+1 to James's take
I'd prefer simplicity of implementation over perfection here.
Philip
On 4/20/20 4:08 PM, James Y Knight via llvm-dev wrote:
In a previous discussion, one other suggestion had been to migrate all
the bugzilla bugs to a separate initially-private "bug archive"
repository in github. This has a few benefits:
1. If the migration is messed up, the repo can be deleted, and the
process run again, until we get a result we like.
2. The numbering can be fully-controlled.
Once the bugs are migrated to /some/ github repository, individual
issues can then be "moved" between repositories, and github will
redirect from the movefrom-repository's bug to the target repository's
bug.
We could also just have llvm.org/PR### <http://llvm.org/PR###> be the
url only for legacy bugzilla issue numbers -- and have it use a file
listing the mappings of bugzilla id -> github id to generate the
redirects. (GCC just did this recently for svn revision number
redirections, https://gcc.gnu.org/pipermail/gcc/2020-April/232030.html).
Then we could introduce a new naming scheme for github issue shortlinks.
On Mon, Apr 20, 2020 at 3:50 PM Richard Smith via llvm-dev
<llvm-...@lists.llvm.org <mailto:llvm-...@lists.llvm.org>> wrote:
On Mon, 20 Apr 2020 at 12:31, Tom Stellard via llvm-dev
<llvm-...@lists.llvm.org <mailto:llvm-...@lists.llvm.org>> wrote:
Hi,
I wanted to continue discussing the plan to migrate from
Bugzilla to Github.
It was suggested that I start a new thread and give a summary
of the proposal
and what has changed since it was originally proposed in October.
== Here is the original proposal:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-October/136162.html
== What has changed:
* You will be able to subscribe to notifications for a
specific issue
labels. We have a proof of concept notification system
using github actions
that will be used for this.
* Emails will be sent to llvm-bugs when issues are opened or
closed.
* We have the initial list of labels:
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/labels
== Remaining issue:
* There is one remaining issue that I don't feel we have
consensus on,
and that is what to do with bugs in the existing bugzilla.
Here are some options
that we have discussed:
1. Switch to GitHub issues for new bugs only. Bugs filed in
bugzilla that are
still active will be updated there until they are closed.
This means that over
time the number of active bugs in bugzilla will slowly
decrease as bugs are closed
out. Then at some point in the future, all of the bugs from
bugzilla will be archived
into their own GitHub repository that is separate from the
llvm-project repo.
2. Same as 1, but also create a migration script that would
allow anyone to
manually migrate an active bug from bugzilla to a GitHub issue
in the llvm-project
repo. The intention with this script is that it would be used
to migrate high-traffic
or important bugs from bugzilla to GitHub to help increase the
visibility of the bug.
This would not be used for mass migration of all the bugs.
3. Do a mass bug migration from bugzilla to GitHub and enable
GitHub issues at the same time.
Closed or inactive bugs would be archived into their own
GitHub repository, and active bugs
would be migrated to the llvm-project repo.
Can we preserve the existing bug numbers if we migrate this way?
There are lots of references to "PRxxxxx" in checked in LLVM
artifacts and elsewhere in the world, as well as links to
llvm.org/PRxxxxx <http://llvm.org/PRxxxxx>, and if we can preserve
all the issue numbers this would ease the transition pain
substantially.
The key difference between proposal 1,2 and 3, is when bugs
will be archived from bugzilla
to GitHub. Delaying the archiving of bugs (proposals 1 and 2)
means that we can migrate
to GitHub issues sooner (within 1-2 weeks), whereas trying to
archive bugs during the
transition (proposal 3) will delay the transition for a while
(likely several months)
while we evaluate the various solutions for moving bugs from
bugzilla to GitHub.
The original proposal was to do 1 or 2, however there were
some concerns raised on the list
that having 2 different places to search for bugs for some
period of time would
be very inconvenient. So, I would like to restart this
discussion and hopefully we can
come to some kind of conclusion about the best way forward.
Thanks,
Tom
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