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229 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
229 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
# Chrome Network Bug Triage : Suggested Workflow
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[TOC]
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## Identifying unlabeled network bugs on the tracker
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* Look at new unconfirmed bugs since noon PST on the last triager's rotation.
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[Use this issue tracker
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query](https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/list?q=status%3Aunconfirmed&sort=-id&num=1000).
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* Read the title of the bug.
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* If a bug looks like it might be network related, middle click (or
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command-click on OSX) to open it in a new tab.
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* If a user provides a crash ID for a crasher for a bug that could be
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net-related, look at the crash stack at
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[go/crash](https://goto.google.com/crash), and see if it looks to be network
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related. Be sure to check if other bug reports have that stack trace, and
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mark as a dupe if so. Even if the bug isn't network related, paste the stack
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trace in the bug, so no one else has to look up the crash stack from the ID.
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* If there's just a blank form and a crash ID, just ignore the bug.
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* If network causes are possible, ask for a net-internals log (If it's not a
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browser crash) and attach the most specific internals-network label that's
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applicable. If there isn't an applicable narrower component, a clear owner
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for the issue, or there are multiple possibilities, attach the
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Internals>Network component and proceed with further investigation.
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* If non-network causes also seem possible, attach those components as well.
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## Investigate UMA notifications
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For each alert that fires, determine if it's a real alert and file a bug if so.
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* Don't file if the alert is coincident with a major volume change. The volume
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at a particular date can be determined by hovering the mouse over the
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appropriate location on the alert line.
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* Don't file if the alert is on a graph with very low volume (< ~200 data
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points); it's probably noise, and we probably don't care even if it isn't.
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* Don't file if the graph is really noisy (but eyeball it to decide if there is
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an underlying important shift under the noise).
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* Don't file if the alert is in the "Known Ignorable" list:
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* SimpleCache on Windows
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* DiskCache on Android.
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## Investigating component=Internals>Network bugs
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* Note that you may want to investigate Needs-Feedback bugs first, as
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that may result in some bugs being added to this list.
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* It's recommended that while on triage duty, you subscribe to the
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Internals>Network component (but not its subcomponents). To do this, go
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to the issue tracker and then click "Saved Queries".
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Add a query with these settings:
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* Saved query name: Network Bug Triage
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* Project: chromium
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* Query: component=Internals>Network
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* Subscription options: Notify Immediately
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* Look through unconfirmed and untriaged component=Internals>Network bugs,
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prioritizing those updated within the last week. [Use this issue tracker
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query](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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* If more information is needed from the reporter, ask for it and add the
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Needs-Feedback label.
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* While investigating a new issue, change the status to Untriaged.
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* If a bug is a potential security issue (Allows for code execution from remote
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site, allows crossing security boundaries, unchecked array bounds, etc) mark
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it Type-Bug-Security. If it has privacy implication (History, cookies
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discoverable by an entity that shouldn't be able to do so, incognito state
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being saved in memory or on disk beyond the lifetime of incognito tabs, etc),
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mark it with component Privacy.
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* For bugs that already have a more specific network component, go ahead and
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remove the Internals>Network component to get them off the next triager's
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radar and move on.
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* Try to figure out if it's really a network bug. See common non-network
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components section for description of common components for issues incorrectly
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tagged as Internals>Network.
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* If it's not, attach appropriate labels/components and go no further.
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* If it may be a network bug, attach additional possibly relevant component if
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any, and continue investigating. Once you either determine it's a
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non-network bug, or figure out accurate more specific network components, your
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job is done, though you should still ask for a net-internals dump if it seems
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likely to be useful.
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* Note that Chrome-OS-specific network-related code (Captive portal detection,
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connectivity detection, login, etc) may not all have appropriate more
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specific subcomponents, but are not in areas handled by the network stack
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team. Just make sure those have the OS-Chrome label, and any more specific
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labels if applicable, and then move on.
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* Gather data and investigate.
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* Remember to add the Needs-Feedback label whenever waiting for the user to
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respond with more information, and remove it when not waiting on the
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user.
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* Try to reproduce locally. If you can, and it's a regression, use
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src/tools/bisect-builds.py to figure out when it regressed.
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* Ask more data from the user as needed (net-internals dumps, repro case,
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crash ID from about:crashes, run tests, etc).
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* If asking for an about:net-internals dump, provide this link:
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https://sites.google.com/a/chromium.org/dev/for-testers/providing-network-details.
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Can just grab the link from about:net-internals, as needed.
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* Try to figure out what's going on, and which more specific network component
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is most appropriate.
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* If it's a regression, browse through the git history of relevant files to try
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and figure out when it regressed. CC authors / primary reviewers of any
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strongly suspect CLs.
