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141 lines
7.0 KiB
Markdown
141 lines
7.0 KiB
Markdown
# Chrome Network Bug Triage
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The Chrome network team uses a two day bug triage rotation. The main goals are
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to identify and label new network bugs, and investigate network bugs when no
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label seems suitable.
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## Responsibilities
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### Required, in rough order of priority:
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* Identify new network bugs on the tracker.
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* Investigate UMA notifications.
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* Investigate recent Internals>Network issues with no subcomponent.
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* Follow up on Needs-Feedback issues for all network components.
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* Identify and file bugs for significant new crashers.
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### Best effort, also in rough priority order:
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* Investigate unowned and owned-but-forgotten net/ crashers.
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* Investigate old bugs.
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* Close obsolete bugs.
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All of the above is to be done on each rotation. These responsibilities should
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be tracked, and anything left undone at the end of a rotation should be handed
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off to the next triager. The downside to passing along bug investigations like
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this is each new triager has to get back up to speed on bugs the previous
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triager was investigating. The upside is that triagers don't get stuck
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investigating issues after their time after their rotation, and it results in a
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uniform, predictable two day commitment for all triagers.
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## Details
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### Required:
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* Identify new network bugs on the bug tracker. All Unconfirmed issues filed
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during your triage rotation should be scanned, and, for suspected network
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bugs, a network component assigned and an about:net-internals log requested.
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A triager is responsible for looking at bugs reported from noon PST / 3:00 pm
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EST of the last day of the previous triager's rotation until the same time on
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the last day of their rotation. Once you've assigned a bug to a component,
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mark it Untriaged, so other triagers sorting through Unconfirmed bugs won't
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see it.
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* For desktop bugs, ask for a net-internals log and give the user a link to
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https://sites.google.com/a/chromium.org/dev/for-testers/providing-network-details
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(A link there appears on about:net-internals, for easy reference) for
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instructions. On mobile, point them to about:net-export. In either case,
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attach the Needs-Feedback label.
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* Investigate UMA notifications.
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* UMA notifications ("chirps") are alerts based on UMA histograms that are
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sent to chrome-network-debugging@google.com. Triagers should subscribe
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to this list. When an alert fires, the triager should determine if the
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alert looks to be real and file a bug with the appropriate label if so.
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Note that if no label more specific than Internals>Network is appropriate,
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the responsibility remains with the triager to continue investigating the
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bug, as above.
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* The triager is responsible for looking at any notification previous
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triagers did not, so when an issue is investigated, the person who did
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so should respond to chrome-network-debugging@google.com with a short
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email, describing their conclusions. Future triagers can then use the
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fact an alert was responded to as an indicator of which of them need
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to be followed up on. Alerts fired before the beginning of the
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previous triager's rotation may be ignored.
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* Investigate [Unconfirmed / Untriaged Internals>Network issues that don't belong to a more specific network component](https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/list?can=2&q=component%3DInternals%3ENetwork+status%3AUnconfirmed,Untriaged+-label:Needs-Feedback&sort=-modified),
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prioritizing the most recent issues, ones with the most responsive reporters,
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and major crashers. This will generally take up the majority of your time as
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triager. Continue digging until you can do one of the following:
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* Mark it as *WontFix* (working as intended, obsolete issue) or a
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duplicate.
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* Mark it as a feature request.
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* Mark it as Needs-Feedback.
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* Remove the Internals>Network component, replacing it with at least one
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more specific network component or non-network component. Replacing the
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Internals>Network component gets it off the next triager's radar, and
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in front of someone more familiar with the relevant code. Note that
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due to the way the bug report wizard works, a lot of bugs incorrectly end
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up with the network component.
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* The issue is assigned to an appropriate owner, and make sure to mark it
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as "assigned" so the next triager doesn't run into it.
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* If there is no more specific component for a bug, it should be
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investigated by the triager until we have a good understanding of the
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cause of the problem, and some idea how it should be fixed, at which point
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its status should be set to Available. Future triagers should ignore bugs
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with this status, unless investigating stale bugs.
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* Follow up on [Needs-Feedback issues for all components owned by the network stack team](https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/list?q=component%3AInternals%3ENetwork+-component%3AInternals%3ENetwork%3EDataProxy+-component%3AInternals%3ENetwork%3EDataUse+-component%3AInternals%3ENetwork%3EVPN+Needs%3DFeedback&sort=-modified).
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* Remove label once feedback is provided. Continue to investigate, if
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the previous section applies.
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* If the Needs-Feedback label has been present for one week, ping the
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reporter.
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* Archive after two weeks with no feedback, telling users to file a new
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bug if they still have the issue, with the requested information, unless
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the reporter indicates they'll provide data when they can. In that case,
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use your own judgment for further pings or archiving.
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* Identify significant new browser process
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[crashers](https://goto.google.com/chromecrash) that are potentially network
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related. You should look at crashes for the most recent canary that has at
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least a day of data, and if there's been a dev or beta release from the start
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of the last triager's shift to the start of yours, you should also look at
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that once it has at least a day of data. Recent releases available
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[here](https://omahaproxy.appspot.com/). If both dev and beta have been
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released in that period, just look at beta. File Internals>Network bugs on
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the tracker when new crashers are found. Bugs should only be filed for
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crashes that are both in the top 100 for each release and occurred for more
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than two users.
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* Make sure to check for new crashes on all platforms, not just Windows.
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### Best Effort (As you have time):
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* Investigate old bugs, and bugs associated with Internals>Network
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subcomponents.
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* Investigate unowned and owned but forgotten net/ crashers that are still
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occurring (As indicated by
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[go/chromecrash](https://goto.google.com/chromecrash)), prioritizing frequent
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and long standing crashers.
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* Close obsolete bugs.
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See [bug-triage-suggested-workflow.md](bug-triage-suggested-workflow.md) for
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suggested workflows.
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See [bug-triage-labels.md](bug-triage-labels.md) for labeling tips for network
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and non-network bugs.
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See [crash-course-in-net-internals.md](crash-course-in-net-internals.md) for
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some help on getting started with about:net-internals debugging.
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