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BeOS Bugs On-Line
We've been collecting bugs from developers for a long time, and now we're offering some feedback on the status of the publicly available bugs in our database. Before you dive into the bugs, please take a moment to read this document thoroughly, especially the FAQs at the bottom. Your understanding of the information provided here really will help everyone involved. The two main goals of the Bug reporting area are:
The Bug Search Form has been set up to facilitate both of these things. A specific bug can be found by searching for the bug's Bug Number (assigned when the bug was submitted). Multiple bugs can also be found based on certain search criteria on the form. The bugs displayed using these criteria are only the publicly available bugs. Publicly available bugs are bugs which developers/users have submitted via the Bug Report Form and were declared available to the public. Publicly available bugs can be browsed in batches of 100 at a time. The bugs submitted within the last month are also summarized on the New Bugs page. The items of information available for each bug are as follows:
To help explain some of the more subtle facilities of the on-line bug reports, here's a series of Frequently Asked Questions: Q: How do you folks at Be classify the bugs which are submitted? A: Melissa Rogers wrote a great article on how bugs are dealt with in a Be Newsletter article; it explains in detail the procedures we use. It's a little long in tooth in some aspects (i.e. our three month schedule has lengthened for DR9's major upgrades, bugs aren't slurped from the web site once a week any more but enter a database straight from the web form), but it's still pretty accurate.
A: We receive many, many, many feature requests from our users and developers, through the Bug Report Form, the BeDevTalk and BeUserGroup mailing lists, and from the comp.sys.be heirarchy. The feature requests are summarized and reviewed in weekly meetings; some are accepted but many are declined. Unfortunately, we simply can't implement all of the features suggested to us.
A: The "bug" could be an intended feature of the system (it's a matter of perspective; often the BeOS User's Guide explains as a feature the very functionality the submittor is describing as a "bug"), pilot error, we couldn't understand what the submittor was trying to describe, or a bug in a product which we don't manufacture. If you're convinced it's a bug, describe in detail the specific steps to take to reproduce the bug on the Bug Report Form and reference the previous bug number. Our QA Team's dream is to have every bug submitted in step-by-step format describing the bug to the letter. Bugs submitted like that have a much better chance of being identified and fixed.
A: Use the Bug Search Form and search for a string which would likely occur in someone else's description of your bug/feature. Please understand that we can't provide direct information on which bug it's a duplicate of; we're trying to concentrate on fixing new bugs.
A: It means that the bug/feature is in the queue for fixing or possible adoption. Acknowledged features might or might not be adopted (we'll need to evaluate it further), while we try to fix every bug before the next release.
A: Yes. Now it's possible that the bug may re-appear when we thought we'd fixed it, that the feature somehow got dropped at the last minute, or that the entry in the database was an error. But our intent is that yes, it has been implemented/fixed. Note that the fix might not appear in the next release, but it will appear in a future release (i.e. it might not have been fixed between DR8 and DR8.2, but it will be fixed in the Preview Release).
A: Actually, the best way to go is to submit another bug report, mentioning the Bug Number in question along with a deatiled and thorough description of the bug.
A: Help us reproduce the bug so that we can fix it! Fill out another Bug Report Form and include a more detailed description of your system with the exact steps you take to reproduce the bug.
A: It could mean that the bug/feature is still being evaluated. Unclear and confusing bugs/features are great candidates for staying "Unclassified" for some time. But usually "Unclassified" means that the database which the web site reads from simply hasn't been updated for that bug yet. The bug/feature could already have been evaluated by the QA Team at Be, but the web database hasn't been updated yet.
A: Fixing bugs, by far. The QA Team tries to break the BeOS in every way possible; this is done both for the current BeOS version using bug reports submitted from users and developers, and the next BeOS version as it's readied for release. The QA Team has done an outstanding job in providing the information here; they've already worked long hours updating the web-based bug database. But their main focus is breaking the BeOS.
A: Yes. Hopefully the information about bugs which have already been submitted will prove to be the most helpful aspect of the web-based bug database. Some people will inevitably want word-for-word descriptions of everything said or implied about their bug/feature here at Be along with why it was or wasn't adopted and what is being done about it and who tested it when; we simply don't have the resources to support an undertaking like that and make it publicly available.
A: It means that words in the Full Description matched the search criteria. Since the Full Description isn't displayed in the search results, no bold-faced words will appear for that entry.
A: Information gets uploaded every night.
A: Yes.
A: Your bug probably isn't publicly available; the search engine only searches the publicly available bugs. The Bug Report Form has a checkbox to make bugs publicly available; if it wasn't checked (or this wasn't available on the form at the time you submitted the bug), your bug isn't publicly available. We did this so that source code submitted wouldn't become publicly available unless the submittor decreed it so.
A: The next time you submit a bug you could check the "Make all previously submitted bugs available to the world" checkbox.
So, in summary, you can view the bugs via a few different methods:
As always, we encourage you to submit the bugs you encounter to us using the Bug Report Form. Happy hunting!
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