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* If you are having trouble with an issue, particularly for help understanding
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net-internals logs, email the public net-dev@chromium.org list for help
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debugging. If it's a crasher, or for some other reason discussion needs to
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be done in private, use chrome-network-debugging@google.com. TODO(mmenke):
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Write up a net-internals tips and tricks docs.
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* If it appears to be a bug in the unowned core of the network stack (i.e. no
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subcomponent applies, or only the Internals>Network>HTTP subcomponent
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applies, and there's no clear owner), try to figure out the exact cause.
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## Looking for new crashers
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1. Go to [go/chromecrash](https://goto.google.com/chromecrash).
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2. For each platform, look through the releases for which releases to
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investigate. As per [bug-triage.md](bug-triage.md), this should be the most
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recent canary, the previous canary (if the most recent is less than a day
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old), and any of dev/beta/stable that were released in the last couple of
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days.
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3. For each release, in the "Process Type" frame, click on "browser".
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4. At the bottom of the "Magic Signature" frame, click "limit 1000" (Or reduce
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the limit to 100 first, as that's all the triager needs to look at).
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Reported crashers are sorted in decreasing order of the number of reports for
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that crash signature.
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5. Search the page for *"net::"*.
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6. For each found signature:
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* Ignore signatures that only occur once or twice, as memory corruption can
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easily cause one-off failures when the sample size is large enough. Also
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ignore crashers that are not in the top 100 for that platform / release.
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* If there is a bug already filed, make sure it is correctly describing the
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current bug (e.g. not closed, or not describing a long-past issue), and
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make sure that if it is a *net* bug, that it is labeled as such.
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* Ignore signatures that only come from one or two client IDs, as individual
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machine malware and breakage can cause one-off failures.
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* Click on the number of reports field to see details of crash. Ignore it
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if it doesn't appear to be a network bug.
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* Otherwise, file a new bug directly from chromecrash.
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* For each bug you file, include the following information:
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* The backtrace. Note that the backtrace should not be added to the
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bug if Restrict-View-Google isn't set on the bug as it may contain
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PII. Filing the bug from the crash reporter should do this
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automatically, but check.
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* The channel in which the bug is seen (canary/dev/beta/stable), and its
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rank among crashers in the channel.
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* The frequency of this signature in recent releases. This information
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is available by:
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1. Clicking on the signature in the "Magic Signature" list
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2. Clicking "Edit" on the dremel query at the top of the page
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3. Removing the "product.version='X.Y.Z.W' AND" string and clicking
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"Update".
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4. Clicking "Limit 1000" in the Product Version list in the
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resulting page (without this, the listing will be restricted to
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the releases in which the signature is most common, which will
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often not include the canary/dev release being investigated).
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5. Choose some subset of that list, or all of it, to include in the
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bug. Make sure to indicate if there is a defined point in the
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past before which the signature is not present.
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As an alternative to the above, you can use [Eric Roman's new crash
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tool](https://ericroman.users.x20web.corp.google.com/www/net-crash-triage/index.html)
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(internal link). Note that it isn't a perfect fit with the triage
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responsibilities, specifically:
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* It's only showing Windows releases; Android, iOS, and WebView are
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usually different, and Mac is sometimes different.
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* The instructions are to look at the latest canary which has a days
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worth of data. If canaries are being pushed fast, that may be more
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than one canary into the past, and hence not visible on the tool.
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* Eric's tool filters based on files in "src/net" rather than looking
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for magic signature's including the string "net::" ("src/net" is
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probably the better filter).
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## Investigating crashers
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* Only investigate crashers that are still occurring, as identified by above
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section. If a search on go/crash indicates a crasher is no longer occurring,
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mark it as WontFix.
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* On Windows, you may want to look for weird dlls associated with the crashes.
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This generally needs crashes from a fair number of different users to reach
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any conclusions.
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* To get a list of loaded modules in related crash dumps, select
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modules->3rd party in the left pane. It can be difficult to distinguish
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between safe dlls and those likely to cause problems, but even if you're
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not that familiar with windows, some may stick out. Anti-virus programs,
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download managers, and more gray hat badware often have meaningful dll
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names or dll paths (Generally product names or company names). If you
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see one of these in a significant number of the crash dumps, it may well
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be the cause.
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* You can also try selecting the "has malware" option, though that's much
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less reliable than looking manually.
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* See if the same users are repeatedly running into the same issue. This can
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be accomplished by search for (Or clicking on) the client ID associated with
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a crash report, and seeing if there are multiple reports for the same crash.
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If this is the case, it may be also be malware, or an issue with an unusual
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system/chrome/network config.
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* Dig through crash reports to figure out when the crash first appeared, and
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dig through revision history in related files to try and locate a suspect CL.
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TODO(mmenke): Add more detail here.
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* Load crash dumps, try to figure out a cause. See
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http://www.chromium.org/developers/crash-reports for more information
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