/srv/irclogs.ubuntu.com/2008/12/15/#ubuntu-bugs.txt

pckchembdmurray ping00:16
Hobbseebug 25634500:26
ubottuLaunchpad bug 256345 in wesnoth "recruiting impossible on some parts of a castle" [Low,Confirmed] https://launchpad.net/bugs/25634500:26
bdmurraypckchem: pong00:38
pckchembdmurray: Hey I think I found a problem with the launchpad scripts00:39
bdmurraypckchem: uh, which launchpad scripts?  the greasemonkey ones?00:39
pckchembdmurray: Yes, sorry00:39
pckchembdmurray:00:39
pckchembdmurray: When you use the supplied config.xml, the scripts don't work00:39
pckchembdmurray: The fix is fairly easy, you just change the basedir to "/"00:40
pckchemfor all the scripts00:40
pckchemOR you can just make a individual folder for each file00:41
bdmurraypckchem: can you report a bug at https://bugs.edge.launchpad.net/launchpad-gm-scripts ?00:41
pckchemSure, I'm about to work up a patch right now. Just wanted to make sure that wasn't intentional before I did it :/00:42
bdmurraypckchem: I actually not sure what that bit does. ;-)00:42
pckchembdmurray: :) . I didn't either until a few moments ago. Had a bit of a learning moment. This is also a nice excuse to learn more bzr00:44
pckchembdmurray: Thanks, that's all.00:45
andresmujicahello,01:23
andresmujicaanyone has a sony vaio laptop with a ricoh webcam?01:24
andresmujicai need to test a patch from Alexander01:24
andresmujicato solve a pair of bugs...01:24
d-b_hi there what is the proper method of getting a log / debuggin nautlius05:32
d-b_this bug is rather funny .... https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/nautilus/+bug/19579805:32
ubottuLaunchpad bug 195798 in nautilus "Nautilus: Impossible to change case of filename/extension in Windows Share" [Low,New]05:32
d-b_--> bug actually is rather critical05:34
d-b_if you do as in the example -> make a file called 123.abc  and then make one called 123.ABC.txt05:35
d-b_then make rename 123.ABC.txt to 123.ABC -> it will delete the 123.abc file05:35
d-b_then if you make a new file called 123.abc to replace the deleted file it will delete the 123.ABC file05:36
d-b_yes the file is deleted.05:36
d-b_dolphin informs me that access is denied to writing a file such as 123.ABC if i have 123.abc05:38
d-b_mmm wait that might be my fault05:38
d-b_ok seperate bug in dolphin then05:39
zzxxzzJust bought new notebook, and installed ubuntu 8.10 - Notice that when a file is sent to trash, the icon remains the same, and pointing at it displays "No items in Trash", but I can right click on the icon and click on "Empty Trash" and empty the content. Anyone know how to fix this? Or is this a bug?06:49
macosounds like a bug06:52
macoi cant imagine it's intentional06:52
macoi cant reproduce it06:54
zzxxzzmaco: I assume you responded to me? A friend also has the same problem in 8.10, and my other computer using 7.04 does not. It seems to take us over a year to resolve problems after each upgrade as new problems appear in addition to the old ones.07:02
macoyes07:02
macooh07:02
macowas it a fresh install or an upgrade?07:02
zzxxzzmaco: I wanted to upgrade my  existing system from 7.04 but we've been unable to resolve a problem keeping us from backing up the home partition and our bug report was closed as 7.04 is no longer supported, so I bought a new computer and did a fresh install using the alternate CD.07:05
macomine's a fresh install with an old /home too..07:06
zzxxzzmaco: It's a new home also as we can't move the home from the old computer yet. In fact we've done nothing more than install 8.10 and apply all the recommended updates so far.07:07
macoer, that is weird. does it consistently do that?07:07
jmarsdenzzxxzz: I just tried it here (I basically never use Nautilus myself!), and the icon changes just fine.  8.10 64bit, fresh install.  So what you are seeing is probably not the general case.07:08
jmarsdenCAn you create a new user, log in as that user, and se if they also get the same issue?07:08
zzxxzzmaco: Yes, the icon always shows an empty waste basket, and if I create a text file and send it to the trash is remains the same, and pointing to the icon displays "No items in Trash", but if I click on the icon the browser displays the file(s) in the trash, and if I right click on the icon the "Empty Trash" function does remove the content.07:11
zzxxzzjmarsden: My friends computer has 2 users and both user log ins produce the same result.07:12
macojmarsden: any chance the fact that there was trash in my bin when i installed is why i cant reproduce?07:13
jmarsdenNo idea.  I can't reproduse the problem here either, starting from an empty wastebasket...07:13
zzxxzzI've tried to find where the icon choices are located to no avail, but I assume the fact that it states there is no content might be the reason the icon remains the same.07:15
jmarsdenYes, sounds more like the applet doesn't "notice" (wasn't told?) that someone put some trash in it, somehow.07:16
macothe one on the panel or the one in nautilus?07:16
jmarsdenmaco: There is a trash icon in Nautilus?  Where?07:17
macoin the bar on the left...07:17
jmarsdenThe one that changes state for me is the one in the panel.  Right-click and About shows: Trash Applet 2.24.107:17
macoi dont have that in my panel :P well, i dont have a bottom panel07:18
macojust open your home directory and its on the left07:18
dholbachgood morning07:18
macohello07:18
dholbachhi maco07:18
zzxxzzI just checked the 7.04 system which works, and my home directory there has a .Trash directory which contains entries for the deleted files. The 8.10 system does not have a .Trash directory, but shows 3 files totaling over 500MB in the trash.07:19
greg-gHeya dholbach, good flight back?07:19
macozzxxzz: they moved in 8.0407:19
jmarsdenmaco: OK, that one I would not expect to change visual state etc, it is just... an icon... right?07:19
maco!trash07:19
ubottuThe location of Trash has changed since 8.04, it is now located in ~/.local/share/Trash | Looking for the trash in previous versions: ~/.Trash07:19
macojmarsden: it changes07:20
dholbachheya greg-g - yeah all good - how was yours?07:20
