On Fri, Mar 01, 2013 at 07:12:03AM +0100, David Henningsson wrote: > As we now move to a rolling release schedule, when is the right time > to do a wide-scale testing and report bugs? Without just being met > with a "please check if it's fixed in the next version" message?
I think we should deal with this by improving the way we interact with users on bug reports. A constant stream of "please see if this is fixed in the next version", with no explanation of how it might be fixed, gives users the impression that we don't really have much idea what we're doing and are just throwing things at the wall until they stick. The strategy here is often more about finding reasons to close bugs so that the statistics look better, rather than actively working with users to find fixes. A better approach is something more thoughtful like "The $foobar subsystem was extensively overhauled in 3.10, and has been reported to improve output frobbing on AMD systems. Could you test to see if this fixes your bug?" That is, we should have actual reasons for asking for retests and we should tell users what they are, rather than making them spend time retesting just for the sake of it. If we do that and do it well, then bug reporting schedules matter much less. -- Colin Watson [cjwat...@ubuntu.com] -- ubuntu-devel mailing list ubuntu-devel@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-devel