On Wed, Apr 15, 2020 at 12:50:09AM +0200, Michal Kubecek wrote:
On Tue, Apr 14, 2020 at 08:37:18PM +0300, Leon Romanovsky wrote:
The autoselection process works good enough for everything outside of netdev community.
That's very far from true. I have seen and heard many complaints about
How about some actionable data? What do you expect us to do with "seen and heard"?
Do you have evidence that AUTOSEL introduces more regressions over the stable tagged commits? Do you have evidence showing that AUTOSEL isn't performing properly? Great, let's go over it.
I have always measured the results of this work and compared it to the "regular" flow of stable tagged commits, I'm keeping track of how the quality of it compares to those stable tagged commits, and quite a few times I took action to deal with specific issues that come up with the process based on data.
There's not much I can do with "seen and heard".
AUTOSEL and inflation of stable trees in general, both in private and in
I'm puzzled about your objections to "inflation"? The stable tree was missing a bunch of fixes before, and now it doesn't.
In parallel to "inflating" the stable trees I'm also driving efforts to improve the testing of these trees so that we could reliably say that we didn't introduce any regressions into the stable tree. "inflation" on it's own doesn't increase the rate of regressions in stable trees, and that's based on historical data.
public lists. It was also discussed on Kernel Summit few times - with little success.
Define success? We're adding a bunch of missing fixes and not causing any more regressions than before, you don't call that a success?
Let me also point out that I've tried to bring up this process (as well as the -stable process in general) at every kernel summit/maintainer's summit (here's the one from last year: https://lwn.net/Articles/799166/) and attempted to address any feedback that came back from it. It seemed to me that there's an agreement that this process was going well (at the very least Linus didn't yell at me), so I'm still puzzled by your own success criteria.