''' -- and code a fix.
'''review''' -- to ship the fix, we need to review it,
'''testcase''' -- write a test case for it,
(module maintainers should):
'''package''' -- and package it up as an RPM, an activity, etc.
'''add to build''' -- then package needs to be added to a development build
(everyone should):
'''test in build''' -- and the packaging needs to be tested,
even though a build might not yet exist for this.
(during change control):
'''approve for release''' -- get approval to add the package to a stable build stream (stable builds only)
'''add to release''' -- approved changes need to be committed
'''test in release''' -- and retested at least once...
(as needed):
'''qa signoff''' -- some developers will want QA to review their work... (optional)
'''finalize''' -- before being added to the release notes
'''no action''' -- and closed.


The workflow can be exited early by resolving a ticket as 'worksforme', 'invalid', etc.


== Approval for Release ==
At various times, someone (e.g. the developer or the release team) may need an answer to a question. In this event, the ticket's next action should be set to 'communicate'.


We may enter change-control near the end of a release. When we enter change control, the ticket workflow expands to include the 'approve for release', 'add to release', and 'test in release' actions.
Finally, the other 'Action Needed' states can be used to describe ignorance about what sort of action is needed. The regular Trac triage process will be responsible for pushing these tickets along.

In order to pass the 'approve for release' action, you are expected to provide:

; packages
: a complete list of the packages (in source: (E)NVR form, e.g. koji: rainbow-0.7.20.fc9) which must be included to effect your change.
; changelog
: a nice human-readable description of your change including citations of tickets that will need to be updated as it is processed.
; test cases
: checkable test cases in either the <tt>|TestCase|</tt> Sugar style, the [[Systematic testing]] style, or the [[Tinderbox]] style.
; test results
: the results of executing your test cases on a development build (or after having installed your packages on release-stream build)
; (optional) risk assessment
: an explanation, if convenient, of what risks are incurred by accepting your change.


== User Story ==

=== Characters ===

:''Anonymous Alice'' -- generic (possibly minimally skilled) Trac user.
:''Terry Ticket-Herder'' -- ticket herder who watches incoming tickets and improves their quality.
:''Carol Coder'' -- coder who diagnoses, designs, codes, and reviews code.
:''Mark Maintainer'' -- module maintainer (packager) aggregates code and pushes it into build streams (i.e. into [[Developer/Fedora|Fedora]] or [[Build system#Instructions for use|Joyride]]).
:''Release Rob'' -- [[release team]] member who approves requests to modify a stable build stream.
:''Bill Builder'' -- [[build team]] member
:''Quality Assurance'' -- [[QA team]] member

=== Story ===

# ''Anonymous Alice'' observed curious behavior while exploring the system. She records it in Trac but does not set the <tt>next_action</tt> field or sets it to '''unknown'''.
# ''Terry Ticket-Herder'' decides ''Alice's'' reported behavior is significant but doesn't know how to reproduce it so he changes the <tt>next_action</tt> to '''reproduce''' to indicate his need for instructions on how to reproduce the issue.
#* Terry might instead have closed Alice's ticket as <tt>invalid</tt>, <tt>worksforme</tt>, etc or have sent it on to a later state if Alice wrote a particularly good ticket.
#* If necessary, Terry would also fill in the <tt>Milestone</tt>, <tt>Component</tt>, <tt>Keywords</tt>, and <tt>CC</tt> fields to conform to our [[Trac conventions]].
# Once Alice's behavior can be reproduced, it can be '''diagnose'''[d] by ''Carol Coder'' (probably with help from Alice).
# Carol will eventually propose a '''design''' that she thinks will resolve the issue.
# Carol will '''code''' to her design and will seek '''review''' of her work. She will also write a '''testcase'''.
# When all is in order, Carol or ''Mark Maintainer'' will '''package''' the changes and add them to a development build (in the '''add to build''' state).
# When built in Joyride, Carol or Mark will '''test in build'''.
#* If the test fails, then the tester may remand the issue to an earlier state and owner; otherwise, the tester should advance the ticket to the next state (see below).
#* Test results should be recorded according to the [[Trac conventions]] (e.g as a keyword like <tt>joyride-2230:+</tt> for a 'pass' or <tt>8.2-757:-</tt> for a 'fail').
# ''During change control'', changes must pass through three additional steps:
## Changes cannot be committed to the stable build stream without meeting [[#Approval for Release|basic requirements]]. ''Release Rob'' will regularly review tickets in the '''approval for release''' state.
## Approved changes will be sent to the ''Bill Builder'' in the '''add to release''' state.
## Once Bill updates the stable build stream, he will place the ticket in the '''test in release''' state for further testing by Alice, Carol, or another friend.
##* After being tested as fixed in a release-stream build, issues should be pushed through some of the ''qa signoff'', ''finalize'', or ''no action'' states. See below.
# ''Occasionally'', an issue may require test facilities beyond those available to ordinary developers and testers or may be so important that it requires additional [[systematic testing]]. Such issues can be pushed, at anyone's discretion, through the '''qa signoff''' state where ''Quality Assurance'' will examine them and pass them on.
# Rob will document tickets which reach the '''finalize''' state in the [[Release Notes]].
# Tickets will eventually require '''no action'''.
#* Rob is responsible for closing user-facing issues which result in changes to the build or work-arounds.
#* Other issues can be closed by anyone when they cease to be relevant to the release process.


