BMO/User profile fields
These are descriptions of the fields listed on the user profile pages on bugzilla.mozilla.org.
Contents
Last activity
The date and time a user last reported, changed or commented on a bug in Bugzilla. Link to user activity report for the last 4 weeks.
Bugs filed
The total number of bugs reported by the user.
Commented on
The total number of bugs that the user has commented on.
Comments made
The total number of comments that the user has added.
Confirmed
The number of bugs the user has changed from UNCONFIRMED to NEW.
QA-contact
QA-contacts work as part of the QA team to help developers with regression testing, steps to reproduce bugs, and bug verification.
Patches submitted
The number of patches a user has submitted to help fix a bug.
Patches reviewed
Shows how many patches a user has reviewed.
- Code Review FAQ including how to become a reviewer
Assigned to
Bugs assigned to a user.
Bugs poked
Total number of bugs a user has interacted with: filed, commented on, changed status, added whiteboard or keyword tags, changed product or component; anything done to the bug that results in saving changes.
RESOLVED
Bugs a user has changed from NEW, UNCONFIRMED, or REOPENED to RESOLVED.
DUPLICATE
Bugs a user has resolved as a duplicate of an existing bug.
INVALID
Bugs a user has resolved as INVALID; these may be issues that aren't Mozilla bugs, or are features rather than unexpected behavior.
WORKSFORME
Bugs a user was unable to reproduce on the reported hardware and OS. This includes bugs which used to be reproducible, but have "spontaneously disappeared", without it being known exactly what fixed the bug.
FIXED
Bugs a user has resolved as FIXED. Only verify FIXED if the bug's resolution can be tied to a specific code checkin in a Mozilla repository.
VERIFIED
Resolved bugs that a user has made sure have been resolved correctly.
Activity by product
Currently this gathers actions performed on bugs rather than counting the number of bugs. So the numbers here will be larger than the total number of bugs a user has worked on. We may change this in future if it seems confusing. The point would be to reflect the products where a user most often focuses their work.