Information to include in a Support ticket
To troubleshoot and investigate a Support ticket in an efficient and effective manner, the WPVIP Support team needs to fully understand the scope, nature, and context of a request. If the initial request in a ticket does not provide sufficient information, the amount of time required to communicate and resolve the issue will increase.
When creating a Support ticket, provide as many of the details listed below as possible that are relevant to the issue.
Essential information
The WPVIP Support team requires most if not all of the information listed below to proceed with an investigation:
- The domain name(s) that correspond to the WPVIP Platform environment affected.
- Exact URLs that are affected. These could be front-end URLs, WordPress admin URLs, or both.
- Steps to replicate the issue. This is very important so that Support can start analyzing the problem right away.
- Description of issue + supporting screenshots, error messages, and support details if applicable.
- Describe the expected behavior.
- Describe how the actual behavior differs from the expectation in as much detail as possible.
- What time (in UTC) did the issue(s) occur?
- What is the overall impact of the issue, and/or the number of users that are affected?
Information for debugging issues
If assistance is requested for debugging an issue, the Support team will need most if not all of the following information:
- What steps have been taken to investigate this issue so far?
- What has been determined from looking at New Relic?
- What has been determined from looking at Query Monitor?
- What can be seen by using a browser’s development tools? Are there browser errors? What about the response headers?
- Is the site down for everyone, or just one person?
- Have advertisements or other third-party content been identified as possible sources of the problem?
- Have developers on the team replicated this issue on non-production environments?
Additional information
Depending on the type of issue, providing some of the following information in a Support ticket can also be helpful for the WPVIP team to quickly and effectively provide assistance:
- On which network are the affected users? (e.g. office, home, mobile)
- On which browser(s) is the issue appearing?
- If one user is affected, what is the user’s source IP?
- If only a few users (less than 5) are affected, what are the WordPress usernames of the affected users?
- Have there been recent deployments?
- Have there been network changes on the customer side? (e.g. DNS if applicable or internal network changes)
- Provide a traceroute and HTTP headers.
- Provide a HAR file for failing or problematic requests.
- Provide a screen share or videos demonstrating the issue.
- If a site has a reverse proxy such as Akamai, can the issue be reproduced when requests bypass the reverse proxy and are sent directly to the Automattic Anycast IP address by editing the local hosts file?
- If a decoupled architecture is used, has it been determined that the front-end application is not causing the issue?
- Have there been any caching changes? (e.g. modifications to cache-control headers)
Last updated: September 24, 2024