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Issue Tracking
This page describes how we track issues in the vscode
repository.
New issues or pull requests submitted by the community are triaged by a team member. The team rotates the inbox tracker on a weekly basis.
The Inbox query contains all the
- open issues or pull requests that
- are not feature requests nor test plan items and
- have no owner assignment.
The inbox tracker should do the following initial triage:
- Is the issue invalid? Close it and justify the reason.
- Is the issue a general question, like How can I compile TypeScript? Close it and redirect the user to Stack Overflow with this message.
- Is it a feature request? Tag it accordingly and assign to owner. The owner will unassign himself if he does not plan to work on the feature.
- Else, assign the issue to an owner.
Everyone should do the following secondary triage to their assigned issues (the inbox tracker may do some of these steps too, if obvious):
- If an issue needs more info, assign the
needs more info
and ask for more information in a comment. - If the issue is a bug, add the
bug
label. - If the issue is a feature request, add the label
feature request
and @-mention if someone from the team should be aware of the feature request. - If needed, edit the title to improve it.
- If possible, assign the issue with a feature/topic area label.
- If the issue is important, assign an
important
label and optionally mention @microsoft/vscode to get the attention of the entire team. - If the issue needs to be fixed in this release, assign it to the current milestone (eg: blocks a scenario, completes a new feature, etc.). Else, assign it to the Backlog.
- If needed, follow-up with the author.
At the beginning of the endgame we review the open issues and adjust the milestone if needed, moving to the next milestone or back to the backlog.
At the beginning of the debt week we review the issues, pull requests assigned to the backlog milestone, and assign the ones we want to address to the current milestone.
When team members files a bug they perform steps of the inbox tracker for the issue they filed. Therefore bugs filed by the development team do not need to be triged by the inbox tracker.
Bugs need to be verified.
- Once a bug is fixed its state is changed to
closed
- If it needs verification, assign it to another team member
- Once verified, label the issue with
verified
Tip: To see what bugs you need to verify, create a personal query: current milestone, assigned to me, closed,
-label:"verified"
Duplicate bugs are closed with a comment duplicates #issue
. Please try to reference an earlier issue unless a later issue is more appropriate (has more context, better scenarios, repro steps, etc.).
Use the issue mover tool to move bugs to another repository.
Visual Studio Code consists of multiple repositories and we should use consistent work flows and labels across all our repositories.
To establish consistent labels across all our repositories use the Label Manager tool.
To enable planning across repositories all the Visual Studio Code related repositories need to define the same milestones.
We use issues for iteration plans and the wiki for the test plan.
- Iteration Plans have a label
iteration-plan
withtasks
[ ] for the different items. The individual items are tracked in existing issues (bugs, feature requests). If there is no existing issue then a new issue with the labelplan-item
is created. Here is an example. - We use a wiki page for a test plan. Here is an example.
Project Management
- Roadmap
- Breaking Changes
- Development Process
- Issue Tracking
- Iteration Plans
- Previous Releases
- Related Projects
Contributing
- How to Contribute
- Submitting Bugs and Suggestions
- Code Organization
- Coding Guidelines
- Contributor License Agreement
Documentation