[Scons-dev] bug prune
Andrew Featherstone
andrew.featherstone at cantab.net
Thu Sep 5 16:25:23 EDT 2019
Expanding on Russel's comment, the SCons project is a broad church that
nominally supports a very large number of languages. I think old issues
reflect the relative interest from the comminity for supporting a
particular language and/or feature of SCons (e.g. people care a lot more
about continued support for MSVC, less about Java). Perhaps all that's
required is expectation management? The readme is already quite large, but
something in there?
Andrew
On Thu, 5 Sep 2019 at 20:01, Bill Deegan <bill at baddogconsulting.com> wrote:
> O.k.
> I'll try to get this setup this weekend.
>
> On Thu, Sep 5, 2019 at 3:47 AM Russel Winder <russel at winder.org.uk> wrote:
>
>> On Tue, 2019-09-03 at 11:44 -0700, Bill Deegan wrote:
>> > On one hand dropping the number of open bugs will have significant
>> > appearance/PR improvements.
>> > (I've seen comments saying 600+ bugs outstanding the project must not be
>> > still alive).
>>
>> I'd say having a lot of open bugs in a project that clearly has regular
>> commits (as SCons does) could lead to the the thought that the SCons team
>> doesn't care about submitted issues – rather than being a dead project.
>>
>> Age of bugs is also a dimension. Bugs open for more than a few years
>> indicate
>> a "no-one actually cares about this" and so are candidates for closing
>> with
>> the option of reopening – or better a new bug opening given the difference
>> between the software now compared to then.
>>
>> > But dropping 620 of 680 bugs because they're stale, but possibly still
>> > unresolved issues probably isn't the best.
>>
>> It depends. Some may just not be relevant any more. Given the rate of
>> change
>> of SCons code base, any bug report unaddressed in say five years should be
>> closed.
>>
>> > Would we tag them stale and close them, allowing them to be identified
>> as
>> > possibly not resolved, but with no recent activity?
>>
>> Or delete them in the hope of getting a new bug report if the problem is
>> still
>> a real one.
>>
>> > We used to have weekly (ish) bug triage IRC meetings.
>> > Though to be honest some issues never got addressed because the time
>> > required to thoroughly investigate them and resolve and the few people
>> > reporting them dropped their effective priority.
>> >
>> > Thoughts?
>>
>> I was never able to get involved in triaging since the meeting were always
>> held as a time when I was in bed a sleep.
>>
>> --
>> Russel.
>> ===========================================
>> Dr Russel Winder t: +44 20 7585 2200
>> 41 Buckmaster Road m: +44 7770 465 077
>> London SW11 1EN, UK w: www.russel.org.uk
>>
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