+1 Yes please!

2015-10-19 16:09 GMT+08:00 Alexander Rojas <[email protected]>:

> +1 Yes please!
>
> > On 15 Oct 2015, at 10:11, Bernd Mathiske <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > Proposal: in extension of today’s limited two-level (epic, task)
> approach, make full use of expressive power already available in JIRA to
> provide more structure for larger projects to facilitate planning,
> tracking, and reporting. This will facilitate dynamically planning of
> sub-projects, which will make us more agile.
> >
> > The general idea is to use links between epics to provide a recursive
> hierarchical structure, with which one can span trees or DAGs of
> arbitrarily large projects. This does not mean that we want to plan
> everything in minute detail before starting to work. On the contrary.
> >
> > You can start anywhere in the eventual tree and express part of the
> overall effort, maybe say a short epic with a few task tickets. Then you
> can LATER make this epic a dependency for a larger effort.
> >
> > Conversely, you can subdivide a task in the epic into subtasks. However,
> this does not mean that you have to literally use the feature “subtask” in
> JIRA for this. Instead, staying recursive in our JIRA grammar, so to speak,
> convert the task to an epic and then create ordinary tasks in it to
> represent subtasks.
> >
> > Now the task cannot be a task in its parent epic anymore. We fix this by
> putting in a link of type "blocks" to the parent. When you then look at the
> parent, it still holds a number of tasks, and it has one dependency on an
> epic (to which you can add more).
> >
> > Thus our dependency tree can grow in all directions. You can also
> rearrange and update it in any shape or form if necessary.
> >
> > Overall, we only use two JIRA elements: epics and tasks (of different
> flavors such as bugs, improvements, etc.). Tasks are the leaves, everything
> else is an epic. Review requests only ever happen for tasks.
> >
> > The epics are there to provide a high level view and to allow dynamic
> (“more agilish”, non-waterfall) planning. Granted, you’d also use a tree if
> you did waterfall. The difference is that you’d spec it all out at once. My
> observation is that not too few of us do exactly this - outside JIRA - and
> then try to remember what tickets are where in their tree. Let’s make this
> part of JIRA!
> >
> > Why not use labels? Because they are in a flat name space and we want to
> represent tree structure. How would you know that a label denotes a
> subproject of another label? By memorizing or by depicting a tree outside
> JIRA. Why not use components? Same problem as with labels: flat name space.
> We can use labels and components these for many other purposes. Separate
> discussion.
> >
> > Aren’t we doing this already? Probably. I have not checked thoroughly.
> There may occasionally be epics that link to other epics. If so, I would
> merely like to encourage us to use this powerful expressive means more
> often.
> >
> > Bernd
> >
>
>


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