greg-gdholbach: slept through most of it, so great.07:20
* jmarsden peers at screen... you are right... 1600x1200 here, so it's a small icon!07:20
dholbachgreg-g: hardly surprising after the last night at UDS :)07:21
macocan jorge actually sing?07:21
dholbachmaco: yes :)07:21
macosaw a photo and went O_o "jorge?"07:22
greg-gdholbach: yeah, there are some pictures of me online that are... incriminating :)07:22
macoah we should've found a way to make him karaoke at OLF07:22
greg-gmaco: Penguicon!07:22
macogreg-g: huh?07:22
* maco googles07:22
zzxxzzubottu is correct, the files are in the new location, but the icon is not changing from empty, nor giving an indication there is something in the trash.07:22
macogreg-g: wait is that the one that Tamora Pierce spoke at and i saw on someone's shirt at OLF and got all upset that i missed an insane combination of my favourite author and my favourite operating system?07:23
greg-gmaco: probably07:24
jmarsdenzzxxzz: Do permisions on ~/.local and ~/.local/share and ~/.local/share/Trash/ all look sane on your systems?  I'm not sure what could be causing you to see this... guessing...!07:25
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BoogieBooHi08:16
BoogieBooWhere CAN I find help to my VPN connection problem? I have been struggeling to make the VPN work in intrepid, yesterday I finally manged to make it to work following the launchpad bud documentation about this problem. Then I switched of the computer, when todays I switched on and tried to connect again, CONNECTION FAILED message, but the configuration is still the same...THIS IS NOT ACCEPTABLE if we want Ubuntu to start sp08:18
BoogieBooreading into work computer,08:18
BoogieBooIs there anyone that can help me with this please?08:19
Ryan52BoogieBoo: ask in #ubuntu? that might get you more help..08:30
BoogieBoowell I ask here because actually is a bug08:31
BoogieBooIt is a shame to spend more than a month to make to work somethign that it was working before the upgrade.08:32
BoogieBooAnd more when it is something necessary for diary working08:32
BoogieBooit is a shame08:32
BoogieBooAnd it seems to be a taboo in internet, I can't find anyhelp anywhere08:33
macoer, is a bug filed?08:33
Ryan52BoogieBoo, this channel is for working on bugs/triaging bugs, I think :)08:33
BoogieBooIt is actually a BUG08:34
BoogieBooVPN connections to PPTP servers in intrepid is a crape08:34
Ryan52okay...08:34
BoogieBooNetworkmanager is not working properly08:34
BoogieBooBut there are some Launchpad guides to solve it08:34
BoogieBooand the solution is not in the reposteries yet08:34
BoogieBooYesterday I followed the launchpad, and I manged tom amke it to work08:35
BoogieBooI had to edit gconf-edit by my self, etc.. because Networkmanager is not saveing the values correctly08:35
BoogieBooafter that it woked08:36
BoogieBoohowever today I restarted the computer and the VPN is not working again08:36
BoogieBooI checked the changes I made in gconf.efdit and they still were there08:36
BoogieBooso I can't understand now why it is not working?08:36
BoogieBooThis is a crucial issue; Million of people need to access their offices networks remotely,08:37
BoogieBooto WORK08:37
Ryan52BoogieBoo, it sounds like you need help with something. but regardless, if you think it's a bug, do you see the bug already reported? if so, then please provide any more information on the problem that you can into that bug report. if not, then please report it.08:38
* Ryan52 notes that openvpn works for him...so it probably doesn't affect millions.08:38
macoRyan52: its only pptp vpn08:39
macocisco vpn is fine too08:39
Ryan52ah, didn't see that.08:39
macoyeah, we've been over this before08:40
macoi told him to try using the vpn from the command line to see if its the nm plugin's fault or the vpn client's fault, but i dont think he did08:40
macodoing that is how i found that the route wasnt being set right by nm, but that the command line vpnc was doing it right, so i knew a bug i had was actually in nm08:40
macoer, was actually in nm-vpnc08:41
BoogieBoomaco08:42
BoogieBoomaco, yesterday following the launchpad, I managed the VPN to work08:42
BoogieBoomaco, it seems that Networkmanager-pptp is not working properly, it is not saving the parameters correctly08:43
BoogieBoomaco, so I opened gconf-edit and I added some keys manually and It worked, some keays as "refuse-eap"08:43
macois the command line vpnc working?08:43
BoogieBoovpnc is for cisco08:43
macoer, not vpnc08:43
macovpn08:43
macoyeah, vpnc is what my fingers automatically do since i use it for school wireless :P08:43
BoogieBooah, vpnc ok, I am going to try in a minutes08:43
macoi dont know the command08:44
macobut im sure the linux-pptp must have a command08:44
BoogieBoomaco, well, so yesterday I was all the evening connected properly08:44
BoogieBoomaco, yesterday it was workign properly!08:44
BoogieBoomaco, today I switch on the computer again, and it is not working again08:44
BoogieBoomaco, I checked that all the chanegs I made in gconf-efit are still there after the reboot, and they are08:45
BoogieBooso this is crace08:45
BoogieBoocrazy08:45
BoogieBoothis is really crazy unstable08:45
macolook, ive had odd bugs pop up from in nm caused by it not knowing how to handle bugs in my wireless driver08:45
macoso please try a command line method08:45
macothose are generally more failure-resistent08:45
macoex: i cant connect to wep with nm because nm gets confused when my driver drops a few packets, but the command line does not.08:46
BoogieBooI will try08:47
BoogieBoonothing08:51
BoogieBoolooking at the syslog I can't understant whta is going on, the messages are not clear!08:52
BoogieBoothe funny thing is that here the other XP machines are already connected to the VPN08:55
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wicopeI really feel in a deadend, I don0t know what else can I do to solve this guys09:04
wicopeand I really need it to work09:05
hggdhwicope: did you open a bug on this?11:13
