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Dan Morrill3cd199f2009-11-06 14:04:16 -08001page.title=Life of a Bug
2doc.type=source
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4<p>The Android Open Source project maintains a public issue tracker where you
5can report bugs and request features for the Android software stack. (For
6details on this issue tracker, please see <a
7href="{@docRoot}source/report-bugs.html">the Reporting Bugs page</a>.)
8Reporting bugs is great (thank you!), but what happens to a bug report once
9you file it? This page describes the Life of a Bug.</p>
10<p><i>Please note: the the Android Open Source Project (AOSP) issue tracker is
11intended only for bugs &amp; feature requests related to the Android software
12stack. Because many users find their way here looking for the Google apps for
13Android (such as Gmail and so on), we have components set up for their
14convenience. However, these apps are not part of Android, and any issues
15reported on these components are not guaranteed to to receive attention.
16Most notably, to report issues related to Android Market, you should visit the
17<a href="http://www.google.com/support/forum/p/Android+Market?hl=en">Android
18Market Support Forum</a>.</i></p>
19<p>Here's the Life of a Bug, in a nutshell:</p>
20<ol>
21<li>A bug is filed, and has the state "New".</li>
22<li>An AOSP contributor periodically reviews and triages bugs. Bugs are
23triaged into one of four "buckets": New, Open, No-Action, or Resolved.</li>
24<li>Each bucket includes a number of states that provide more detail on the
25fate of the issue.</li>
26<li>Bugs in the "Resolved" bucket will eventually be included in a future
27release of the Android software.</li>
28</ol>
29<h2>Bucket Details</h2>
30<p>Here is some additional information on each bucket, what it means, and how
31it's handled.</p>
32<h3>New Issues</h3>
33<p>New issues include bug reports that are not yet being acted upon. The two
34states are:</p>
35<ul>
36<li><b>New</b><p>The bug report has not yet been triaged (that is, reviewed by
37an AOSP contributor.)</p></li>
38<li><b>NeedsInfo</b><p>The bug report has insufficient information to act
39upon. The person who reported the bug needs to provide additional detail
40before it can be triaged. If enough time passes and no new information is
41provided, the bug may be closed by default, as one of the No-Action
42states.</p></li>
43</ul>
44
45<h3>Open Issues</h3>
46<p>This bucket contains bugs that need action, but which are still
47unresolved, pending a change to the source code.</p>
48<ul>
49<li><b>Unassigned</b><p>The bug report has been recognized as an adequately
50detailed report of a legitimate issue, but has not yet been assigned to an
51AOSP contributor to be fixed. Typically, bugs in this state are considered low
52priority, at least insofar that if they were high priority, they'd be assigned
53to a contributor.</p></li>
54<li><b>Reviewed</b><p>Like <code>Unassigned</code>, but the issue
55represented is being tracked in a separate bug database. For example, the bug
56might have been reported via an AOSP member's internal bug-tracking system,
57which is considered the "master" copy.</p></li>
58<li><b>Assigned</b><li>Like <code>Unassigned</code>, but the bug has been
59actually assigned to a specific contributor to fix.</p></li>
60</ul>
61<p>Typically, a given bug will start in <code>Unassigned</code>, where it
62will remain until it is associated with a specific upcoming release, at which
63point it will enter <code>Reviewed</code> or <code>Assigned</code>. However,
64note that this isn't a guarantee, and it's not uncommon for bugs to go from
65<code>Unassigned</code> to one of the Resolved states.</p>
66<p>In general, if a bug is in one of these Open states, the AOSP team has
67recognized it as a legitimate issue and will fix it according to the product
68priorities and milestones. However, it's impossible to guarantee a fix in time
69for any particular release.</p>
70
71<h3>No-Action Issues</h3>
72<p>This bucket contains bugs that have for one reason or another been
73determined to not require any action.</p>
74<ul>
75<li><b>Spam</b><p>A kind soul sent us some delicious pork products, that we,
76regrettably, do not want.</p></li>
77<li><b>Question</b><p>Someone mistook the issue tracker for a help forum.
78(This is not as uncommon as one might assume: many users whose native language
79isn't English can make this mistake.)</p></li>
80<li><b>Unreproducible</b><p>An AOSP contributor attempted to reproduce the
81behavior described, and was unable to do so. This sometimes means that the bug
82is legitimate but simply rare or difficult to reproduce, and sometimes means
83that the bug was fixed in a later release.</p></li>
84<li><b>WorkingAsIntended</b><p>An AOSP contributor has determined that the
85behavior described isn't a bug, but is the intended behavior. This state is
86also commonly referred to as "WAI".</b></li>
87<li><b>Declined</b><p>This is like <code>WorkingAsIntended</code>, except
88typically used for feature requests instead of bugs. That is, an AOSP
89contributor has determined that the request is not going to be implemented in
90Android.</b></li>
91</ul>
92
93<h3>Resolved Issues</h3>
94<p>This bucket contains bugs that have had action taken, and are now
95considered resolved.</p>
96<ul>
97<li><b>FutureRelease</b><p>This bug has been fixed (or feature implemented) in
98a source tree, but has not yet been included in a formal Android
99platform release. (Note that this may also include fixes that exist in a
100private source tree that has not yet been contributed to a public
101tree.)</p></li>
102<li><b>Released</b><p>This bug has been fixed, and is included in a formal
103Android platform release. When this state is set, we try to also set a
104property indicating which release it was fixed in.</p></li>
105<li><b>Duplicate</b><p>This bug is a duplicate of another, existing bug
106report.</p></li>
107</ul>
108
109<h2>Other Stuff</h2>
110<p>The states and lifecycle above are how we generally try to track software.
111However, Android contains a lot of software and gets a correspondingly large
112number of bugs. As a result, sometimes bugs don't make it through all the
113states in a formal progression. We do try to keep the system up to date, but
114we tend to do so in periodic "bug sweeps" where we review the database and
115make updates.</p>
116<p>Since the AOSP is essentially constantly evolving, we do make tweaks to
117the list of bug states and the lifecycle described above. When we do this,
118however, we'll be sure to update this page as well.</p>
119<p>Finally, you should be aware that for a variety of reasons, there are
120actually multiple issue trackers for Android-related issues. The <a
121href="http://code.google.com/p/android/issues/list">Google Code Project
122Hosting Issue Tracker</a> is the <b>only</b> official public issue tracker; however,
123many of the AOSP Member organizations maintain their own, as do most OEMs. We
124try to keep the public issue tracker in sync with private issue trackers
125wherever possible, but in cases where confidential information and security
126issues are involved, this isn't always possible.</p>