gitlab-org--gitlab-foss/doc/development/contributing/issue_workflow.md
Achilleas Pipinellis 790eabcaf4 Merge branch 'patch-28' into 'master'
Documentation: Fix broken link of feature proposal template in issue_workflow.md

See merge request gitlab-org/gitlab-ce!21894
2018-09-28 10:23:11 +00:00

16 KiB

Workflow labels

To allow for asynchronous issue handling, we use milestones and labels. Leads and product managers handle most of the scheduling into milestones. Labelling is a task for everyone.

Most issues will have labels for at least one of the following:

  • Type: ~"feature proposal", ~bug, ~customer, etc.
  • Subject: ~wiki, ~"container registry", ~ldap, ~api, ~frontend, etc.
  • Team: ~"CI/CD", ~Plan, ~Manage, ~Quality, etc.
  • Release Scoping: ~Deliverable, ~Stretch, ~"Next Patch Release"
  • Priority: ~P1, ~P2, ~P3, ~P4
  • Severity: ~S1, ~S2, ~S3, ~S4

All labels, their meaning and priority are defined on the labels page.

If you come across an issue that has none of these, and you're allowed to set labels, you can always add the team and type, and often also the subject.

Type labels

Type labels are very important. They define what kind of issue this is. Every issue should have one or more.

Examples of type labels are ~"feature proposal", ~bug, ~customer, ~security, and ~"direction".

A number of type labels have a priority assigned to them, which automatically makes them float to the top, depending on their importance.

Type labels are always lowercase, and can have any color, besides blue (which is already reserved for subject labels).

The descriptions on the labels page explain what falls under each type label.

Subject labels

Subject labels are labels that define what area or feature of GitLab this issue hits. They are not always necessary, but very convenient.

Examples of subject labels are ~wiki, ~ldap, ~api, ~issues, ~"merge requests", ~labels, and ~"container registry".

If you are an expert in a particular area, it makes it easier to find issues to work on. You can also subscribe to those labels to receive an email each time an issue is labeled with a subject label corresponding to your expertise.

Subject labels are always all-lowercase.

Team labels

Team labels specify what team is responsible for this issue. Assigning a team label makes sure issues get the attention of the appropriate people.

The current team labels are:

  • ~Configuration
  • ~"CI/CD"
  • ~Create
  • ~Distribution
  • ~Documentation
  • ~Geo
  • ~Gitaly
  • ~Manage
  • ~Monitoring
  • ~Plan
  • ~Quality
  • ~Release
  • ~Secure
  • ~UX

The descriptions on the labels page explain what falls under the responsibility of each team.

Within those team labels, we also have the ~backend and ~frontend labels to indicate if an issue needs backend work, frontend work, or both.

Team labels are always capitalized so that they show up as the first label for any issue.

Release Scoping labels

Release Scoping labels help us clearly communicate expectations of the work for the release. There are three levels of Release Scoping labels:

  • ~Deliverable: Issues that are expected to be delivered in the current milestone.
  • ~Stretch: Issues that are a stretch goal for delivering in the current milestone. If these issues are not done in the current release, they will strongly be considered for the next release.
  • ~"Next Patch Release": Issues to put in the next patch release. Work on these first, and add the "Pick Into X" label to the merge request, along with the appropriate milestone.

Each issue scheduled for the current milestone should be labeled ~Deliverable or ~"Stretch". Any open issue for a previous milestone should be labeled ~"Next Patch Release", or otherwise rescheduled to a different milestone.

Priority labels

Priority labels help us define the time a ~bug fix should be completed. Priority determines how quickly the defect turnaround time must be. If there are multiple defects, the priority decides which defect has to be fixed immediately versus later. This label documents the planned timeline & urgency which is used to measure against our actual SLA on delivering ~bug fixes.

Label Meaning Estimate time to fix
~P1 Urgent Priority The current release + potentially immediate hotfix to GitLab.com
~P2 High Priority The next release
~P3 Medium Priority Within the next 3 releases (approx one quarter)
~P4 Low Priority Anything outside the next 3 releases (approx beyond one quarter)

Severity labels

Severity labels help us clearly communicate the impact of a ~bug on users.

Label Meaning Impact on Functionality Example
~S1 Blocker Outage, broken feature with no workaround Unable to create an issue. Data corruption/loss. Security breach.
~S2 Critical Severity Broken Feature, workaround too complex & unacceptable Can push commits, but only via the command line.
~S3 Major Severity Broken Feature, workaround acceptable Can create merge requests only from the Merge Requests page, not through the Issue.
~S4 Low Severity Functionality inconvenience or cosmetic issue Label colors are incorrect / not being displayed.

Severity impact guidance

Severity levels can be applied further depending on the facet of the impact; e.g. Affected customers, GitLab.com availability, performance and etc. The below is a guideline.

Severity Affected Customers/Users GitLab.com Availability Performance Degradation
~S1 >50% users affected (possible company extinction level event) Significant impact on all of GitLab.com
~S2 Many users or multiple paid customers affected (but not apocalyptic) Significant impact on large portions of GitLab.com Degradation is guaranteed to occur in the near future
~S3 A few users or a single paid customer affected Limited impact on important portions of GitLab.com Degradation is likely to occur in the near future
~S4 No paid users/customer affected, or expected to in the near future Minor impact on on GitLab.com Degradation may occur but it's not likely

Label for community contributors

Issues that are beneficial to our users, 'nice to haves', that we currently do not have the capacity for or want to give the priority to, are labeled as ~"Accepting Merge Requests", so the community can make a contribution.