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CrownAmbassadorGuys I'm lost! I just joined the bugteam, but have no idea where to go to start helping. Any help please?11:33
BUGabundo_workCrownAmbassador: how about taking a look at the most recent bugs?11:34
BUGabundo_workalso ,if you dare, subscribe to some packages bug-mail11:34
BUGabundo_workor if you are crazy enouth the entire UBUNTU bug mail11:34
BUGabundo_workor just use feeds CrownAmbassador11:34
duanedesignI think the Importance of the following bugs should be set to  Wishlist13:27
duanedesignbug  #30768413:27
ubottuLaunchpad bug 307684 in transmission "Transmission should not verify all data when restarted after forced exit by logout" [Undecided,New] https://launchpad.net/bugs/30768413:27
duanedesignbug #30771513:27
ubottuLaunchpad bug 307715 in ufw "ufw should support a quiet option" [Undecided,New] https://launchpad.net/bugs/30771513:27
duanedesignbug #30779613:27
ubottuLaunchpad bug 307796 in fglrx-installer "fglrx-kernel-source should depend on gcc" [Undecided,New] https://launchpad.net/bugs/30779613:27
duanedesignbug #30774413:28
ubottuLaunchpad bug 307744 in kino "kino should notify if dvgrab is missing before attempting capture" [Undecided,New] https://launchpad.net/bugs/30774413:28
duanedesignThank you for your help13:28
asacmaco: thats as-designed, yes.13:34
asacits not undebated whether thats the right thing to do, but its currently a feature13:35
BUGabundo_workogasawara maco removing the eth Sky2 driver helped suspend/hibernate to work with jaunty kernel13:40
BUGabundo_workI also got the pics and video of the crash... uploading now13:40
macoasac: how does one force the wireless to disconnect?13:48
macoBUGabundo_work: good to know, since this laptop has sky213:48
BUGabundo_workLOL13:49
BUGabundo_workso don't use .28-2 kernel13:49
BUGabundo_worklol13:49
BUGabundo_workmaco I disconnect  my wifi via soft switch13:50
BUGabundo_workno other way AFAIK13:50
BUGabundo_workbut I've seen a few people complaing about the way NM07 connects to both wifi and eth (making a bridge)13:50
asacmaco: right click on applet and "disable wireless" is a workaround13:56
BUGabundo_workit is asac... as long as kernel doesn't crash13:58
BUGabundo_workor you can enable it again13:58
BUGabundo_workit still doesn't work for everybody13:58
BUGabundo_workplus for some really strange reason13:58
BUGabundo_workenableling and disbling net interfaces seems to freeze the system for a few secs (2-3 sec)13:59
asacBUGabundo_work: freezes are driver issues14:14
asaciwl* stuff has that14:14
BUGabundo_workahh14:21
BUGabundo_workbut I get the same even for eth card14:21
BUGabundo_workand my card uses Sky2 driver asac14:22
asacBUGabundo_work: hmm ... does that driver use mac80211 stack?14:33
BUGabundo_workhow can I check asac?14:33
BUGabundo_workogasawara: maco: bug # 30818514:43
BUGabundo_workogasawara: maco: bug #30818514:43
ubottuLaunchpad bug 308185 in linux "traceback on shutdown" [Undecided,New] https://launchpad.net/bugs/30818514:43
asacBUGabundo_work: lsmod | grep 80215:15
BUGabundo_workasac: http://paste.ubuntu.com/8562515:24
asacBUGabundo_work: so you have iwlagn chipset15:30
asac-> 15:14 < asac> iwl* stuff has that15:30
BUGabundo_workfor the wifi, yes15:30
BUGabundo_workbut I said that also the ethnet card would make the same freezes on NM15:30
BUGabundo_workEVEN with wifi turned off15:31
KennethVenkenHello, the person reporting bug 215915 just installed ubuntu 8.10 and isn't experiencing the problem any more, (had the problem with 8.04 beta). Currently the status is set to new. To what should i set the status: Invalid or Fix Released?15:40
ubottuLaunchpad bug 215915 in network-manager "wireless WPA key corrupted on system restart" [Undecided,New] https://launchpad.net/bugs/21591515:40
bdmurraymvo: ping16:34
mvohey bdmurray16:37
bdmurraymvo: Made it back safe?  Where are the release notes fetched when using 'update-manager -d'?16:38
mvobdmurray: http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/dists/jaunty/main/dist-upgrader-all/current/ReleaseAnnouncement16:39
mvobdmurray: that is the default location16:39
bdmurraymvo: and would it use the apt proxy to get that file?16:39
mvobdmurray: hm, it should, let me check16:40
mvobdmurray: yeah, newer version of u-m should honor the apt proxy (and the gconf proxy) for this. not sure when exactly this was added (but I can check the bzr logs)16:41
bdmurraymvo: I'm having an issue getting the release notes with apt-cacher right now16:42
bdmurraymvo: Okay, I got it - it's probably a bug with apt-cacher16:46
mvobdmurray: ok, thanks16:50
bddebianBoo17:35
MrKanisterHi. Can someone please set the bug +308224 to wishlist17:46
imachineHi18:31
imachinei've had issues with building nvidia drivers on updated 8.04 (updated to 8.10)18:31
imachinei'm on x86_64, dkms fails telling me it cannot determine kernel version18:32
imachineI've seen something similar on gentoo forums, and the problem was no asm-i386 in the 'include' dir for kernel sources (or headers)18:32
imachineI've symlinked, no go.18:32
chrisccoulsonimachine - if you're looking for support, then you might like to try the #ubuntu channel18:34
imachinewell, I'm not exactly looking for support.18:34
imachineI'm trying to pinpoint this bug, so we can develop a fix, together.18:34
imachineI've searched forums, generic ones, and found numerous solutions, yet none were able to fix this issue.18:34
imachineit doesn't seem like a simple 'pebkac'18:35
imachine:)18:35
chrisccoulsonis this a bug with the ubuntu packaged nvidia drivers or are you trying to get the drivers from the nvidia website working?18:35
imachinenope, ubuntu packaged.18:35
imachinelike I wrote, dkms fails at building them.18:35
imachineboth using envy or the standard gtk2 driver thingy.18:36
chrisccoulsonok, i probably can't help you with that. the person who would normally be able to help (tseliot) is not here at the moment18:36
imachineok18:36
imachineI see he wrote envy18:36
chrisccoulsonthat's right18:37
imachinethat's cool, envy fails too since it seems a compilation error.18:37
