At Linaro, one way or another, we do a weekly report cycle to our groups, members and Linaro.
This can be done in multiple ways, but it's always good that we do at least one of them, to make the lives of project managers, tech leads and member services a bit easier.
Every month, we also use that information to prepare an /wiki/spaces/EMR/overview, so having accurate information on your progress is important to report them to our members.
The two main update methods are: Weekly emails and Jira update.
Weekly emails was the style most teams used in the past, but they're now redundant with Jira updates, so we strongly recommend you to use Jira directly.
Here are the explanation of both, however, so you can interpret other people's reports, if they still come in that fashion.
Weekly Email
This is simply an email that you should send to your team's mailing list on Fridays, outlining what you have worked on.
You should not use this style from now on, but understanding it will make the Jira style more clear.
Style
The format is usually known as "3x3", with three sections:
- What you have worked on, including references to Jira tickets, short comments and the amount you've worked on each of them.
- What you plan to do next week, including continuations, new tasks, holidays, etc.
- Any serious problems or blocking issues, to raise awareness that you may not be performing as optimally as expected.
Jira + wort time
Linking the Jira card (by title, ex. HPC-123) and a short description of what you've done.
Also, this format has a "10/10" time slot, with each slot being "half-day", so that you have 2 slots per day, 10 slots per week.
Those times are approximate and only meant as a general idea of proportional work, not to actually measure time worked.
Most of those reports contain a proportional amount of "time wasted" in meetings, emails, travel, infrastructure.
An example of such a report would be:
This week
=========* [HPC-123] Updated machines to new OS [1/10]
* [HPC-234] Continue working on SVE libraries [4/10]
* [HPC-345] Rebased patch, still waiting for reviews [1/10]
* Meetings, emails, infrastructure [2/10]
* Friday off [2/10]
We usually try not to waste more than one day a week on meetings. If you have too many meetings or you're wasting too much time discussing on lists and reviewing patches, make sure you sync with your tech lead to reduce that time.
Plans for next week
These are normally simple and often obvious tasks, but show which of the tasks you performed this week will need continuation, which will be closing and which new ones will be started.
An example of such a section would be:
Next week
=========* [HPC-123] Run validation on the new OS
* [HPC-234] Finish SVE work, submit a review
* [HPC-345] Hopefully merge the patch
The most important is: keep it simple, keep it short.
Problems and blockages
If you had any major blocking issues, make sure you mention them in here. This section normally doesn't appear on the reviews, as we keep them for special occurrences that not always happen.
For example:
Problems
========* Lab outages meant OS upgrade could only happen on the last day
Usually, those problems should be report only, as this is not meant as a way to make people aware of the blockages. Ie. they should be fixed straight away with the right people as soon as possible, and only mentioned in this report as an explanation why something you planned to do in the previous week hasn't been done.
However, plans not always work as weeks pass, and it's ok to plan one thing on the previous week and do something different this one. For that reason, you don'y have to explain every plan that didn't work in this section, only the major and uncommon occurrences.
Jira update
Now that we're all using Jira Kanban boards, we can see our progress as it happens. Adding comments directly to the tasks, moving them across the board and creating new tasks on the fly is the best way to report your progress without adding bureaucracy to the process.
Furthermore, project managers and tech leads scan the Jira updates (using weekly and monthly filters based on changes to cards) to know what happened. These updates are scanned by hand and scripts, and they update other project management structures, "Health Check" and "Engineering Update" reports every month.
Rationale
The weekly email was redundant and boring, but it had all the information we needed in a condensed format. So, to completely deprecate it, we need to find similar solutions in Jira that can replace every "feature" of the emails.
But for that to work, the right cards need to be updated as you progress, with comments and changes to the workflow (status, priority, sub-tasks). If engineers don't update the cards, tech leads and project managers have no way to know what has been done.
Three Blocks
Jira + wort time
Since we're updating Jira cards, we don't need to reference the cards anywhere. Just adding comments to the cards would be enough.
The updates are better if they're done as soon as you finished a step in your work, or at the end of each day, so that we can have an idea of pace. But that's not always possible, so we shouldn't create strict rules around it.
The minimum amount that is required, however, is at least one update per week, on the cards that you have actually worked on. Simple comments, like "still progressing, now implemented X and Y", are more than enough.
Also make sure to keep the workflow correct. Only keep "In Progress" what you're actively working on that week, and move to "Upstream Review" what's waiting on the community or back to "TODO" what you have put on hold.
Plans for next week
Tasks that are "Open" are unassigned meaning no one will work on them any time soon. Once you plan on working with something, assign that card to you (or create a new one and assign it), so that it appears in your "TODO" column.
This is essentially the "next week" plan. Given the vague nature of the original plan, and how it could be overruled but new tasks, there's no difference at all.
Problems and blockages
All problems and blockages should be reported immediately at the appropriate channels, copying your internal development list and your tech lead.
Infrastructure problems need to be reported to ITS, Lab and Systems teams or other teams in LEG. Builds and releases reported back to Builds, toolchain, kernel or even LAVA teams.
Long term blockages, the ones that would be reported on the weekly email, after you have reported and followed up in the right channels, should be moved to the "Blocked" column.
These mark tasks as "completely blocked", meaning you cannot work at all without the other teams removing the blockage, and will fire a salvo of urgent requests across all involved teams.
So, if you have a blocked task, but you can do other tasks while you wait for that one task to be unblocked, do not move them to the "Blocked" column.
Overall
The following picture summarises the usage of Jira:
And the three points below summarise the weekly cycle updating Jira:
- Constantly update cards with comments and workflow movement (drag&drop on Kanban board). At least once weekly, possibly once daily, preferably as you complete blocks of work.
- Make sure the tasks are in the right column. Pay attention to the roles of the columns, and use them wisely. You should do that at least once a week.
- Use mailing lists, IRC, email, Hangouts for all other updates, conversations, collaborations and to interact with other teams.