[[Category:Trac]]
[[Category:Trac]]
[[Category:Procedures]]

Latest revision as of 23:03, 13 May 2010

  This page is monitored by the OLPC team.

This page discusses the workflow which Trac tickets move through. It presents the workflow states, a toy user story, and a brief discussion of the requirements which must be satisfied to move tickets through a delicate portion of the workflow. Questions about this workflow can be recorded on the discussion page. Finally, be aware that this workflow differs from any previous one and will probably change again during the this release cycle.

Workflow States

Here is an approximate common path, subject to circumstances, followed by a toy user story.

A Trac ticket's position in the workflow is recorded in its Action Needed field. This field can contain the following values:

 (everyone should):
 reproduce       --  first we need to know how to reproduce your issue
 diagnose        --  then its root cause needs to be diagnosed
 design          --  at which time we can design...
 code            --  and code a fix.
 review          --  to ship the fix, we need to review it,
 testcase        --  write a test case for it,  
 
 (module maintainers should):  
 package         --  and package it up as an RPM, an activity, etc.
 add to build    --  then package needs to be added to a development build
 
 (everyone should):
 test in build   --  and the packaging needs to be tested,
                           even though a build might not yet exist for this.
   
 (during change control):
 approve for release --  get approval to add the package to a stable build stream (stable builds only)
 add to release  --  approved changes need to be committed
 test in release --  and retested at least once...
 
 (as needed):
 qa signoff      --  some developers will want QA to review their work... (optional)
 finalize        --  before being added to the release notes
 no action       --  and closed.


Approval for Release

We may enter change-control near the end of a release. When we enter change control, the ticket workflow expands to include the 'approve for release', 'add to release', and 'test in release' actions.

In order to pass the 'approve for release' action, you are expected to provide:

packages
a complete list of the packages (in source: (E)NVR form, e.g. koji: rainbow-0.7.20.fc9) which must be included to effect your change.
changelog
a nice human-readable description of your change including citations of tickets that will need to be updated as it is processed.
test cases
checkable test cases in either the |TestCase| Sugar style, the Systematic testing style, or the Tinderbox style.
test results
the results of executing your test cases on a development build (or after having installed your packages on release-stream build)
(optional) risk assessment
an explanation, if convenient, of what risks are incurred by accepting your change.


User Story

Characters

Anonymous Alice -- generic (possibly minimally skilled) Trac user.
Terry Ticket-Herder -- ticket herder who watches incoming tickets and improves their quality.
Carol Coder -- coder who diagnoses, designs, codes, and reviews code.
Mark Maintainer -- module maintainer (packager) aggregates code and pushes it into build streams (i.e. into Fedora or Joyride).
Release Rob -- release team member who approves requests to modify a stable build stream.
Bill Builder -- build team member
Quality Assurance -- QA team member

Story

  1. Anonymous Alice observed curious behavior while exploring the system. She records it in Trac but does not set the next_action field or sets it to unknown.
  2. Terry Ticket-Herder decides Alice's reported behavior is significant but doesn't know how to reproduce it so he changes the next_action to reproduce to indicate his need for instructions on how to reproduce the issue.
    • Terry might instead have closed Alice's ticket as invalid, worksforme, etc or have sent it on to a later state if Alice wrote a particularly good ticket.
    • If necessary, Terry would also fill in the Milestone, Component, Keywords, and CC fields to conform to our Trac conventions.
  3. Once Alice's behavior can be reproduced, it can be diagnose[d] by Carol Coder (probably with help from Alice).
  4. Carol will eventually propose a design that she thinks will resolve the issue.
  5. Carol will code to her design and will seek review of her work. She will also write a testcase.
  6. When all is in order, Carol or Mark Maintainer will package the changes and add them to a development build (in the add to build state).
  7. When built in Joyride, Carol or Mark will test in build.
    • If the test fails, then the tester may remand the issue to an earlier state and owner; otherwise, the tester should advance the ticket to the next state (see below).
    • Test results should be recorded according to the Trac conventions (e.g as a keyword like joyride-2230:+ for a 'pass' or 8.2-757:- for a 'fail').
  8. During change control, changes must pass through three additional steps:
    1. Changes cannot be committed to the stable build stream without meeting basic requirements. Release Rob will regularly review tickets in the approval for release state.
    2. Approved changes will be sent to the Bill Builder in the add to release state.
    3. Once Bill updates the stable build stream, he will place the ticket in the test in release state for further testing by Alice, Carol, or another friend.
      • After being tested as fixed in a release-stream build, issues should be pushed through some of the qa signoff, finalize, or no action states. See below.
  9. Occasionally, an issue may require test facilities beyond those available to ordinary developers and testers or may be so important that it requires additional systematic testing. Such issues can be pushed, at anyone's discretion, through the qa signoff state where Quality Assurance will examine them and pass them on.
  10. Rob will document tickets which reach the finalize state in the Release Notes.
  11. Tickets will eventually require no action.
    • Rob is responsible for closing user-facing issues which result in changes to the build or work-arounds.
    • Other issues can be closed by anyone when they cease to be relevant to the release process.