imachineI mean envy etc does everything correctly, only fails later on, during the build itself.18:37
imachinehttp://pastebin.com/m632026718:38
imachinethis is what envy spews18:38
imachinehttp://pastebin.com/m1fb153eb and heere's the make.log18:39
thekornI'm sure there are bugreports about this issue somewhere on launchpad18:40
thekornlet me try to find one18:40
imachineI've found it too18:41
imachine(well some of it)18:41
imachinebut not much solutions.18:41
imachineI've seen the most informative on gentoo forums.18:41
imachinehowever their fix (the asm-i386) didn't quite help.18:41
imachinemaybe I'm missing some build packages?18:42
imachineor have one too many, conflicting?18:42
thekornsorry, I think I can't help you further, because I don't find the bug I was searching for18:48
imachine#18:49
imachine*** Unable to determine the target kernel version. ***18:49
imachinethat's the line you'd find the report by18:49
imachinehttp://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?pid=328232#p328232 some more info here19:01
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JugglerLKRhi20:56
JugglerLKRanyone here?20:56
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danage1i'm getting kernel panics (caps lock blinking) on a thinkpad x61s that is otherwise working fine. my suspect is ath9k. any quick commands that i could run/logs to check for a first debugß22:03
danage1upon second thought, it could also be virtualbox22:03
LaserJockbdmurray: around?22:05
bdmurrayLaserJock: indeed22:05
LaserJockbdmurray: is there any bug policy for teams to sort of opt-out of triage?22:06
LaserJockor perhaps opt-out of parts of triage22:06
bdmurrayNot that I know of22:07
LaserJocksome of the general triage policies aren't fitting what I'm trying to do so well and I'd rather not have people (me, the team, and triagers) waste time22:07
LaserJockright now the only problem is people marking bugs as invalid due to inactivity22:08
LaserJockwhen they get marked Invalid they drop off the "radar"22:09
bdmurrayFrom what state to Invalid?22:09
LaserJockusually Incomplete I think22:09
LaserJockthe most common case is a triager does a "Is this bug still affecting you?" then some time later another triagers marks it Invalid because of a lack of response22:10
LaserJockwhich I know makes sense from a general perspective, but I'm looking at having to go through ~ 150 Invalid bugs looking for good bugs22:11
bdmurrayI'd be interested to find out what makes a good bug and modifying the instructions for bug to Incomplete if they can be general cased.22:12
LaserJockwhat makes a good bug is having enough info to try to reproduce the bug22:12
LaserJocki.e. they gave some steps22:12
LaserJockor described what happened22:13
LaserJockI don't like having bugs marked as Invalid before we confirm that 1) we can't confirm it or 2) it's not a real bug22:14
calcLaserJock: in many cases the 'is this bug still affecting you?' is asked because the user didn't give enough information to begin with or its generally not reproducible22:15
calcLaserJock: so if the user also doesn't respond to the question then its no longer known to be reproducible by anyone at all22:16
LaserJockcalc: that's not my experience22:16
LaserJockmost often triagers don't even attempt to reproduce22:16
LaserJockand demand stuff from the reporter that I feel is not required to look into the bug22:17
LaserJockI want triagers to attempt to reproduce before closing22:17
calcLaserJock: demand what kind of stuff? i usually ask for an example file showing the problem (for OOo)22:17
hggdh_LaserJock, yes, I have seen it happen22:17
LaserJockif they can't reproduce and it looks like a one-off fine22:17
calcsince the majority of the time i can't reproduce users bugs just from what little they report initially22:18
calcbut i have also seen crack triagers as well22:18
LaserJockbut I'd say a majority of my bugmail is from triagers closing my bugs for no good reason22:18
LaserJockand it makes it difficult for me because I have to go "fix" bugs22:18
* calc has had the same problems at times22:19
calcsome people close bugs mistakenly that are upstream... because they are upstream22:19
LaserJockat the point the "noise" is pretty high22:19
bdmurrayHave you documented how to triage the packages you are talking about?22:19
LaserJockbdmurray: no, but I shouldn't have to22:20
LaserJockthey're just general packages22:20
LaserJockabout 30 or so of them, mostly in Main but some in Universe as well22:20
LaserJockmy concern is that I'm losing info due to triaging, whereas I should be *gaining* info from triaging efforts22:21
LaserJockI realize that a lot of the problem would be sorted if we got to bugs faster, and triagers are just doing what they're told/trained to do22:22
LaserJockbut I just don't see us getting to these bugs much faster  in the immediate future so I'd rather not lose the info22:23
LaserJockso I was wondering if there were any good ideas from the bug gurus :-)22:24
hggdhLaserJock, what packages are you being hit on?22:25
LaserJockthey're random ones22:25
calcLaserJock: would an in-between status be useful for closing and only allow invalid/wontfix for bugsquad/maintainers or something like that, of course i don't know if that would be usable22:25
LaserJockbut I focus on Edubuntu and Science packages so that's where I see it22:25
hggdhcould you give us some examples?22:26
hggdhof bugs22:26
LaserJocksure22:26
bdmurrayLaserJock: earlier you said 'demand stuff from the reporter that I feel is not required' which leads me to believe that documenting what you do think is useful for those packages would be helpful.  I also think there could be a general clearer policy on 'try as hard as possible' to recreate the bug before moving a bug from New -> Incomplete.22:26
LaserJockhggdh: bug #24161022:27
ubottuLaunchpad bug 241610 in kino "When russian language is turned on, kino UI stays Engliish" [Undecided,Invalid] https://launchpad.net/bugs/24161022:27
calcLaserJock: well they could have checked if it still affecting eg intrepid but not reporting bugs correctly does cause problems in many cases22:28
