This doc is here to explain the lifecycle of a Beaker ticket. If you have any questions about the workflow of a Beaker ticket, or the stage that it's in, you should be able to answer them here. If not, then please let QE know, and we'll work to answer your question and update this doc, so that we can do this better going forward.
Note that a typical Beaker ticket goes through these states. They can sometimes go in order, but on average, they loop around through the various stages, can cycle a number of times before becoming resolved, and will sometimes skip stages as well.
- Beaker tickets live in the BKR project
- Create a Jira account to interact with them
These are the states that a Beaker ticket goes through before it is picked up for development. Note that this is only for work done by the Beaker team. If there is something you'd like to contribute to, we would appreciate that you go through the development states for tracking purposes, but you can skip directly to the "In Progress" state if you're going to work on a ticket.
The state for newly filed issues. These have not been triaged, and are waiting to be looked at by the team.
The state for blocked issues. These can be blocked by another issue (please link that issue from the ticket if that's the case), or they can be blocked on info needed from another party. If this is the case, please assign the ticket to the person you need info from to move the ticket forward.
This is the state for when a ticket has been triaged, but hasn't yet been estimated for work from someone on the Beaker team, or someone ready to take on the work. Any preliminary information needed to understand the ticket (before investigation) should be gathered before this point.
An accepted ticket that has been estimated should be put into the Ready for Engineering state. This does not necessarily mean that a ticket has been prioritized against other Beaker work, but prioritization should occur by the time the issue has been picked up in a sprint.
Once you're ready to pick up a ticket & work on it, then it should go through these states.
This state is set aside for a Beaker contributor to let others know that they're currently working on a particular issue.
Once a Pull Request (PR) is generated for an issue, the contributor should set the status to Ready for Merge. We do have a github integration setup, so if you've titled your PR correctly (according to our contributor docs), it will be linked from the JIRA ticket.
In the Beaker project, we leave the assignee as the person who wrote the proposed change, so that they know that they have to keep pushing for their code to be merged.
Once your PR is merged, then you can Resolve your ticket.
NOTE that when you do this, you should set the FixedVersion to
BKR.next
The reason that we do this now and not before is that we use this field to autogenerate our release notes. We want to make sure that we capture only work that is in the next release, not work that's intended for it.