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Issue Management Policies
We have a lot of issue traffic to manage, so we have a few policies in place to help us do that. This is a brief summary of some of the policies we have in place and the justification for them.
Commenting on closed issues
In general, we recommend you open a new issue if you have a bug, feature request, or question to discuss. If you find a closed issue that is related, open a new issue and link to the closed issue rather than posting on the closed issue. Closed issues don't appear in our triage process, so only the people who have been active on the original thread will be notified of your comment. A new issue will get more attention from the team.
In general we don't mind getting duplicate issues. It's easier for us to close duplicate issues than to discuss multiple root causes on a single issue! We may close your issue as a duplicate if we determine it has the same root cause as another. Don't worry! It's not a waste of our time!
Needs Author Feedback
If a contributor reviews an issue and determines that more information is needed from the author, they will post a comment requesting that information and apply the Needs: Author Feedback
label. This label indicates that the author needs to post a response in order for us to continue investigating the issue.
If the author does not post a response within 7 days, the issue will be automatically closed. If the author responds within 7 days after the issue is closed, the issue will be automatically re-opened. We recognize that you may not be able to respond immediately to our requests, we're happy to hear from you whenever you're able to provide the new information.
Duplicate issues
If we determine that the issue is a duplicate of another, we will label it with the Resolution: Duplicate
label. The issue will be automatically closed in 1 day of inactivity.
Answered questions
If we determine that the issue is a question and have posted an answer, we will label it with the Resolution: Answered
label. The issue will be automatically closed in 1 day of inactivity.
Locking closed issues
After an issue has been closed and had no activity for 30 days it will be automatically locked as resolved. This is done in order to reduce confusion as to where to post new comments. If you are still encountering the problem reported in an issue, or have a related question or bug report, feel free to open a new issue and link to the original (now locked) issue!