A couple of additional data points to consider…

Approximately 30% of all reported bugs are still open.
The number of open bugs grows by roughly 28 per week. This has been consistent 
for the past 6 years, when I started tracking it.  I've reported this to the 
mailing list a few times as an FYI.
So, we do okay—70% of bugs get closed even though we have no defined 
process—but clearly we can do better.

Personally I think anything that raises bug-awareness in the community can only 
help.  All of the ideas so far have sounded great. Replacing the "new bugs" 
category with UNCONFIRMED or something like that should be good; making sure 
that everything at least gets looked at is important. Looking forward to the 
BoF.
--paulr

From: Alex Rønne Petersen [mailto:a...@alexrp.com]
Sent: Saturday, October 06, 2018 5:50 PM
To: kristof.be...@arm.com
Cc: llvm-...@lists.llvm.org; cfe-...@lists.llvm.org; lldb-dev@lists.llvm.org; 
tanyalatt...@llvm.org; n...@arm.com; Robinson, Paul
Subject: Re: [cfe-dev] [RFC] LLVM bug lifecycle BoF - triaging

Hello,

I am not a frequent poster on the LLVM mailing lists, but I happened to notice 
this thread and thought I'd weigh in.

Over 2 years ago, I reported this bug: 
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=29102

We had to add a pretty ugly workaround in Mono to deal with that, and the 
workaround is still to this day written to apply to *all* Clang versions on 
ARM64 because we've gotten no response to the bug. This is what we're doing 
currently: https://github.com/mono/mono/blob/master/mono/utils/atomic.h#L209

I think this looks to be a pretty serious bug that shouldn't have gone 
unacknowledged for so long. If there had been any kind of response to the bug, 
I would've even been happy to cook up a patch. But, frankly, without any 
confirmation that a bug is valid, very few potential contributors are going to 
put in the time and effort to write and submit a patch and risk that it gets 
rejected because the issue it's trying to address isn't even considered a bug 
by the project maintainers.

Don't get me wrong, though - I understand from experience that "triage all the 
bugs" is much easier said than done, especially in an open source project. I 
just wanted to back up Kristof's feeling that the project is losing potential 
contributions with a concrete example of such, for what it's worth.

Regards,
Alex

On Thu, Oct 4, 2018 at 11:55 AM Kristof Beyls via cfe-dev 
<cfe-...@lists.llvm.org<mailto:cfe-...@lists.llvm.org>> wrote:
Hi all,

I’d like to share a few thoughts and analysis results on the LLVM bug life 
cycle, especially the reporting/triaging part.

As one of the few people creating llvm bugzilla accounts when people request an 
account, I started to have a feel that many reported bugs, especially by 
first-time reporters, never get any reply or feedback, let alone be acted on.
If people go through the effort of requesting an account, and then reporting 
the bug, they show motivation to contribute to the project. However, if then 
they see zero return on their effort spent, even if it’s just a confirmation of 
the bug indeed being real or an explanation of what they thought to be a bug 
isn’t actually a bug, I fear as a community we disincentify a large number of 
potential long-term contributors.

The above was all based on gut feel, so I tried to gather a bit more data to 
see if my feel was correct or not.
I scraped the bugs in bugzilla and post-processed them a bit. Below is a chart 
showing, year by year, how long it takes for a reported bug to get any comment 
from anyone besides to original reporter. If the bug is still open and didn’t 
have any reaction after half a year the chart categorizes is as an “infinite” 
response time.

 [cid:DC7C978D-FC04-470F-BAAE-CC5C623999F0]
It shows that in recent years the chance of never getting a response to a bug 
report has been increasing.
For some bugs - e.g. an experienced LLVM developer records a not-that-important 
bug in bugzilla - that may be just fine.
However, I assume that for people reporting a bug for the first time, the 
majority may look at least for confirmation that what they reported is actually 
a bug.
The chart shows (blue bars) that about 50% of first-time bug reporters never 
get any reply.

I also plotted which components get the most reported bugs that don’t get any 
reaction and remain open:
[cid:130482D2-6DEF-4796-84EC-2968F16B635C]
The percentage at the top of the bars is the percentage of bugs against that 
component that never get any reaction. The bar height shows the absolute 
numbers.


I hope that at the “Lifecycle of LLVM bug reports” BoF at the upcoming dev 
meeting in San Jose (https://llvmdev18.sched.com/event/H2T3, 17th of October, 
10.30am), we can discuss what could be done to improve the experience for 
first-time reporters and also to reduce the number of bug reports that 
seemingly get ignored completely.
By sending this email, I hope to trigger discussion before the BoF, both by 
attendees and non-attendees, so that we have a more fruitful outcome.

At first sight, to me, it seems that the following actions would help:

  *   Let’s introduce some form of “triaged” state in bugzilla, to represent 
that a bug report has been accepted as describing a real problem; able to be 
acted on (e.g. has a suitable reproducer); and not being a duplicate of another 
bug report. Looking at 
https://bugzilla.readthedocs.io/en/5.0/using/editing.html#life-cycle-of-a-bug, 
maybe the best way to achieve this would be for newly raised bugs to by default 
go to an “UNCONFIRMED” state instead of “NEW”? Moving the status to “NEW” or 
“CONFIRMED” would indicate the bug has been triaged.
  *   Would it help to have one or multiple people per component that volunteer 
to triage new bugs?
  *   With the majority of developers being part of a team working on a product 
based on LLVM, I would assume that it is in the interest of most that reported 
bugs at least get evaluated/triaged? What is stopping those developers to find 
the time to do some triaging? Would a better notification mechanism be useful 
to notify when new bugs on a specific component come in that you could triage? 
Maybe per component try to have a few people on the “default CC list”, which 
seems easy to set up as a bugzilla administrator.
  *   Should we get rid of the "new-bugs/new bugs” component if we won’t have 
people triaging them?
  *   Should we have some description of what a reasonable triage of a bug 
looks like? If we write such a page, we could also use that page to describe 
what we think should get recorded when closing bugs.

Thanks,

Kristof

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