Quoting Joey Hess ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):

> I'm unclear whether you're talking about dealing with all d-i bugs (most
> of them are tagged d-i), or with installation reports too. Having some
> people work on managing our bugs would indeed be quite useful. Some
> examples:
> 
>   - bugs against individual d-i components are not always tagged d-i,
>     and so they don't show up in queries like "bts show tag:d-i" and are
>     easy to miss
>   - bug priorities are often wrong
>   - bugs are reported against pseudo-packages "install" and
>     "installation", or even "boot-floppies" and have to be reassigned to
>     debian-installer where appropriate to be noticed

I would add some bug triage to individual packages:
-sorting bugs for partman-*

> Plus we have 500 or so uncategorised installation reports (on the
> installation-reports pseudo-package). There's a document[1] that
> explains how to categorise them, but it takes a lot of effort to learn
> enough about d-i to become good at this, and then the task soon becomes
> tedious, and few people have managed to do more than a hundred or so
> total. So I think a more accessible way to help with a lower barrier to
> entry is a find idea.

As a first work and provided everyone agrees, I think that closing all
reports pertaining to beta2 and beta3 with just a word pointing to
current daily builds would be good.

It is highly unlikely that these reports currently bring some new
input on nasty things in d-i as beta2 and beta3 are far to differnt
from current d-i (except maybe hardware support for this or
that....but what else other than "please try daily build images" could
be done�?)

If such work is done, it's however important to give very precise
instructions on which image is to be used....so giving an URL of a CD
images (most of the time these are tests with CD images anyway)





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