On Tue, Dec 13, 2005 at 08:01:06PM +0000, Russell King wrote:
> On Tue, Dec 13, 2005 at 07:05:52PM +0100, Adrian Bunk wrote:
> > On Tue, Dec 13, 2005 at 05:31:12PM +0000, Russell King wrote:
> > > The defconfig files in arch/arm/configs are for platform configurations
> > > and are provided by the platform maintainers as a _working_ configuration
> > > for their platform. They're not "defconfigs". They got called
> > > "defconfigs" as a result of the kbuild "cleanups". Please don't confuse
> > > them as such.
> > >
> > > If, in order to have a working platform configuration, they deem that
> > > CONFIG_BROKEN must be enabled, then that's the way it is.
> >
> > if a working platform configuration configuration requires
> > CONFIG_BROKEN=y, the problem is a bug that should be fixed properly.
>
> Maybe they're only broken for a small subset of platforms, and someone
> added a BROKEN without properly considering whether it should be global
> or not?
>
> I don't disagree with the overall notion that CONFIG_BROKEN should not
> be set _where_ _possible_. However, if it needs to be set to get the
> required options, then that's what needs to happen until such time that
> the above is corrected.
Where is the bug report from the person who set CONFIG_BROKEN=y in the
collie defconfig that the BROKEN dependency on MTD_SHARP was wrong?
> However - and now to the main bug bear - how can we tell what is really
> broken if you _just_ change the default configuration file settings for
> CONFIG_BROKEN? What happens is that, on review, we see a simple change.
> We'd assume that it has little impact, and we accept that change.
>
> Maybe a month or two down the line, someone whines that their platform
> doesn't work for some reason, and it's tracked down to this and the
> resulting fallout from disabling CONFIG_BROKEN.
The whining is the bug report the person who set the CONFIG_BROKEN=y in
the defconfig didn't send.
And things would have been even worse if I had sent a patch erasing
MTD_SHARP from the kernel because code "both marked as obsolete and
BROKEN can clearly be removed" and the code was therefore completely
removed two months before the first person whined?
> That means that the original review was _worthless_. It wasn't a
> review at all.
>
> So, what I am trying to get across is the need to show the _full_ set
> of changes to a default configuratoin when you disable CONFIG_BROKEN,
> which is trivially producable if you run the script I've already posted.
>
> You can even use that in conjunction with your present patch to produce
> a patch which shows _exactly_ _everything_ which changes as a result of
> disabling CONFIG_BROKEN. Surely giving reviewers the _full_ story is
> far better than half a story, and should be something that any change
> to the kernel strives for.
>
> If not, what's the point of the original change?
The point is that I haven't yet heard any good reason for
CONFIG_BROKEN=y in a defconfig.
No, it's not a good reason if someone used it as a workaround instead of
sending a bug report that would result in a fixing of the wrong BROKEN
dependency.
Where is the bug report of the person setting CONFIG_BROKEN=y in the
collie defconfig that the MTD_SHARP dependency on BROKEN was wrong?
> Russell King
cu
Adrian
--
"Is there not promise of rain?" Ling Tan asked suddenly out
of the darkness. There had been need of rain for many days.
"Only a promise," Lao Er said.
Pearl S. Buck - Dragon Seed
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