LaserJockbdmurray: the problem is that it's not a package-specific thing. I mean I can write up a doc for each one that says "please reproduce before closing" but I don't know that'd help all that much22:28
* calc thinks that firefox apport plugin needs writing sooner than later22:28
calcand/or completely turn off reporting of bugs to regular packages in the web interface22:28
hggdhgood example, LaserJock... the reporter does state what is needed to reproduce the issue22:29
calchggdh: however using this as an example if the triager noted it did not affect current release they would have to somehow test all releases or ask the user that questions22:29
calcer question22:29
LaserJocka borderline example is bug #9529222:30
ubottuLaunchpad bug 95292 in qcad "Qcad crashes in use after few minutes" [Medium,Invalid] https://launchpad.net/bugs/9529222:30
calci often get bug reports still on dapper, etc many times without any apport info22:30
LaserJockit's not a great bug, but it's something I want to keep around22:30
hggdhcalc, I agree. But the reporter did not state the versions of Ubuntu and Kino, and the closer -- I guess, just went for "too old, let's close it"22:30
hggdhLaserjock, a question, if you do not mind: when would a bug be "too old to consider". I understand this is a rather loaded question22:31
calchggdh: i agree on the it should have been tested which it appears not to have been, but we have a huge percentage of drive by bug submitters who don't respond to any questions at all, even truely important ones22:31
LaserJockI don't understand why bug #125326 was closed22:32
calchggdh: which probably has jaded our triagers22:32
ubottuLaunchpad bug 125326 in qcad "dimension location" [Undecided,Invalid] https://launchpad.net/bugs/12532622:32
LaserJockhggdh: there is no such thing as a bug too old22:32
calcwith low quality submissions of bugs, submitters who never respond to bugs, triagers probably often don't feel like putting too much time into an individual bug22:32
* calc personally tries to reproduce anything he can, but when that doesn't happen it often eventually ends up closed invalid since the submitter never responds to any questions at all22:33
LaserJockgenerally for me, 1) a bug can't be too old and 2) a reporter shouldn't need to respond to keep a bug open22:33
LaserJockbut like I said before, I totally realize that some packages like firefox, OO.o, etc. have to have a different view22:34
LaserJockI'm just not sure one-size-fits-all triaging is a great idea22:35
danage1LaserJock: yes there is22:35
calcLaserJock: well if the quality of a bug report is so bad that you really can't figure out what the submitter is trying to say (for example) and can't reproduce the bug (and you have tried) and the submitter never responds then yes i believe in the general case the bug should be closed invalid22:35
hggdhthe way I see it, we need to have base rules (that will apply if no exception is requested); but we should also cater for exceptions...22:35
hggdhwhich is the base rule ^^22:36
calcthe qcad crashing example is a good example for the wrong reason22:36
LaserJockcalc: agreed, but that's based on the bug reports merits, not on whether the reporter responds22:36
calcif it doesn't constantly crash then the triager wouldn't be able to do anything with that bug anyway since the user didn't attach the needed crash dump, etc22:36
LaserJockI don't want people closing bugs because somebody doesn't respond regardless of whether the bug has useful info22:36
calcasking if it is still reproducible is the wrong question but the user never responded at all so probably wouldn't have submitted a crash report either22:37
LaserJocksome of these bugs are *very* old, some of the reporters probably aren't even using Ubuntu anymore22:37
calcah yea the qcad bug is pretty old22:37
calcbut the quality of the qcad bug itself isn't high enough that i would consider it useful to keep open22:38
calcqcad crashes... doing what exactly, no info, no crash report, etc22:38
LaserJockI'd probably close it22:38
LaserJockbut *I* want to close it22:38
LaserJockhaving it disappear before I get a chance to look at everything just makes my life harder22:38
greg-gLaserJock: the new self-appointed bug closer for the majority of bugs in LP.  Get to work!   ;)22:39
LaserJockqcad is pretty buggy, period. I want to talk to upstream so I want to gather together all our qcad bugs, look at what's common, etc.22:39
calcLaserJock: are the appointed maintainer of qcad? otherwise anyone in core should be able to close (i would think) but you make sorta a good point in that i think as well that only people who have upload rights or maybe more restrictive than that should be able to close bugs as invalid or wontfix22:40
calcLaserJock: i meant to ask 'are you'22:40
LaserJockcalc: there are no appointed maintainers22:40
LaserJockfor almost all the packages I'm talking about22:40
calcLaserJock: so why did you think only you should be able to close the bug instead of pedro?22:40
* calc must be confused about something22:40
LaserJockcalc: no, that's a good question22:41
Hobbseei don't think it's a case of "only i should close these bugs"22:41
LaserJockit's sort of a sticky point of Ubuntu maintainership style22:41
Hobbseeit's more of a "only people who are clued up and DTRT should close these bugs"22:41
LaserJockHobbsee: basically22:41
LaserJockI'm not saying I have to do it because I'm the only one that should deal with qcad22:42
LaserJockbut I want people who are gonna put some effort into it dealing with the bugs22:42
LaserJockmaintaining packages is difficult, and it's made more difficult when people who may not know the whole story are closing bugs22:43
greg-gso a general raising of consciousness?22:43
LaserJockI'd rather not have to send an email to ubuntu-bugsquad every time I want to do something22:44
LaserJocki.e. get an overview of qcad bugs22:44
greg-ghowever that would be done (limiting "invalid" to bugcontrol, something else)22:44
LaserJockhmm22:44
LaserJockI don't think so much that22:44
