admin/make-tarball.txt: Misc small updates/edits
[bpt/emacs.git] / admin / notes / bugtracker
1 NOTES ON THE EMACS BUG TRACKER -*- outline -*-
2
3 The Emacs Bug Tracker can be found at http://debbugs.gnu.org/
4
5 * Quick-start guide
6
7 This is 95% of all you will ever need to know.
8
9 ** How do I report a bug?
10 Use M-x report-emacs-bug, or send mail to bug-gnu-emacs@gnu.org.
11 If you want to Cc someone, use an "X-Debbugs-CC" header (or
12 pseudo-header, see below) instead.
13
14 ** How do I comment on a bug?
15 Reply to a mail on the bug-gnu-emacs list in the normal way.
16 Or send a mail to 123@debbugs.gnu.org.
17
18 If the bug is old and closed, you may have to unarchive it first.
19 Send a mail to control@debbugs.gnu.org with
20 unarchive 123
21 on the first line of the body.
22
23 ** How do I close a bug?
24 Send a mail to 123-done@debbugs.gnu.org. In the body, explain
25 why the bug is being closed.
26
27 ** How do I set bug meta-data?
28 By mailing commands to control@debbugs.gnu.org. Place commands at the
29 start of the message body, one per line.
30
31 severity 123 serious|important|normal|minor|wishlist
32 tags 123 moreinfo|unreproducible|wontfix|patch
33
34 * More detailed information
35
36 For a list of all bugs, see http://debbugs.gnu.org/db/pa/lemacs.html
37 This is a static page, updated once a day. There is also a dynamic
38 list, generated on request. This accepts various options, eg to see
39 the most recent bugs:
40
41 http://debbugs.gnu.org/cgi/pkgreport.cgi?newest=100
42
43 Or follow the links on the front page http://debbugs.gnu.org .
44
45 ** How do I report a bug in Emacs now?
46 The same way as you always did. Send mail to bug-gnu-emacs@gnu.org,
47 or use M-x report-emacs-bug.
48
49 The only differences are:
50
51 i) Your report will be assigned a number and generate an automatic reply.
52
53 ii) Optionally, you can set some database parameters when you first
54 report a bug (see "Setting bug parameters" below).
55
56 iii) If you want to CC: someone, use X-Debbugs-CC: (note this only
57 applies to _new_ reports, not followups).
58
59 Once your report is filed and assigned a number, it is sent out to the
60 bug mailing list. In some cases, it may be appropriate to just file a
61 bug, without sending out a copy. To do this, send mail to
62 quiet@debbugs.gnu.org.
63
64 ** How do I reply to an existing bug report?
65 Reply to 123@debbugs.gnu.org, replacing 123 with the number
66 of the bug you are interested in. NB this only sends mail to the
67 bug-list, it does NOT send a CC to the original bug submitter.
68 So you need to explicitly CC him/her (and anyone else you like).
69 (This works the same way as all the Emacs mailing lists. We generally
70 don't assume anyone who posts to a list is subscribed to it, so we
71 cc everyone on replies.)
72
73 (Many people think the submitter SHOULD be automatically subscribed
74 to subsequent discussion, but this does not seem to be implemented.
75 See http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=37078
76 See also http://debbugs.gnu.org/5439 )
77
78 Do NOT send a separate copy to the bug list address, since this may
79 generate a new report. The only time to send mail to the bug list
80 address is to create a new report.
81
82 Gnus users can add the following to message-dont-reply-to-names;
83 similarly with Rmail and rmail-dont-reply-to-names:
84
85 "\\(emacs-pretest-bug\\|bug-gnu-emacs\\|bug-\\(e\\|gnu\\)macs\\)@gnu\\.org\\|\
86 \\(submit\\|control\\|owner\\)@debbugs\\.gnu\\.org"
87
88 The "owner@debbugs.gnu.org" entry is there because it appears in the
89 "Resent-To" header. For a long time Rmail erroneously included such
90 headers in replies. If you correspond with an Rmail user on a bug,
91 these addresses may end up in the Cc. Mailing to them does nothing
92 but create duplicates and errors. (It is possible, but unlikely, that
93 you might want to have a dialog with the owner address, outside of
94 normal bug reporting.)
95
96 ** When reporting a new bug, to send a Cc to another address
97 (e.g. bug-cc-mode@gnu.org), do NOT just use a Cc: header.
98 Instead, use "X-Debbugs-CC:". This ensures the Cc address will get a
99 mail with the bug report number in. If you do not do this, each reply
100 in the subsequent discussion might end up creating a new bug.
