I'm convinced.

On Tue, Apr 17, 2018 at 10:29 AM, Tim Armstrong <tarmstr...@cloudera.com> wrote:
> I noticed that there's been a trend recently towards reopening old issues
> instead of filing new issues. Not trying to pick on anyone but it seems
> like its worth having a discussion about best practices.
>
> Personally I think reopening JIRAs is often a bad thing for a several
> reasons:
>
> * We don't tend to properly triage the issue to determine if it is actually
> has same root cause as the old one. E.g. the same test fails for two
> completely different reasons.
> * People are tempted to skimp on including diagnostic information.
> * It gets confusing trying to figure out which version the issue was fixed
> in, particularly if the new thing turns out to be a separate issue.
> * The target version, fix version, priority, etc is wrong
> * It automatically ends up on the plate of whoever last fixed it, rather
> than whoever currently has bandwidth. This is particularly bad for anyone
> who has fixed or tried to fix a lot of flaky tests over the last year or
> two (e.g. me).
>
> I'd prefer if we opened new issues by default unless we're really confident
> that it's the same issue. It's much easier to mark issues as duplicates
> than it is to separate out two distinct issues tracked by one JIRA. Even if
> we're pretty sure it's the same thing, I think we should think carefully
> before re-opening issues from previous releases.
>
> Anyway, this is just my opinion. Do others agree or disagree?
>
> - Tim

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