On Thursday, 21 September 2006 08:48, Andrew Morton wrote:
> On Thu, 21 Sep 2006 02:36:55 -0400
> Jeff Garzik <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Andrew Morton wrote:
> > > If you think that shortening the release cycle will cause people to be more
> > > disciplined in their changes, to spend less time going berzerk and to spend
> > > more time working with our users and testers on known bugs then I'm all
> > > ears.
> >
> > Honestly, I do think it would be positive. It would shorten the
> > feedback loop, and get more changes out to testers.
> >
> > It would also decrease the pressure of the 60+ trees trying to get
> > everything in, because they know the next release is 3-4 months away.
> > It would be _much_ easier to say "break the generic device stuff in
> > 2.6.20 not 2.6.19, please" if we knew 2.6.20 wasn't going to be a 2007
> > release.
> >
>
> Well, it might be worth trying. But there's a practical problem: how do we
> get there when there's so much work pending? If we skip some people's
> trees then they'll get sore, and it's not obvious that it'll help much, as
> the various trees are fairly unrelated (ie: parallelisable).
>
> I guess the most practical way is to incrementally shorten the cycles.
>
>
> <rerererepeating self>
>
> I do think that any process change we make should send the signal "slow
> down, be more careful, test and review it more carefully". Or at least,
> "try to make sure it compiles".
>
> A compulsory Reviewed-by: would wedge things up nicely ;)
Well, I think this need not help. Like when some USB-related changes that
had been reviewed and even tested happened to break ohci-hcd because they
had only been tested on uhci ...
IMHO every change should appear in at least three consecutive -mm kernels
without causing any problems before it's allowed to go to the mainline.
Greetings,
Rafael
--
You never change things by fighting the existing reality.
R. Buckminster Fuller
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