Adrian Bunk wrote:
On Tue, Nov 13, 2007 at 01:47:10PM -0500, Mark Lord wrote:
Adrian Bunk wrote:
...
I did bisecting myself, and I know that it costs time and work.
But the first point is the above one that it makes otherwise nearly
undebuggable problems debuggable and fixable.
..
Definitely useful, no question.
But the problem is now that kernel devs are addicted to it,
many won't even consider resolving a problem any other way.
That's not "maintaining" (or supporting) one's code.
What you replaced with two dots contained the answer to this:
Another point is that it shifts the work from the few experienced
developers to the many users. Users (and voluntary testers) we have
many, but developer time for debugging bug reports is a quite scarce
resource.
And when a "maintainer" is too busy to find/fix their own bugs,
that could be a sign that they've bitten off too big of a chunk
of the kernel, and it's time for them to distribute code maintainership.
The problem is: Maintainers don't grow on trees.
You need people who are both technically capable and willing to spend
time on the non-sexy task of debugging problems.
Where do you plan to find them?
If you don't believe me, please find a maintainer for the currently
unmaintained parallel port support.
Or if you want a harder task, find a maintainer for the floppy driver...
..
Again, the problem is:
But the problem is now that kernel devs are addicted to it,
many won't even consider resolving a problem any other way.
And that's simply not good enough.
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