101 This is annoying. (So annoying that a form of message-id tracking has
102 been implemented to hopefully stop this happening, but it is still
103 better to use X-Debbugs-CC.)
104
105 Like any X-Debbugs- header, this one can also be specified in the
106 pseudo-header (see below), if your mail client does not let you add
107 "X-" headers.
108
109 If a new report contains X-Debbugs-CC in the input, this is
110 converted to a real Cc header in the output. (See Bug#1780,5384)
111 It is also merged into the Resent-CC header (see below).
112
113 ** How does Debbugs send out mails?
114
115 The mails are sent out to the bug list by being resent. The From:
116 header is unchanged. In new reports only (at present), the To:
117 address is altered as follows. Any "bug-gnu-emacs",
118 "emacs-pretest-bug", or "submit@debbugs" address is replaced by
119 123@debbugs in the mail that gets sent out. (This also applies to any
120 Cc: header, though you should be using X-Debbugs-CC instead in new
121 reports). The original header is stored as X-Debbugs-Original-To, if
122 it was changed. Any X-Debbugs-CC is merged into the Cc.
123
124 Mails arriving at the bug list have the following Resent-* headers:
125
126 Resent-From: person who submitted the bug
127 Resent-To: owner@debbugs.gnu.org
128 Resent-CC: maintainer email address, plus any X-Debbugs-CC: entries
129
130 The "maintainer email address" is "bug-gnu-emacs@gnu.org" in most cases.
131
132 ** To not get acknowledgment mail from the tracker,
133 add an "X-Debbugs-No-Ack:" header (with any value). If you use Gnus,
134 you can add an element to gnus-posting-styles to do this automatically, eg:
135
136 ("gnu-emacs\\(-pretest\\)?-bug"
137 ("X-Debbugs-No-Ack" "yes"))
138
139 (adjust the regexp according to the name you use for the bug lists)
140
141 ** To record a bug in the tracker without sending mail to the bug list.
142 This can be useful to make a note of something discussed on
143 emacs-devel that needs fixing. In other words, this can be the
144 equivalent of adding something to FOR-RELEASE.
145
146 To: quiet@debbugs.gnu.org
147 [headers end]
148 Package: emacs
149 Version: 23.0.60
150 Severity: minor
151
152 Remember to fix FOO, as discussed on emacs-devel at http://... .
153
154 ** Not interested in tracker control messages (tags being set, etc)?
155 Discard mails matching:
156
157 ^X-GNU-PR-Message: (transcript|closed)
158
159 ** Not receiving messages in response to your control commands?
160 The messages debbugs sends out in response to control-server commands
161 always have headers To: your@email, and Cc: tracker@debbugs.gnu.org
162 (the latter is an alias for the emacs-bug-tracker mailing list).
163 These are also the addresses to which a copy of the response is sent.
164 (In general, there need not be any relation between the To: and Cc:
165 headers visible in a message and where debbugs actually sends it.)
166 If you used an X-Debbugs-No-Ack header, however, a copy is _not_ sent
167 to you, but the To: header is unchanged. If you are subscribed to the
168 emacs-bug-tracker mailing list and have duplicate suppression turned
169 on, the presence of your address in the To: header will cause Mailman
170 to not send you a list copy, because it thinks you have received a
171 direct copy. If you used X-Debbugs-No-Ack, this is not the case, and
172 you won't get any copy at all. If this bothers you, don't use both
173 X-Debbugs-No-Ack and Mailman duplicate suppression for the
174 emacs-bug-tracker mailing list, just pick one or the other.
175
176 ** How to avoid multiple copies of mails.
177 If you reply to reports in the normal way, this should work fine.
178 Basically, reply only to the numbered bug address (and any individual
179 people's addresses). Do not send mail direct to bug-gnu-emacs or
180 emacs-pretest-bug unless you are reporting a new bug.
181
182 ** To close bug #123 (for example), send mail
183
184 To: 123-done@debbugs.gnu.org
185
186 with a brief explanation in the body as to why the bug was closed.
187 There is no need to cc the address without the "-done" part or the
188 submitter; they get copies anyway so this will just result in more
189 duplicate mail.
190
191 ** Details of closing a bug.
192 (For information only)
193 Sending a mail to 123-done does the following:
194
195 1) Mark the bug as closed in the database.
