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Sitting here frustrated that a team member broke the build and then goes on a long-weekend vacation, I wonder what other teams do when someone breaks the build? What would you consider a fair punishment?

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vote up 89 vote down

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MY DAILY REP-WHORING – Jeff Atwood Oct 17 '08 at 8:48
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Yea, and the doughnuts were brought, and they were consumed, and the Lead saw this, and it was good. And the Lead took a senior programmer aside, and said, "Let this N00b break the build again tomorrow, for doughnuts are pleasing to Me." – Dave DuPlantis Oct 17 '08 at 14:10
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My experience with build breaks has been that the guys checking in the most breaks are often the ones doing the most work.

Yes, there are sloppy developers checking in crap. There are also some geniuses that break on one platform or another. When the average developer breaks the build in 1% of their check-ins, and the geniuses break the build in 0.1% of their checkins, the geniuses still break the build more.

Sometimes, you need to know why. Is there a cultural or process reason? I know that in our case, those "sweeping changes" alluded to above were part of the problem. If you need to touch 120 files once in a while (yes, I've had a delivery in clearcase within the last year with ~120 elements in it, and, yes, it almost broke the build, but I managed to catch the files I missed before the next build - this time), you need to either expect build breaks or find a procedural improvement that can catch them faster/easier (continuous integration, for example, probably would have been sufficient). Ostracising your star developers who are the only ones gutsy enough to make sweeping changes probably isn't the right answer.

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I love this answer! – Wayne Koorts Aug 13 at 1:56
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We have a bee outfit, consisting of springy antenna, wings, and a wand.

This is an upgrade from our previous rabbit outfit :)

You have to wear it until the end of the day (including when going out to get lunch, if you break the build in the morning).

Edit: Here is a photo of the bee outfit (with face removed to protect the innocent, i.e. it isn't me)

alt text

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Hehe, I'd like to see that outfit... – Andreas Magnusson Oct 17 '08 at 8:46
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I don't think embarrassing people is a good strategy. – David G Oct 17 '08 at 13:57
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One problem with trying to embarrass people is that not everyone would be embarrassed by that. The last thing you want is someone breaking the build so he can pick up pizza dressed as a bee. – Dave DuPlantis Oct 17 '08 at 14:12
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It's not really that embarrassing in our environment (it might be in others but we're very informal and casual). It's just intended to be a bit of fun, which is how everyone takes it. – Greg Beech Oct 19 '08 at 15:35
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To protect the innocent? But he's guilty! – Germán Nov 14 '08 at 2:19
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Take No Prisoners

I maintain a nerf arsenal.

Revert the check-in and aim for the face.

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Hate check-in reverters :) Give me a moment to fix it, will you! It's a different thing if I'm away, but if you just need to get something to build while I'm fixing it then for pete's sake just leave your change in your workspace. – romkyns May 10 at 14:41
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You Broke the Build

from YBTB

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vote up 19 vote down

A guy I worked with, in a past job, worked in a place where if you broke the build, you got to have, all to yourself, in your very own cubicle:

A giant cardboard cutout of Jar-Jar Binks.

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vote up 15 vote down

$1 in a bucket that is saved for release celebration, beers, etc...

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vote up 14 vote down

None. Encourage programmers not to be scared. It is when they break but not fix the build, then may {insert choice higher being} have mercy on their soul.

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I worked on an enormous project that took nearly 24 hours to build, so breaking it meant a lot of time lost. 2000 people worked on that project, and many were waiting for a good build to come out, so that made it all the more expensive. Don't break the build. – Jay Bazuzi Oct 27 at 0:35
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Programmers scared of breaking builds will be scared of making changes, and therefore scared of working on the code. Not productive in the least. Revisit program without fear. Sounds like the project was a little too monolithic and poorly architected. 2000 people shouldn't be responsible for or dependent on a single build. Individual components with stable version would have been a better choice. Alternatively implement some measures to detect build break changes before they get checked into source control. – vfilby Oct 29 at 18:28
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We have a CI system that will send an email and let people know that the build has broken (tests are failing or whatever). It saves us a lot of time. But seriously...

It's just not a big deal.

Why? We use git, so one of two things happens:

  1. The rest of us continue to work without those newest changes until the guy who pushed bad code fixes his code.
  2. One of us throws away his changes and resets the main branch and lets him rework it and try it again.

The biggest problem I've run into is having people who don't check in changes. I'd rather have pushed changes and build an after-the-fact branch to stash stuff away while it gets fixed than to have people who sit on changes for months to hide stuff.

