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@@ -15,6 +15,8 @@
- [Between the 1st and the 7th](#between-the-1st-and-the-7th)
- [On the 7th](#on-the-7th)
- [After the 7th](#after-the-7th)
+- [Regressions](#regressions)
+ - [How to manage a regression](#how-to-manage-a-regression)
- [Release retrospective and kickoff](#release-retrospective-and-kickoff)
- [Retrospective](#retrospective)
- [Kickoff](#kickoff)
@@ -199,7 +201,7 @@ you can ask for an exception to be made.
Check [this guide](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/release/docs/blob/master/general/exception-request/process.md) about how to open an exception request before opening one.
-### Regressions
+## Regressions
A regression for a particular monthly release is a bug that exists in that
release, but wasn't present in the release before. This includes bugs in
@@ -217,10 +219,30 @@ month. When we say 'the most recent monthly release', this can refer to either
the version currently running on GitLab.com, or the most recent version
available in the package repositories.
-A regression issue should be labeled with the appropriate [subject label](../CONTRIBUTING.md#subject-labels-wiki-container-registry-ldap-api-etc)
-and [team label](../CONTRIBUTING.md#team-labels-ci-discussion-edge-platform-etc),
-just like any other issue, to help GitLab team members focus on issues that are
-relevant to [their area of responsibility](https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/engineering/workflow/#choosing-something-to-work-on).
+### How to manage a regression
+
+Regressions are very important, and they should be considered high priority
+issues that should be solved as soon as possible, especially if they affect
+users. Despite that, ~regression label itself does not imply when the issue
+will be scheduled.
+
+When a regression is found:
+1. Create an issue describing the problem in the most detailed way possible
+1. If possible, provide links to real examples and how to reproduce the problem
+1. Label the issue properly, using the [team label](../CONTRIBUTING.md#team-labels),
+ the [subject label](../CONTRIBUTING.md#subject-labels)
+ and any other label that may apply in the specific case
+1. Add the ~bug and ~regression labels
+1. Notify the respective Engineering Manager to evaluate the Severity of the regression and add a [Severity label](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md#bug-severity-labels). The counterpart Product Manager is included to weigh-in on prioritization as needed to set the [Priority label](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md#bug-priority-labels).
+1. If the regression is either an ~S1, ~S2 or ~S3 severity, label the regression with the current milestone as it should be fixed in the current milestone.
+ 1. If the regression was introduced in an RC of the current release, label with ~Deliverable
+ 1. If the regression was introduced in the previous release, label with ~"Next Patch Release"
+1. If the regression is an ~S4 severity, the regression may be scheduled for later milestones at the discretion of Engineering Manager and Product Manager.
+
+When a new issue is found, the fix should start as soon as possible. You can
+ping the Engineering Manager or the Product Manager for the relative area to
+make them aware of the issue earlier. They will analyze the priority and change
+it if needed.
## Release retrospective and kickoff