196
197 2) Send a mail to the original submitter telling them that their bug
198 has been closed. This mail has a header:
199
200 X-GNU-PR-Message: they-closed 123
201
202 3) Send a mail to you and to the emacs-bug-tracker list confirming
203 that the bug has been closed. This mail has a header:
204
205 X-GNU-PR-Message: closed 123
206
207 4) Send a copy of your mail to the bug-gnu-emacs list in exactly the
208 same way as if you had sent mail to "123" (sans -done). This mail has
209 headers:
210
211 X-GNU-PR-Message: cc-closed 123
212 Mail-Followup-To: 123@debbugs.gnu.org, person-who-closed
213
214 (This is Emacs-specific. Normally the bug list gets the same mail as in 3).
215
216 ** Setting bug parameters.
217 There are two ways to set the parameters of bugs in the database
218 (tags, severity level, etc). When you report a new bug, you can
219 provide a "pseudo-header" at the start of the report, eg:
220
221 Package: emacs
222 Version: 23.0.60
223 Severity: minor
224
225 This can also include tags, or any X-Debbugs- setting.
226 Some things (e.g. submitter) don't seem to work here.
227
228 Otherwise, send mail to the control server, control@debbugs.gnu.org.
229 At the start of the message body, supply the desired commands, one per
230 line:
231
232 command bug-number [arguments]
233 ...
234 quit|stop|thank|thanks|thankyou|thank you
235
236 The control server ignores anything after the last line above. So you
237 can place control commands at the beginning of a reply to a bug
238 report, and Bcc: the control server (note the commands have no effect
239 if you just send them to the bug-report number). Bcc: is better than Cc:
240 in case people use Reply-to-All in response.
241
242 Some useful control commands:
243
244 *** To reopen a closed bug:
245 reopen 123
246
247 *** Bugs can be tagged in various ways (eg wontfix, patch, etc).
248 The available tags are:
249 patch wontfix moreinfo unreproducible fixed notabug
250 See http://debbugs.gnu.org/Developer#tags
251 The list of tags can be prefixed with +, - or =, meaning to add (the
252 default), remove, or reset the tags. E.g.:
253
254 tags 123 + wontfix
255
256 ** URL shortcuts
257
258 http://debbugs.gnu.org/...
259
260 123 # given bug number
261 123;mbox=yes # mbox version of given bug
262 package # bugs in given package
263 from:submitter@email.address
264 severity:severity # all bugs of given severity
265 tag:tag # all bugs with given tag
266
267 ** Usertags
268
269 See <http://wiki.debian.org/bugs.debian.org/usertags>
270
271 "Usertags" are very similar to tags: a set of labels that can be added
272 to a bug. There are two differences between normal tags and user tags:
273
274 1) Anyone can define any valid usertag they like. In contrast, only a
275 limited, predefined set of normal tags are available (see above).
276
277 2) A usertag is associated with a specific user. This is normally
278 an email address (with an "@" sign and least 4 characters after the "@"),
279 but on debbugs.gnu.org, the definition is less strict - anything with
280 5 or more alphanumeric characters will work. For personal tags,
281 using an email address is still recommended. Please only use the
282 "emacs" user, or other short users, for "official" tags.
283
284 You set usertags in the same way as tags, by talking to the control server.
285 One difference is that you can also specify the associated user.
286 If you don't explicitly specify a user, then it will use the email
287 address from which you send the control message.
288
289 *** Setting usertags
290
291 a) In a control message:
292
293 user emacs # or email@example.com
294 usertags 1234 any-tag-you-like
295
296 This will add a usertag "any-tag-you-like" to bug 1234. The tag will
297 be associated with the user "emacs". If you omit the first line,
298 the tag will be associated with your email address.
299
300 The syntax of the usertags command is the same as that of tags (eg wrt
301 the optional [=+-] argument).
302
303 b) In an initial submission, in the pseudo-header:
304
305 User: emacs
306 Usertags: a-new-tag
307
308 Again, the "User" is optional.
309
310 *** Searching by usertags
311
312 The search interface is not as advanced as for normal tags. You need
313 to construct the relevant url yourself rather than just typing in a
314 search box. The only piece you really need to add is the "users"
315 portion, the rest has the same syntax as normal.
316
317 **** To browse bugs by usertag:
318 http://debbugs.gnu.org/cgi/pkgindex.cgi?indexon=users
319
320 **** To find all bugs usertagged by a given email address:
321
322 http://debbugs.gnu.org/cgi/pkgreport.cgi?users=emacs
323
324 (Supposedly, the "users" field can be a comma-separated list of more
325 than one email address, but it does not seem to work for me.)
