gitlab-org--gitlab-foss/.gitlab/issue_templates/Implementation.md

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<!--
Implementation issues are used break-up a large piece of work into small, discrete tasks that can
move independently through the build workflow steps. They're typically used to populate a Feature
Epic. Once created, an implementation issue is usually refined in order to populate and review the
implementation plan and weight.
Example workflow: https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/engineering/development/threat-management/planning/diagram.html#plan
-->
## Why are we doing this work
<!--
A brief explanation of the why, not the what or how. Assume the reader doesn't know the
background and won't have time to dig-up information from comment threads.
-->
## Relevant links
<!--
Information that the developer might need to refer to when implementing the issue.
- [Design Issue](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/<id>)
- [Design 1](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/<id>/designs/<image>.png)
- [Design 2](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/<id>/designs/<image>.png)
- [Similar implementation](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/merge_requests/<id>)
-->
## Non-functional requirements
<!--
Add details for required items and delete others.
-->
- [ ] Documentation:
- [ ] Feature flag:
- [ ] Performance:
- [ ] Testing:
## Implementation plan
<!--
Steps and the parts of the code that will need to get updated. The plan can also
call-out responsibilities for other team members or teams.
e.g.:
- [ ] ~frontend Step 1
- [ ] `@person` Step 1a
- [ ] ~frontend Step 2
-->
<!--
Workflow and other relevant labels
# ~"group::" ~"Category:" ~"GitLab Ultimate"
Other settings you might want to include when creating the issue.
# /assign @
# /epic &
-->
/label ~"workflow::refinement"
/milestone %Backlog