Re: bugs - lets call an exterminator!
Thomas Swan <tswan@olemiss.edu>
From: Thomas Swan <tswan@olemiss.edu>
To: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Cc: Vince Vielhaber <vev@michvhf.com>, "Colin 't Hart" <cthart@yahoo.com>, pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org
Date: 2001-08-29T09:56:20Z
Lists: pgsql-hackers
Tom Lane wrote: >Vince Vielhaber <vev@michvhf.com> writes: > >>On Thu, 23 Aug 2001, Colin 't Hart wrote: >> >>>5. I think Bugzilla's concepts of products, components and versions fit >>>the way we work. >>>I envisage that 'Postgres', 'Interfaces', 'Languages' might be products >>>that we would have. >>>Within 'Postgres' we would have the various subsystems that make up the >>>core. >>>Within 'Interfaces' we would have 'JDBC', 'ODBC' etc. >>>Within 'Languages' we would have 'PL/pgSQL' etc. >>> > >>I can see a little benefit to this, but for the most part the same >>people that are working on the core pieces of PostgreSQL are also >>working on the interfaces and languages. >> > >I would argue against subdividing a bug database at all. I don't think >the project is large enough to require it (we are in no danger of >becoming the size of Mozilla anytime soon). But more importantly, >subdivision introduces the risk of misclassification of a bug --- and >in my experience the initial reporter of a bug *very* frequently >misidentifies where the problem is. So unless additional effort is >expended to reclassify bugs (is that even possible in Bugzilla?), the >classification will degenerate to the point of being a hindrance rather >than a help in locating things. Overall I just don't see that much >benefit from a classification system. > Bugzilla does provide for the reclassification bugs. I have misidentified where bugs were in Mozilla and have had them reclassified into different areas/components of that project.