326
327 **** To find bugs tagged with a specific usertag:
328
329 This works just like a normal tags search, but with the addition of a
330 "users" field. Eg:
331
332 http://debbugs.gnu.org/cgi/pkgreport.cgi?users=emacs;tag=calendar
333
334 *** To merge bugs:
335 Eg when bad replies create a bunch of new bugs for the same report.
336 Bugs must all be in the same state (e.g. same package(s) and severity
337 -- see `reassign' and `severity' below), but need not have the same
338 tags (tags are merged). E.g.:
339
340 merge 123 124 125 ...
341
342 Note that merging does not affect titles. In particular, a "retitle"
343 of merged bugs only affects individual bugs, not all of them.
344
345 *** Forcing a merge:
346 Like `merge', but bugs need not be in the same state. The packages
347 must still match though (see `reassign' below). The first one listed
348 is the master. E.g.:
349
350 forcemerge 123 124 125 ...
351
352 Note: you cannot merge with an archived bug - you must unarchive it first.
353
354 *** To unmerge bugs:
355 To disconnect a bug from all bugs it is merged with:
356
357 unmerge 123
358
359 This command accepts only one bug number.
360
361 *** To clone bugs:
362 Useful when one report refers to more than one bug.
363
364 clone 123 -1 [-2 ...]
365 retitle -1 second bug
366 retitle -2 third bug
367
368 The negative numbers provide a way to refer to the cloned bugs (which
369 will be assigned proper numbers).
370
371 NB you cannot clone a merged bug. You'd think that trying to do so
372 would just give you an unmerged copy of the specified bug number, but no:
373
374 http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=474742
375
376 You must unmerge, clone, then re-merge.
377
378 *** To set severity:
379 severity 123 critical|grave|serious|important|normal|minor|wishlist
380
381 See http://debbugs.gnu.org/Developer#severities for the meanings.
382
383 *** To set the owner of a bug:
384 owner 123 A Hacker <none@example.com>
385
386 The shorthand `!' means your own address.
387
388 *** To remove the owner of a bug:
389 noowner 123
390
391 *** To mark a bug as fixed in a particular version:
392 fixed 123 23.0.60
393
394 *** To remove a "fixed" mark:
395 notfixed 123 23.0.60
396
397 *** To make a bug as present in a particular version:
398 found 123 23.2
399 NB if there is no specified "fixed" version, or if there is one and it
400 is earlier than the found version, this reopens a closed bug.
401
402 The leading "23.1;" that M-x report-emacs-bug adds to bug subjects
403 automatically sets a found version (if none is explicitly specified).
404
405 *** To assign or reassign a bug to a package or list of packages:
406 reassign 1234 emacs
407
408 Note that reassigning clears the list of found versions, even if the
409 new packages includes the original one.
410
411 ** To remove spam from the tracker, move it to the `spam' pseudo-package:
412 reassign 123 spam
413
414 (Should not be necessary any more, now that the input is moderated.)
415
416 ** To change the title of a bug:
417 retitle 123 Some New Title
418
419 ** To change the submitter address:
420 submitter 123 none@example.com
421
422 Note that it does not seem to work to specify "Submitter:" in the
423 pseudo-header when first reporting a bug.
424
425 ** How does archiving work?
426 You can still send mail to a bug after it is closed. After 28 days with
427 no activity, the bug is archived, at which point no more changes can
428 be made. If you try to send mail to the bug after that (or merge with
429 it), it will be rejected. To make any changes, you must unarchive it first:
430
431 unarchive 123
432
433 The bug will be re-archived after the next 28 day period of no activity.
434
435 ** The web-page with the list of bugs is slow to load
436
437 It's a function of the number of displayed bugs. You can speed things
438 up by only looking at the newest 100 bugs:
439 http://debbugs.gnu.org/cgi-bin/pkgreport.cgi?newest=100;package=emacs
440
441 Or use the static index:
442 http://debbugs.gnu.org/db/ix/full.html
443
444 ** What are those "mbox folder" links on the bug report pages?
445
446 "mbox folder" = messages as they arrived at the tracker
447
448 "status mbox" = as above, but with a fake message at the start
449 summarizing the bug status
450
451 "maintainer mbox" = messages as sent out from the tracker to the
452 maintainers (ie, bug-gnu-emacs). These have some changed headers
453 (Resent-*, Subject, etc).
454
455 ** What do the pkgreport.cgi sort options mean?
