1. A good tester will always try to reduce the repro steps to the
minimal steps to reproduce; this is extremely helpful for the
programmer who has to find the bug.
2. Remember that the only person who can close a bug is the
person who opened it in the first place. Anyone can resolve it, but
only the person who saw the bug can really be sure that what they saw
is fixed.
3. There are many ways to resolve a bug. FogBUGZ allows you to
resolve a bug as fixed, won't fix, postponed, not repro, duplicate, or
by design.
4. Not Repro means that nobody could ever reproduce the bug.
Programmers often use this when the bug report is missing the repro
steps.
5. You'll want to keep careful track of versions. Every build
of the software that you give to testers should have a build ID number
so that the poor tester doesn't have to retest the bug on a version of
the software where it wasn't even supposed to be fixed.
6. If you're a programmer, and you're having trouble getting
testers to use the bug database, just don't accept bug reports by any
other method. If your testers are used to sending you email with bug
reports, just bounce the emails back to them with a brief message:
"please put this in the bug database. I can't keep track of emails."
7. If you're a tester, and you're having trouble getting
programmers to use the bug database, just don't tell them about bugs -
put them in the database and let the database email them.
8. If you're a programmer, and only some of your colleagues
use the bug database, just start assigning them bugs in the database.
Eventually they'll get the hint.
9. If you're a manager, and nobody seems to be using the bug
database that you installed at great expense, start assigning new
features to people using bugs. A bug database is also a great
"unimplemented feature" database, too.
10. Avoid the temptation to add new fields to the bug
database. Every month or so, somebody will come up with a great idea
for a new field to put in the database. You get all kinds of clever
ideas, for example, keeping track of the file where the bug was found;
keeping track of what % of the time the bug is reproducible; keeping
track of how many times the bug occurred; keeping track of which exact
versions of which DLLs were installed on the machine where the bug
happened. It's very important not to give in to these ideas. If you do,
your new bug entry screen will end up with a thousand fields that you
need to supply, and nobody will want to input bug reports any more. For
the bug database to work, everybody needs to use it, and if entering
bugs "formally" is too much work, people will go around the bug
database.
Top Ten Tips for Bug Tracking
最新推荐文章于 2025-06-07 19:24:53 发布