LaserJockas I don't think a person can really know enough about everything22:44
LaserJockbut more of a "don't touch it unless you're willing to "own" it"22:45
greg-gright22:45
greg-ghmmmm22:45
LaserJockI don't like people closing bugs who are obviously just running through a list closing things as fast as they can22:45
greg-gkinda goes against the idea of "anyone can help with triaging LP bugs, no memberships required"  not saying that is bad, just thinking out loud.22:46
LaserJockthey're not taking the time to look at the bug, see if they can reproduce it, see if there are other similar bugs22:46
LaserJockyes, I think it sort of does that22:46
LaserJockI'd much rather see team triage groups than an Ubuntu-wide triaging team22:46
macogreg-g: every now and then i'm like "i dont care if you know nothing about how it works. you speak $language_i_don't_speak, so *please* translate it to English"22:47
greg-gLaserJock: like the desktop bugs team? so then a new "science bugs team" or something?22:48
LaserJockgreg-g: well, you're gonna get me burnt at the stake22:48
greg-g:)22:48
LaserJockI think bugsquad should disappear basically22:48
LaserJockand that triaging should be incorporated into the relevant development teams22:48
macohehe had LjL translating an italian bug reporter real-time in here yesterday :P22:48
* greg-g lights LaserJock on fire22:48
LaserJockso similar to if a person wants to package, the "attach" on to a development team as a triager22:49
LaserJock*they22:49
calcLaserJock: have a team per cell i guess?22:49
greg-gLaserJock: that could be an interesting way of doing things: you get involved with a package or set of packages, not Ubuntu as a whole.22:49
* calc doesn't know if 'cell' concept is well known yet22:49
greg-goh yeah, the cell idea... I need to read up on those notes22:50
LaserJockcalc: is that the reorganized archive?22:50
calcLaserJock: yes22:50
LaserJockthen yeah22:50
calcand each subsection is its on cell more fine-grained than main/universe currently is22:50
calcmaybe not a lot more fine-grained as its not done yet22:50
LaserJockI think having people join up to a cell as a triager would be better than the current "mile wide, inch deep" approach22:50
* greg-g nods22:51
LaserJockthere does need to be some generalists22:51
Hobbseesnowflakes!22:51
LaserJockwe need a QA team that can support development teams in making good triaging practices/polices and makes sure things don't fall through cracks for non-seeded packages22:52
LaserJockbut those would probably be people who have had pretty extensive experience within a triage team22:53
crimsuntriaging doesn't _gain_ you info, jordan. that's a misperception.23:01
crimsuntriaging makes it possible for people to get to the important bugs more quickly; it doesn't realise a net gain or anything.23:02
greg-gLaserJock: just so you know, I like this idea, and it should be revisited when the cells are implemented, I think.23:02
crimsunfor that purpose, triagers need to prioritise, so quite a bit of info will be lost.23:02
LaserJockcrimsun: well, it quite often will gain you info, but it sure should lose info that you want23:02
crimsunshouldn't*?23:02
macowas about to ask that23:02
LaserJockyes23:02
LaserJocki.e. triaging should get you missing info23:03
LaserJockand not lose the info you want to keep23:03
crimsunthen you've moved beyond triaging23:03
macoto diagnosis?23:03
crimsuntriaging is a first step; it's not the entire process.23:03
crimsuni.e., you wouldn't call surgery triaging23:03
LaserJockthey I say get rid of triaging then, it's mostly useless to the developer23:04
greg-gI would call surgery devel/coding, but finding where/what the issue is would be triaging23:04
LaserJocknot to sound insensitive, but I can "triage" better on my own thanks23:04
LaserJockwhen I have to re-"triage" it make my life more difficult23:05
bdmurraywhen you get to it right? ;-)23:05
LaserJockbdmurray: *exactly*23:05
LaserJockI may be very slow, but I'll get there23:05
crimsunso have you actually approached the triager(s) in question?23:05
LaserJockcrimsun: no, because as far as I know they're just doing what they're told23:05
calctriaging of a bug should get enough info to be able to reproduce the bug outside of the original submitters machine23:06
LaserJockI don't want to start a dev/triager flame war23:06
crimsunso stop assuming and ask.23:06
calcnot solve the bug itself23:06
LaserJockcrimsun: hence why I'm here23:06
calcsolving the bug would be the surgeons job in the analogy23:06
calcah i see greg-g already said that above23:06
* greg-g nods at calc 23:06
* calc had been away dealing with his son23:06
* maco fears a flamewar coming on23:06
crimsunfrankly i see nothing particularly insensitive about the way javier has done his "job"23:06
LaserJockI did assume that the bugs that got marked as Invalid were done correctly according to current SOP23:06
LaserJockso I'm wondering about what to do about that23:07
crimsuni'm sure there are better examples23:07
LaserJockcrimsun: I'm sure there are, I just having waded through the ~150 Invalid bugs to find them23:07
calcmaco: we're all civil (i think) no need for a flamewar ;-)23:07
crimsuni'm not particularly civil, and because i'm not a member, i'm not bound by any CoC.23:08
macocrimsun: you havent signed the CoC/23:08
maco?23:08
greg-gLaserJock: my only question is, is this an edge case.  The case being: A bug that is reported by someone with some of the required information, someone asks a "piddly" question, then 60 days later it is closed due to no response. You are assuming that bug can become a "good bug report" without further input from the reporter while others are assuming it can't (or is much harder).23:08
calccrimsun: eh you're not even a member anymore?23:08
LaserJockfrom my perspective I don't see how "triaging" is helping me any, and in fact it's making it harder23:08
LaserJockgreg-g: it's happening to me more often then not23:09
crimsunLaserJock: do you have a list of bugs that you'd like everyone to stay away from, including the rest of core-dev?23:09
crimsuns/bugs/source packages/23:09