456
457 "normal" = by open/closed status, then severity, then tag, then bug number
458
459 "oldview" = as above, but without the tag part
460
461 "age" = as normal, but sort in decreasing order of last modification
462 time, rather than by increasing bug number
463
464 "raw" = ?
465
466 ** ChangeLog issues
467
468 *** When you fix a bug, it can be helpful to put the bug number in the
469 ChangeLog entry, for example:
470
471 * foo.el (foofunc): Fix the `foo' case. (Bug#123)
472
473 Then the relevant bug can be found for easy reference. If it's an
474 obvious fix (e.g. a typo), there's no need to clutter the log with the
475 bug number.
476
477 Similarly, when you close a bug, it can be helpful to include the
478 relevant ChangeLog entry in the message to the bug tracker, so people
479 can see exactly what the fix was.
480
481 *** bug-reference-mode
482
483 Activate `bug-reference-mode' in ChangeLogs to get clickable links to
484 the bug web-pages.
485
486 *** Debian stuff
487
488 http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2009-11/msg00440.html
489
490 ** Bazaar stuff
491
492 *** You can use `bzr commit --fixes debbugs:123' to mark that a commit fixes
493 Emacs bug 123. You will first need to add a line to one of your
494 configuration files, ~/.bazaar/bazaar.conf or ~/.bazaar/locations.conf:
495
496 bugtracker_debbugs_url = http://debbugs.gnu.org/{id}
497
498 Here "{id}" is a literal string, a placeholder that will be replaced
499 by the bug number you specify after `--fixes debbugs:' in the bzr
500 command line (123 in the example above).
501
502 In the bazaar.conf file, this setting should go into the [DEFAULT]
503 section.
504
505 In the locations.conf file, it should go into the branch-specific
506 configuration section for the branch where you want this to be in
507 effect. For example, if you want this to be in effect for the branch
508 located at `/home/projects/emacs/trunk', you need to have this in your
509 ~/.bazaar/locations.conf file:
510
511 [/home/projects/emacs/trunk]
512 bugtracker_debbugs_url = http://debbugs.gnu.org/{id}
513
514 If you want to use this in all Emacs branches whose common parent is
515 `/home/projects/emacs', put the setting in the [/home/projects/emacs]
516 section. See "bzr help configuration" for more information about
517 the *.conf files, their location and formats. See "bzr help bugs" for
518 more information about the bugtracker_debbugs_url setting.
519
520 See also log-edit-rewrite-fixes in .dir-locals.el.
521
522 Note that all this does is add some metadata to the commit, it doesn't
523 actually mark the bug as closed in the tracker. You can see this
524 information with `bzr log', and it will show up as a link in a recent
525 loggerhead installation, or with some of the graphical frontends to
526 `bzr log'.
527
528 ** Gnus-specific voodoo
529
530 *** Put point on a bug-number and try: M-x gnus-read-ephemeral-emacs-bug-group
531
532 *** If the above is not available:
533 (add-hook 'gnus-article-mode-hook
534 (lambda ()
535 (setq bug-reference-url-format "http://debbugs.gnu.org/%s")
536 (bug-reference-mode 1)))
537
538 and you can click on the bug number in the subject header.
539
540
541 * Technical Notes
542
543 The following are technical notes on how it works. These are just for
544 reference, you don't need to read these as a user of the system.
545
546 Getting mail from the Emacs bug list into the tracker requires the
547 assistance of sysadmin at gnu.org. The test tracker set-up was, I
548 think, [gnu.org #359140]:
549 http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/savannah-hackers/2008-03/msg00074.html
550 http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/savannah-hackers/2008-04/msg00034.html
551
552 ** The debbugs.gnu.org setup was handled in [gnu.org #510605].
553 There are two pieces (replace AT with @ in the following):
554
555 i) fencepost has an /etc/aliases entry:
556 emacs-pretest-bug: submit AT debbugs.gnu.org
557
558 ii) An exim router:
559 emacsbugs_router:
560 driver = redirect
561 senders = !Debian-debbugs AT debbugs.gnu.org
562 local_parts = bug-gnu-emacs
563 domains = gnu.org
564 data = submit AT debbugs.gnu.org
565
566 This says, for mail arriving at bug-gnu-emacs, only allow it through
567 to the list if it was sent from debbugs.gnu.org. Otherwise, send
568 it to the submit address at the bug-tracker.
569
570 FIXME There's probably an issue with the mail-news gateway here that
571 still needs to be addressed (bug#936).
