I am seeing a lot of issues being assigned to 4.1. I find it unrealistic. Below is a gentle reminder on how I'd like us to assign versions.
On 4 nov. 2011, at 11:40, Emmanuel Bernard wrote: > ## Managing JIRA > > JIRA is not exactly a list to Santa Claus. Let me rephrase, JIRA is not a > list to Santa Claus. You can't put a version number to a JIRA issue and hope > things will magically be fixed in this version. The rule of thumb is simple: > > 1. If you think you will do it, set the version number > 2. If you know someone that will likely do it, put a version number > 3. if it's vitally important that this be fixed in the next version, see rule > #1 > > Otherwise don't put a version number without asking the project lead > > The rule is a bit different for the project lead as he has to draw the big > picture of what a release will contain and assigning a number is the easiest > solution. A corollary is that moving a problem from version n to version n+1 > is useless. > > Today we ended up with 60 issues that ought to be resolved in less than a > week. That obviously is beyond our capacity. > > Of course these rules are not hard enforced but we definitively need to shift > back into a more conservative version assignment management. > > By the way, I don't know if you have followed AS 7's team rant on JIRA and > actionable items. While I'm not 100% inlined with their rule, I am > sympathetic to the idea of a managed flow of JIRA issues. I'm not sure how > this can be applied to (or at least get closer with) search, validator and > ogm but I'm open to ideas. _______________________________________________ hibernate-dev mailing list hibernate-dev@lists.jboss.org https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/hibernate-dev