5-A-Day
What is 5-A-Day?
We, that means everybody, will do 5 bugs a day - every day. With only five bugs that everybody looks at every day, we will cover a lot of ground.
What you can do? That's up to you, your interests and your abilities.
- If you're a developer, you can help out reviewing patches and getting them uploaded.
- If you want to just confirm new bugs, you can do that.
- If you've experience with a certain package and want to triage bugs you can do that and forward them upstream if necessary.
- If you know your way around Ubuntu quite well, you can help assign bugs to the right package.
What you need to do to participate?
If you haven't helped out with bugs before you might want to take a look at Bugs/HowToTriage or ask the nice people on #ubuntu-bugs on irc.freenode.net.
Check out the section on Automatic Reporting to see how to participate.
See how you are doing over here: http://daniel.holba.ch/5-a-day-stats/
Print out the 5-a-day Playbook to hand out to participants. 5-a-day.pdf
Join the Launchpad team
Anybody who reports bugs
Did you report a bug on a previous release of Ubuntu?
- Is it the best quality bug report it could be?
- Could it use a better summary or a test case?
- Do you know if the bug is still occurs in the development release?
You can review the bugs you've reported at https://bugs.launchpad.net/people/+me/+reportedbugs .
Not a developer?
Once you feel comfortable to start triaging, the following lists may be a helpful starting point:
Bugs reported using the "Help -> Report a Problem" contain detailed information regarding the system the bug was reported on therefore they can be easier to triage. They are all tagged 'apport-bug' and you can find ones with a status of "New" at New apport-bugs.
Bug reports that were submitted yesterday and are still in a New status can be found at http://people.ubuntu.com/~brian/reports/yesterday/
- It is unfortunately the case that new bug reports will sometimes go unanswered. This is actively being addressed, but we can always use additional help. The following are lists of bug reports marked as "New" against older kernels.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux-source-2.6.15/+bugs?field.status=NEW
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux-source-2.6.17/+bugs?field.status=NEW
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux-source-2.6.20/+bugs?field.status=NEW
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux-source-2.6.22/+bugs?field.status=NEW
- If the report has not had any recent activity, it would be helpful to know if the issue reported still exists or not.
- Additionaly, if the issue still exists, it would be useful to know if it is still present in the actively developed kernel.
- If you're interested on GUI applications you may want to take a look to:
Product
Debugging Instructions
Reviewing bugs marked for expiration - https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+expirable-bugs
Bugs that need forwarding to the Upstream bugtrackers (Instructions)
You're a developer?
You might be interested in the following lists of bugs:
Reviewing patches: http://daniel.holba.ch/harvest/
- Make sure the bug is still relevant.
- Assign it to you.
Transform the patch into a debdiff if necessary.
- Make sure it builds and fixes the bug.
Add it to the sponsoring queue or upload it yourself.
- The Kernel:
http://people.ubuntu.com/~ogasawara/hardy-buglist.html - It's an excellent starting place for the community to get involved and work with the Ubuntu kernel team.