572
573 ** fencepost's /etc/exim4/local_domains configuration needs a line
574 !debbugs.gnu.org adding [gnu.org #503532]. Otherwise people on
575 fencepost can't report bugs, since *.gnu.org addresses are assumed to
576 be handled locally on fencepost, unless otherwise specified.
577
578 ** All mail arriving at debbugs.gnu.org is first run through SpamAssassin.
579 Obvious spam is rejected, the rest is sent on to the moderated list
580 debbugs-submit. Approved mail is passed on to the tracker.
581 (Note this means that messages may appear out of sequence in the
582 tracker, since mail from whitelisted senders goes straight through.)
583
584 NOTE: An alternative to this would be to use listhelper AT nongnu.org
585 as a moderator address. Eg the emacs-bug-tracker list uses this.
586 It does basic spam processing on the moderator requests and
587 automatically rejects the obviously bogus ones. Someone still has to
588 accept the good ones though. The advantage of this would not be having
589 to run and tune our own spam filter. See
590 http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/listhelper
591
592 An "X-Debbugs-Envelope-To" header is used to keep track of where the
593 mail was actually bound for:
594 http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2009-11/msg01211.html
595
596 ** Mailing list recipient/sender filters.
597 The following mailman filters are useful to stop messages being
598 needlessly held for moderation:
599
600 *** debbugs-submit
601 (quiet|control|submit)@(debbugs\.gnu\.org|emacsbugs\.donarmstrong\.com)
602 [0-9]+(-done|-quiet|-subscribe)?@(debbugs\.gnu\.org|emacsbugs\.donarmstrong\.com)
603 (bug-gnu-emacs|emacs-pretest-bug|bug-(e|gnu)macs)@gnu\.org
604
605 bug-emacs and bug-gnumacs are lesser-used aliases from fencepost's
606 /etc/aliases file.
607
608 *** emacs-bug-tracker
609 sender: bug-gnu-emacs AT gnu.org
610 recipient: emacs-bug-tracker AT debbugs\.gnu\.org
611
612 The latter is because that is the address that debbugs actually sends to.
613 An /etc/aliases entry redirects it to the real emacs-bug-tracker address.
614
615 ** Recovering from moderation mistakes
616
617 All discarded messages are stored in /var/lib/mailman/spam.
618 If a non-spam message accidentally gets discarded, just do:
619
620 /usr/lib/debbugs/receive < /var/lib/mailman/spam/not-really-spam.msg
621 chown Debian-debbugs:Debian-debbugs /var/lib/debbugs/spool/incoming/*
622 ... check it works ...
623 mv /var/lib/mailman/spam/not-really-spam.msg /var/lib/mailman/not-spam/
624
625 Also check that the sender was not added to the auto-discard/reject list
626 in the debbugs-submit Mailman interface.
627
628 If you don't have the actual mail, just the mailman moderation mail
629 version of it, you need to extract the original mail, and add the
630 following headers:
631
632 1) The leading envelope From line.
633 2) Message-ID (get it from /var/log/mailman/vette).
634 3) X-Debbugs-Envelope-To: xxx
635 For a new report, xxx = submit; for a control message, xxx = control;
636 for a reply to bug#123, xxx = 123
637
638 Then pipe it to receive as above.
639
640 ** Administrivia
641
642 The debbugs-submit list should have the administrivia option off,
643 else it can by mistake filter out requests to subscribe to bugs.
644 But, this feature doesn't work anyway (see bug#5439).
645
646 ** How to test changes
647
648 Add an entry to /etc/debbugs/Maintainers like:
649
650 mytest my.email.address
651
652 Then if you do all your testing with 'Package: mytest', the resulting
653 mails should only go to your email address.
654
655 ** Adding new tags
656
657 Add them to @gTags in /etc/debbugs/config.
658 I think you also have to add them to 'tags' and 'tags_single_letter'
659 in /usr/share/perl5/Debbugs/Config.pm.
660 And update /var/www/Developer.html with a description of what the tag means.
661 And the "valid tags" list in /var/www/index.html.
662
663 ** Backups
664
665 The FSF sysadmins handle multi-generational backups of the filesystem
666 on debbugs.gnu.org. But if you really want to have your own backup of
667 the bug database, you can use rsync (this requires login access to
668 debbugs.gnu.org):
669
670 rsync -azvv -e ssh USER@debbugs.gnu.org:/var/lib/debbugs/ DEST
671
672 Note that this occupies well over 1G of disk space.