> On May 1, 2026, at 9:33 AM, Mads Toftum <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> On Fri, May 01, 2026 at 08:36:42AM -0400, Rich Bowen wrote:
>> I was thinking last night it might be interesting to dig through and figure
>> out what would be a good place for a beginner to get started, or whether
>> there’s some opportunity for cleanup.
>>
>> TL:DR - we have almost 1500 open bugs, most of which are ancient history.
>>
>> Pretty graphs! - http://httpd.rcbowen.com/httpd-open-bugs.html
>>
> Nice work.
> Would be tempting to close out old reports to get rid of some of the
> noise. If not by date, then at least close anything on unsupported
> versions.
Yes, that would be fantastic. I’m never a big fan of bulk-closing tickets based
on age, but there’s *definitely* a lot of stuff in here against modules that
are long-retired, features that no longer exist, and a lot of other ancient
history.
>
>> I suspect that a *bunch* of them are no longer valid. (There are, for
>> example, 3 open bugs against the Win32 MSI Installer)
>>
> I had a quick look at "Critical & Blocker Bugs" - there's a lot of NEW
> reports and perhaps some things that had better gone to users@httpd.
Yeah, there’s a lot of user support stuff in here that isn’t actually a bug
report. There’s also a lot of tickets where someone did the work, fixed a
problem, and asked the reporter for their +1 to close, and then it just sat and
rotted. This kind of stuff is what the AI tools are actually good at, and I’m
going to do some more digging.
—
Rich Bowen
[email protected]