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Difference between revisions of "Manipulating RT tickets using commits"

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(Initial paste of Sam's info from doc/procedures.txt)
 
(No difference)

Latest revision as of 19:47, 2 November 2011

The following instructions were written for cvs but also work for Subversion.

To: krbdev@mit.edu
Subject: Important: handling commit interactions with bug database
Message-Id: <20020917204852.4AEFE151FEF@industrial-algebra.mit.edu>
Date: Tue, 17 Sep 2002 16:48:52 -0400 (EDT)
From: hartmans@MIT.EDU (Sam Hartman)

Hi. I've just deployed the integration between the RT bug tracking system and our CVS repository.

Per previous discussion, we're moving to a model where any non-trivial functionality change needs to be accompanied by a ticket open in the bug database. This will allow us to generate better release notes. To accomplish this we have created a syntax for manipulating tickets along with commits. If you are someone who has commit access but is not at MIT your commits MUST create or update a ticket.

To manipulate tickets you add some header lines to the top of your log message. The lines can be of the form header: value or rt-header: value. I'll show them without the rt-prefix.

Updating a ticket

To update a ticket, you include a ticket: or rt-ticket: line in your log. For example:

ticket: 1164

Return errno not retval when getpeername fails.

By default when you update a ticket:

  • the ticket is assigned to you
  • The ticket is closed

If these defaults are not appropriate for your action you can override them; see below.

Creating a ticket

You can also create a ticket at the same time as you commit. All you have to do is use new instead of a ticket number in a ticket line. However you almost certainly want to at least set the subject.

ticket: new
subject: Add AES support

Add an implementation of AES to libk5crypto.

In addition to closing the ticket and marking you as the owner of a ticket, creating a new ticket makes you the requester of the ticket.

Other Things to Change

The following additional commands are supported:

  • subject: changes the subject of ticket
  • status: [open|resolved|new|stalled]
  • owner: [username|nobody]
  • cc: [email address]
  • Component: change component of ticket [krb5-libs etc]
  • Version_Reported:
  • Target_Version:
  • Tags: [enhancement|nochange|noresource|pullup]

You could set version_fixed, but it is wrong to do so.

Also, note that you can update multiple tickets in one log message; updates apply to the most recent ticket: command.