> On 2 May 2019, at 11:22, Simon Urli <simon.u...@xwiki.com> wrote:
> 
> Hi all,
> 
> On 02/05/2019 11:20, Thomas Mortagne wrote:
>> On Thu, May 2, 2019 at 10:57 AM Vincent Massol <vinc...@massol.net> wrote:
>>> 
>>> I did a quick analysis of 11.2 & 11.3 to see how many bugs we fixed since 
>>> they were supposed to be BFD releases.
>>> 
>>> The results are not that impressive:
>>> 
>>> * XWiki 11.0 (non BFD): 32 bugs closed
>>> * XWiki 11.1 (non BFD) 44 bugs closed
>>> * XWiki 11.2 (BFD): 37 bugs closed
>>> * XWiki 11.3 (BFD): 54 bugs closed
>>> 
>>> Here’s the graph:
>>> https://www.evernote.com/l/AHcQ57uKyNRK-YmB09gvM70OXXVTIhFWcs0
>>> 
>>> The graph shows that during the period (March and April) we had:
>>> * Created issues (128)
>>> * Resolved issues (123)
>>> 
>>> So we were not even able to catch up with created bugs during the period.
>>> 
>>> So the question is: why are we not able to catch up?
>>> 
>>> Let’s look at who closed bugs during the period:
>>> https://www.evernote.com/l/AHfj3Z0DW8RAuZ0AHw9BX6cnoDZc89KPvog
>>> 
>>> Top resolvers:
>>> 
>>> * Simon Urli - 32
>>> * Thomas Mortagne - 30
>>> * Vincent Massol - 15
>>> * Guillaume Delhumeau - 5
>>> * Marius Dumitru Florea - 2
>>> 
>>> So one reason is that we roughly have only 2 main issue resolvers (Simon 
>>> and Thomas) and the other committers are not closing enough. So not enough 
>>> manpower.
>>> 
>>> Would be interesting to see if we have more bugs being created every month 
>>> these days when compared to, say, 2 years ago.
>>> 
>>> For ex:
>>> * category = 10000 AND type = Bug and created >= 2019-03-01 and created <= 
>>> 2019-03-31
>>> ** 70 bugs created
>>> * category = 10000 AND type = Bug and created >= 2018-03-01 and created <= 
>>> 2018-03-31
>>> ** 41 bugs created
>>> * category = 10000 AND type = Bug and created >= 2017-03-01 and created <= 
>>> 2017-03-31
>>> ** 46 bugs created
>>> * category = 10000 AND type = Bug and created >= 2016-03-01 and created <= 
>>> 2016-03-31
>>> ** 81 bugs created
>>> 
>>> More generally:
>>> * category = 10000 AND type = Bug and created >= 2015-01-01 and created <= 
>>> 2015-12-31
>>> ** 780 bugs created
>>> * category = 10000 AND type = Bug and created >= 2016-01-01 and created <= 
>>> 2016-12-31
>>> ** 732 bugs created
>>> * category = 10000 AND type = Bug and created >= 2017-01-01 and created <= 
>>> 2017-12-31
>>> ** 609 bugs created
>>> * category = 10000 AND type = Bug and created >= 2019-01-01 and created <= 
>>> 2019-12-31
>>> * 257 bugs created so far. Extrapolates to 257*3 = 771
>>> 
>>> So it seems we don’t have specifically more bugs being reported in general.
>>> 
>>> So it seems it’s mostly a manpower/focus issue.
>> Yes
>>> 
>>> WDYT?
> 
> FTR Marius was on leave for a full month during those BFD releases, so we 
> lost an important manpower for fixing issues then.

That’s a good point indeed.

We could have expected something like 15-20 bug fixes more if Marius had been 
around a month more I guess.

We would have been over the created bugs number by something like 15 bugs for 
the period. 

Still not as much as we had hoped.

I remember that I was hoping to catch up on the last 365 days (100 bugs) but I 
forgot that new bugs would be added during the period…

So to catch up with 100 bugs, if we do +7 when we do a BFD release, we would 
need a full year of BFD releases to catch up…

Thanks
-Vincent

> 
>>> 
>>> Thanks
>>> -Vincent
>>> 
>>> 
> 
> -- 
> Simon Urli
> Software Engineer at XWiki SAS
> simon.u...@xwiki.com
> More about us at http://www.xwiki.com

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