macocalc: he never went through the "become a member" process...had it automatically when in motu, but he's not motu anymore23:09
greg-gLaserJock: ok. But you probably only watch a subset of packages and thus might have a slightly skewed view23:09
calcmaco: ah ok23:09
LaserJockcrimsun: I don't want core-dev to stay away particularly23:09
calcdon't you sign the CoC to be a Ubuntero?23:10
LaserJockgreg-g: almost certainly23:10
macocalc: yeah, LP says crimsun is an ubuntero23:10
greg-gLaserJock: which is why you asked, at first, if some packages could opt-out, which would makes sense in your case.23:10
macocrimsun: dude, you did sign the CoC23:10
LaserJockgreg-g: I fully acknowledge my team is probably a corner-case23:10
calcof course crimsun is civil anyway so its not much of an issue23:10
* calc hugs crimsun 23:10
macohaha23:10
crimsunmaco: of course i signed it when i joined lp, which is when i was an ubuntu-dev member. it doesn't apply now.23:11
macowell the speed of the conversation at one point was enough to make it seem like it was becoming heated23:11
LaserJockif triagers are just flipping bits but not doing much harm I'm ok23:11
macocrimsun: er...pretty sure you dont unsign the CoC23:11
crimsunmaco: revocation.23:11
LaserJockbut I'm just getting more and more bug closings which then means they drop off my package report23:11
crimsunLaserJock: of course that's the intent, but flipping bits is precisely the issue here, no?23:11
macocrimsun: i think he just wants to avoid flips to invalid23:12
LaserJockcrimsun: flipping certain bits is more of a problem than others23:12
macoor won'tfix23:12
LaserJockif people are setting Importance, fine, it's useless but it's not getting in the way23:12
LaserJockif bugs drop off of +packagereport then I've got a problem23:12
crimsuni'd argue that missetting importance is a big deal23:12
macocrimsun: idk...i choose which bugs to try to fix based on my skills, not on the importance setting23:13
greg-geither way, lets not compound the issue23:13
crimsuni use all the fields when i deal with audio bugs, so if the priority bits are misset, then i have to reset them23:13
LaserJockcrimsun: that's sort of my point23:13
LaserJockfor me Importance isn't ... important23:13
LaserJockbut for you it is, so obviously it's hard to work from a common set up triage policies23:14
crimsunLaserJock: right, so what could be proposed is that the general bugcontrol team not touch any bugs affecting x, y, z source packages23:14
LaserJocks/up/of/23:14
LaserJockwell, that's not a great solution, but perhaps possible23:15
macoi guess for people with the skills to fix most anything they come across, Importance is a determining factor. for noobie coders its not :P23:15
crimsunit doesn't have much to do with coding ability, maco23:15
crimsunit's the ability to prioritise bug reports23:15
LaserJockright23:16
LaserJockit depends a lot on how many bugs you're getting, etc.23:16
crimsunLaserJock: what's a better resolution? growing the -science or edubuntu bug triaging teams?23:16
macocrimsun: i mean, when someone's going to *fix* something. if they know that source package well and are a good programmer, the importance can probably determine what they work on. if your skills are limited, you just fix whatever you can, regardless of importance setting23:16
LaserJockmost of the packages I deal with have < 10 bugs so it's not a big deal23:16
LaserJockcrimsun: well, I was thinking trying to get triagers to pay attention a bit more would help23:17
LaserJockor having a policy of trying to reproduce before closing23:17
crimsuncertainly, that goes without saying.23:18
crimsunof course, if the bug summary is "qcad is broken" with nothing else, ...23:18
LaserJockright, that's why I said that bug was borderline23:19
LaserJockI can understand somebody closing that23:19
LaserJockbut quite a few have had at least enough info to attempt to reproduce23:19
LaserJockand nobody has23:19
LaserJockand a developer hasn't made any comment23:19
LaserJocketc.23:19
LaserJockit's just a couple of form responses and it's closed23:20
LaserJockand then I get harrased about how Ubuntu sucks at taking care of bugs23:20
crimsunso perhaps a _better_ framework is appropriate, like providing a utility to automate installing the affected binary package(s) in a chroot/vm23:20
LaserJockthat would probably be handy23:21
crimsun(not everyone will have sbuild or pbuilder installed, but i don't see why the general bugcontrol team can't move toward that)23:21
macocrimsun: and even if they have pbuilder, they might not know how to use it ;)23:22
macoyou're going to tease me about not knowing "pbuilder build" anyway, so i might as well say it23:22
LaserJockI just don't like losing info for essentially no gain23:22
LaserJockit doesn't hurt to have the bugs open until a dev closes them23:23
macoso maybe bug control doesnt close bugs in any method other than duplicate?23:23
crimsunit also doesn't hurt to close the bug if it's not in a supported ubuntu release23:23
LaserJockcrimsun: sure it does23:23
bdmurrayIt does if you have a package with hundreds of bugs and it is hard to find useful ones23:24
macocrimsun: it might still exist23:24
LaserJockwe don't know if that bug *does* affect a supported relese23:24
LaserJockbdmurray: right, but I don't have any of those23:24
crimsunmaco: it might. it won't matter in warty, hoary, or edgy.23:24
LaserJockbdmurray: I fully agree that it's important for Firefox, linux, Xorg, OOo, etc.23:24
crimsunor feisty23:25
LaserJocka lot of my packages don't change that often23:25
crimsun. if it's reproducible in gutsy, hardy, intrepid, jaunty, then obviously we care.23:25
LaserJockso the same exact version can be in multiple releases23:25
LaserJockbut unless somebody *tries* to reproduce we learn nothing23:25
crimsunand yet that version can be a red herring, because sometimes it's something like wxwidgets that's the real culprit.23:26
macoif it's reported in Feisty, it might still exist23:26
LaserJockcrimsun: yep, very true23:26
LaserJockso investiation is needed23:26
