|
[This document is aimed primarily at people who may have used
IssueZilla before the UNCONFIRMED
state was implemented. It might be helpful for newer users as well.]
New issues in some products will now show up in a new state, UNCONFIRMED. This means that nobody has
confirmed that the issue is real. Very busy developers generally
ignore UNCONFIRMED that have been
assigned to them, until they have been confirmed in one way or
another. (Developers with more time will hopefully glance over their
UNCONFIRMED issues regularly.)
There are two basic ways that an issue can become confirmed (and thus
enter the NEW) state.
- A user with the appropriate permissions (see below for more on
permissions) decides that the issue is a valid one, and confirms
it.
- The issue gathers a certain number of votes. Any valid
IssueZilla user may vote for issues (each user gets a certain number
of issues); any UNCONFIRMED
issue which gets enough votes becomes automatically confirmed, and
enters the NEW state.
That's why it is worthwhile to search the issue database for
duplicates of your issue to vote on them before
submitting your own issue. This helps to prevent issue duplication in
the database.
If you have the "Can confirm an issue" permission, then you will be
able to change UNCONFIRMED issues
to the NEW state.
If you not have the "Can confirm an issue" permission, you can still
ACCEPT or RESOLVE all issues assigned to
you. IssueZilla keeps track of this. If this issue gets REOPENED or reassigned to someone else,
it reverts back to the UNCONFIRMED
state. If such an issue has been confirmed, then reassigning
changes its status to NEW or REOPENED.
If you have the "Can edit all aspects of any issue" permission, when
you submit issues, these start out in the NEW state rather than the UNCONFIRMED state. You can override this
feature, however, when you want to submit an issue as UNCONFIRMED.
|