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vote up 11 vote down

Yes, breaking the build and going on vacation (or even home for the night) is bad. I'm talking about the occasional break that gets fixed right away, which is what most of the replies in this thread seem to be referring to.

On our team we have no such "punishment policy" no matter how unwritten or informal. I see no need, because we all know that breaking the build keeps the others on the team from updating or checking in (and that's all it does). That's plenty of motivation for us to be careful.

So where is the need for punishment? To me it smells of 8 year-olds on a playground pointing at each other singing: "nyaa, nyaa, nyaa-nyaa, nyaa... you broke the bui--ild."

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I agree. unprofessional. – tim Dec 17 '08 at 23:10
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I once worked on a team where one developer always broke the build. EVERY check in. And he was a senior developer. Because there was no policy, there was no discipline. And discipline was most certainly needed. – salt.racer Feb 6 at 19:01
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We have a rubber chicken that hangs outside the cubicle of the person who most recently broke the build.

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We sometimes use fingerpointing:

alt text

(from codesmack)

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Is death a bit harsh? :)

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depends on the proximity to the launch date. – Rob Allen Oct 17 '08 at 12:59
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I "suggest" donations to charity organisations. Works great for people coming late for meetings, too.

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vote up 7 vote down

About five years ago things got so bad that I got very "librarian" about it, and started a spreadsheet with WALL OF SHAME in large letters at the top and entered every breakage into it. Each row had the name of the person responsible, the reason why it occurred, and an explanation of the steps taken to ensure it didn't happen again. It was surprisingly effective, but excruciating to have to administer. And people complained about it. So I told them "This is an optional scheme - if you don't want to take part, just never break the build."

Now we have continuous integration, the full nightly build only breaks extremely rarely - if there's a powercut or a disk goes pop. Though the old timers still speak in hushed tones of the dark days when we had THE WALL.

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vote up 6 vote down

It's my understanding that even "fun" broke-the-build markers are considered to be less than optimal because they discourage frequent check-ins, which prevents problems from being caught earlier while they're smaller, not to mention increasing the difficulties of merging.

On the other hand, I did like the dollar into the beer fund suggestion.

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vote up 5 vote down

The person breaking the build becomes the build administrator

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What? You're not using automated builds? – Kelly French Jul 21 at 19:54
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We have just started throwing shoes at the offender.

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You seem to practice agile, you better check it out and fix it, NOW!!! :)

Update: Punishment for the guy who broke the build, fix the next broken build ;)

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The person who broke the build is now responsible for testing the build.

(with the benefit that that programmer will be incentivized to catch the next offender)

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I know one team that made the developer who broke the build wear a dress for a day.

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What about punishment ?

alt text

(from codesmack)

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"He whose release doth cause offence shall bake a cake in recompense"

Serves us very well, and we get some great cakes out of it! Helps people take responsibility but without feeling beat up about it.

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Problem is of course whether the person's cake-baking skills is on pair with their build-breaking skills... – Andreas Magnusson Oct 17 '08 at 11:00
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The best way how to deal with this is to create automated checkin policy, which prevents committing (Checkin in) broken builds, or at least reports the broken build very soon after checked in.

One possible implementation for this can be:

  • have a dedicated build server
  • have a set of automated functionality tests (executed on the build server) which check the build can successfully built, can be run and performs basic functionality OK
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vote up 3 vote down

Revert the offending commit.

Having to merge changes when they return is usually punishment enough.

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Have the build server automatically start playing country western music over a loud speaker which cannot be shut off until the build is fixed...

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A small, stuffed Cthulhu in a coffee cup that sits on the culprit's desk, hight "Works". The developers always say "Works on my machine", so we made it so!

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vote up 1 vote down

One placed I worked, we had a broom. Its use came from checking in "sweeping changes" which usually broke something or other. So we appropriated a broom and it eventually changed into an I-broke-the-build indicator.

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vote up 1 vote down

I guess someone could have to write "I will not break the build" 1000 times, but then again, programmers would just do:

for (int i=0; i<1000; i++) System.Console.WriteLine("I will not break the build");

but in the projects I've use continuous integration on, we used CCTray, and it popped up with a message to all developers on the project within a minute of checking in broken code. All the programmers would just convene at the desk of the culprit shaking their fists and suggesting that it be rolled back or fixed code be submitted. It usually wasn't an issue.

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