crimsunmaco: yes, it _might_. move past that. i've already stated that it needs to be reproducible.23:26
LaserJockbut investigation *won't* happen if people keep closing the bugs23:26
crimsunso we need to set down when to mark bugs as invalid23:27
crimsun(not that many of us don't already have a decent grasp, but for sake of discussion)23:27
LaserJockI'd like to, but I'm uncertain if we can come up with a archive-wide policy on that :(23:28
crimsunsure we can23:28
crimsunobviously different cells will have their own policies23:28
LaserJockthat supersede the archive-wide policy?23:29
macoyeah23:29
crimsunthe onus has always been on the triager to check for conflicting policies23:29
macocrimsun: do we trust all of us?23:29
crimsunnot to mention that policies specific to source packages (logically extensible to cells) override archive-wide by their very definitions..23:30
crimsune.g., ubiquity, alsa-driver, udev, linux23:30
LaserJockcrimsun: right, but there seems to be some resistance to making it more difficult on triagers23:31
macohey wait i have a triage question real quick23:31
Hobbseethere will be no questions!  :P23:31
LaserJockand I'd think "check to see which cell this package is in and read up on their policies" would be making it more difficult23:31
crimsuntriaging is not supposed to be difficult; it's supposed to require due-digilence.23:31
macoif a bug *could* be in linux or *could* be in acpi, should i just mark it as affecting both and let the people that know those packages deal with squabbling over whose bug it is?23:31
Hobbseemaco: that's the usual idea23:31
LaserJockcrimsun: well, I agree to that23:32
macoHobbsee: ok then. the commenters on the bug can stop squabbling over it in that case :P23:32
crimsunmaco: err, definitely don't. you'll earn the wrath of both tim, ben, and myself.23:32
crimsunand if you happen to do that with a gnome package, you'll earn the wrath of seb, too.23:32
LaserJockpersonally I feel like marking Invalid should be after: 1) clearly not a bug 2) reporter can't reproduce 3) at least one other person can't reproduce23:33
ubottuError: Launchpad bug 2 could not be found23:33
crimsunmaco: i.e., until lp gains the ability to remove a task (RSN, i hear), just change the affected source package23:33
crimsunLaserJock: then the burden shifts to (1), which is not always obvious23:34
LaserJockcrimsun: no, but I don't find as many problems there23:34
crimsuni.e., intractible for certain source package combinations(cells)23:34
crimsunintractable*23:34
LaserJockcrimsun: it's primarily 3 that I have issue with23:35
crimsunmaco: the reasoning is that even when marked invalid, multiple tasks still spam inboxes.23:35
LaserJockcrimsun: I think "clearly" is a bit ambiguous but certainly not-a-bug is one of the uses for Invalid23:35
crimsunagain, not so much an issue when tasks can be removed23:36
macook then...23:36
crimsunLaserJock: yes, agreed23:36
LaserJockmaco: the problem is when the one task is marked "invalid" as it's not the right package, the team is still sub'd to the bug and so gets all the bugmail from it23:37
LaserJocknot fun23:37
macoso if a mem= *and* an acpi= kernel parameter both get rid of the bug's symptoms, each with their own quirky side-effects...is that an acpi bug or a kernel bug?23:37
crimsunthe latter.23:39
crimsunit's almost _never_ an acpi bug23:40
crimsun(at least in the age of jaunty)23:40
macoits in intrepid23:40
crimsunmaco: same as for jaunty23:40
macook23:40
crimsunbdmurray: i think LaserJock's proposal regarding extending the requirements to mark a bug as invalid are sensible. can the docs be amended, or does the point warrant further discussion?23:41
bdmurraycrimsun: looking at the scrollback - are your referring to the 1) 2) 3) comment?23:43
crimsunbdmurray: well, all23:44
bdmurraycrimsun: I guess I'm not clear which requirements we are talking about then23:46
maco-_- any of you using irssi on intrepid?23:47
crimsunbdmurray: requiring that at least two people confirm that they cannot reproduce the symptoms in the current development version (https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Bugs/HowToTriage#Invalidating)23:47
macodid /away break?23:47
nhandlermaco: I am using it on jaunty23:48
LaserJockcrimsun: that's for Invalid?23:48
maconhandler: does /away work?23:48
LaserJockcrimsun: that seems a bit more like a "Fix Released"23:48
crimsunmaco: check your scrollback position23:48
nhandlermaco: Yep, I just tested it23:48
macocrimsun: what?23:48
LaserJockbecause of the "development version"23:49
macoi can't /away since installing intrepid :(23:49
macocrimsun: what does /away have to do with scrolling?23:49
nhandlermaco: You need to specify an away message23:49
macodoh23:49
nhandler/away by itself returns you from being away23:49
macoi could've sworn an empty string was allowed23:49
nhandlermaco: xchat allows it iirc23:50
nhandlerBut irssi does not23:50
crimsunit's not allowed through that client23:50
macook then23:50
crimsunLaserJock: ok, s/development/reported/23:50
LaserJockcrimsun: I'd maybe go for "currently supported version"23:50
LaserJockif you can reproduce it in edgy I really don't care at this point :-)23:51
crimsunok, so we'd shift the work to sru folks. sounds great to me ;)23:51
LaserJockwell, I need to know about stuff I need to SRU23:52
LaserJockjust because something is fixed in Jaunty doesn't mean my work is done unfortunately23:53
crimsuni'm fine w/ "currently supported versions or current development version"23:54
LaserJockme too23:54
crimsunor whatever their actual lp terminology is23:54
seaqhmm but that would mean that for triaging bugs you always would need someone else to try reproduce the bug...23:54
bdmurrayseaq: Only to move a bug from Incomplete to Invalid23:55
LaserJockseaq: generally you want at least 2 people to see the same issue in order to confirm it's a bug23:56
seaqok, so in order to move a bug to invalid we would need to check that the bug is not reproducible in the supported versions. By at least 2 people...23:59

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