Project

General

Profile

How To Report Issues » History » Version 9

Dan Smith, 03/09/2012 09:53 AM

1 1 Dan Smith
h1. How To Report Issues
2
3 7 Dan Smith
h2. First things first!
4 1 Dan Smith
5 7 Dan Smith
Before you file a bug, please test the latest Development Version of CHIRP to see if your issue has been fixed. These builds are generated automatically every night when there is a change, and they are available from the bottom of the "download page":/projects/chirp/wiki/download.
6
7 2 Dan Smith
h2. Effective Bug Reporting
8
9 1 Dan Smith
Effective reporting of a bug or feature is critical to getting the issue resolved in a timely manner. If bug descriptions are difficult to understand or reproduce, they are less likely to receive attention. When you are crafting your bug report, try to answer the following questions:
10
11
1. What is the behavior you are seeing?
12
2. What is the behavior you were expecting?
13
3. Can you reproduce the problem all the time?
14
4. What are the steps required to reproduce the problem?
15
5. Is this specific to a certain radio model (driver) or something that you can reproduce with another radio?
16
17
In most cases, it is important to attach an image of your radio to the bug so that a developer can look at the exact state and determine what the problem is. It is often helpful describe what you expect to see in a given memory location, as well as what you actually see.
18 5 Dan Smith
19
h2. Getting your debug log
20
21 9 Dan Smith
If you are expecting something to happen (such as importing from a file, or setting a memory) and CHIRP appears to ignore the request, you probably should include your debug log. If you are getting an error message, you should definitely include the log.
22 1 Dan Smith
23 9 Dan Smith
The debug log is cleared every time you start chirp, so the procedure for getting a usable log is:
24
25
1. Start chirp
26
2. Reproduce the failure or bug
27
3. Close chirp
28
4. Copy and send the debug.log before starting chirp again
29
30
Here are some tips for getting to it on the various platforms:
31
32 5 Dan Smith
h3. Windows
33 8 Dan Smith
34 6 Dan Smith
Go to Start->Run and type "%APPDATA%\CHIRP". Your debug.log file will be in the folder that opens.
35
36 1 Dan Smith
h3. Linux and MacOS
37
38 9 Dan Smith
Your debug log should be in your home directory, in .chirp/debug.log. If you don't know how to find this, open up a terminal window and run the following command at the prompt:
39
40
 cp ~/.chirp/debug.log ~/Desktop
41
42
Then close the terminal window. The debug.log file will be on your desktop.
43 7 Dan Smith
44
h2. Filing your report
45
46
In order to file a new bug report or feature request, you must first create (or sign into) an account. Click the "Register":http://chirp.danplanet.com/account/register or "Sign in":http://chirp.danplanet.com/login link at the top right of this page to do that. Once you are logged in, click the "New issue":http://chirp.danplanet.com/projects/chirp/issues/new link on the menu bar above to get started.