It’s important to get the bugs in the eye of the right set of engineers, for which the team at Mozilla developed BugBug, a machine learning tool that assigns a product and component automatically for every new untriaged bug. By bringing the bugs into the radar of the triage owners, the team at Mozilla has made an effort towards decreasing the turnaround time to fix new issues.
Mozilla has a large training set of data for this model which includes two decades worth of bugs that have been reviewed by Mozillians and assigned to products and components. The bug data can’t be used as-is and any change to the bug after triage would create trouble during operation. So the team at Mozilla rolled back the bug to the time it was originally filed. Out of 396 components, 225 components had more than 49 bugs filed in the past 2 years. During operation, the team performed the assignment when the model was confident enough of its decision and currently, the team is using a 60% confidence threshold.
Ever since the team has deployed BugBug in production at the end of February 2019, they have triaged around 350 bugs. The median time for any developer to act on triaged bugs is 2 days. Usually, 9 days is the average time to act, but with BugBug the Mozilla team took just 4 days to remove the outliers.
The Mozilla team has planned to use machine learning to assist in other software development processes, such as identifying duplicate bugs, providing automated help to developers, and detecting the bugs important for a Firefox release. The team plans to extend BugBug to automatically assign components for other Mozilla products.
To know more about this news, check out the post by Mozilla.
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