Community contributors can submit merge requests for any issue they want, but the ~"Accepting Merge Requests" label has a special meaning. It points to changes that:

  1. We already agreed on,
  2. Are well-defined,
  3. Are likely to get accepted by a maintainer.

We want to avoid a situation when a contributor picks an ~"Accepting Merge Requests" issue and then their merge request gets closed, because we realize that it does not fit our vision, or we want to solve it in a different way.

We add the ~"Accepting Merge Requests" label to:

  • Low priority ~bug issues (i.e. we do not add it to the bugs that we want to solve in the ~"Next Patch Release")
  • Small ~"feature proposal"
  • Small ~"technical debt" issues

After adding the ~"Accepting Merge Requests" label, we try to estimate the weight of the issue. We use issue weight to let contributors know how difficult the issue is. Additionally:

If you've decided that you would like to work on an issue, please @-mention the appropriate product manager as soon as possible. The product manager will then pull in appropriate GitLab team members to further discuss scope, design, and technical considerations. This will ensure that your contribution is aligned with the GitLab product and minimize any rework and delay in getting it merged into master.

GitLab team members who apply the ~"Accepting Merge Requests" label to an issue should update the issue description with a responsible product manager, inviting any potential community contributor to @-mention per above.

Issue triaging

Our issue triage policies are described in our handbook. You are very welcome to help the GitLab team triage issues. We also organize issue bash events once every quarter.

The most important thing is making sure valid issues receive feedback from the development team. Therefore the priority is mentioning developers that can help on those issues. Please select someone with relevant experience from the [GitLab team][team]. If there is nobody mentioned with that expertise look in the commit history for the affected files to find someone.

We also use GitLab Triage to automate some triaging policies. This is currently set up as a scheduled pipeline running on quality/triage-ops project.

Feature proposals

To create a feature proposal for CE, open an issue on the [issue tracker of CE][ce-tracker].

For feature proposals for EE, open an issue on the [issue tracker of EE][ee-tracker].

In order to help track the feature proposals, we have created a [feature proposal][fpl] label. For the time being, users that are not members of the project cannot add labels. You can instead ask one of the [core team] members to add the label ~"feature proposal" to the issue or add the following code snippet right after your description in a new line: ~"feature proposal".

Please keep feature proposals as small and simple as possible, complex ones might be edited to make them small and simple.

Please submit Feature Proposals using the 'Feature Proposal' issue template provided on the issue tracker.

For changes in the interface, it is helpful to include a mockup. Issues that add to, or change, the interface should be given the ~"UX" label. This will allow the UX team to provide input and guidance. You may need to ask one of the [core team] members to add the label, if you do not have permissions to do it by yourself.

If you want to create something yourself, consider opening an issue first to discuss whether it is interesting to include this in GitLab.

Issue tracker guidelines

[Search the issue tracker][ce-tracker] for similar entries before submitting your own, there's a good chance somebody else had the same issue or feature proposal. Show your support with an award emoji and/or join the discussion.

Please submit bugs using the 'Bug' issue template provided on the issue tracker. The text in the parenthesis is there to help you with what to include. Omit it when submitting the actual issue. You can copy-paste it and then edit as you see fit.

Issue weight

Issue weight allows us to get an idea of the amount of work required to solve one or multiple issues. This makes it possible to schedule work more accurately.

You are encouraged to set the weight of any issue. Following the guidelines below will make it easy to manage this, without unnecessary overhead.

  1. Set weight for any issue at the earliest possible convenience
  2. If you don't agree with a set weight, discuss with other developers until consensus is reached about the weight
  3. Issue weights are an abstract measurement of complexity of the issue. Do not relate issue weight directly to time. This is called anchoring and something you want to avoid.
  4. Something that has a weight of 1 (or no weight) is really small and simple. Something that is 9 is rewriting a large fundamental part of GitLab, which might lead to many hard problems to solve. Changing some text in GitLab is probably 1, adding a new Git Hook maybe 4 or 5, big features 7-9.
  5. If something is very large, it should probably be split up in multiple issues or chunks. You can simply not set the weight of a parent issue and set weights to children issues.

Regression issues

Every monthly release has a corresponding issue on the CE issue tracker to keep track of functionality broken by that release and any fixes that need to be included in a patch release (see 8.3 Regressions as an example).

As outlined in the issue description, the intended workflow is to post one note with a reference to an issue describing the regression, and then to update that note with a reference to the merge request that fixes it as it becomes available.

If you're a contributor who doesn't have the required permissions to update other users' notes, please post a new note with a reference to both the issue and the merge request.

The release manager will update the notes in the regression issue as fixes are addressed.

Technical and UX debt

In order to track things that can be improved in GitLab's codebase, we use the ~"technical debt" label in [GitLab's issue tracker][ce-tracker]. For user experience improvements, we use the ~"UX debt" label.

These labels should be added to issues that describe things that can be improved, shortcuts that have been taken, features that need additional attention, and all other things that have been left behind due to high velocity of development. For example, code that needs refactoring should use the ~"technical debt" label, user experience refinements should use the ~"UX debt" label.

Everyone can create an issue, though you may need to ask for adding a specific label, if you do not have permissions to do it by yourself. Additional labels can be combined with these labels, to make it easier to schedule the improvements for a release.

Issues tagged with these labels have the same priority like issues that describe a new feature to be introduced in GitLab, and should be scheduled for a release by the appropriate person.

Make sure to mention the merge request that the ~"technical debt" issue or ~"UX debt" issue is associated with in the description of the issue.

Stewardship

For issues related to the open source stewardship of GitLab, there is the ~"stewardship" label.

This label is to be used for issues in which the stewardship of GitLab is a topic of discussion. For instance if GitLab Inc. is planning to add features from GitLab EE to GitLab CE, related issues would be labelled with ~"stewardship".

A recent example of this was the issue for bringing the time tracking API to GitLab CE.


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