[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] Xen 4.4 development update: Code freezing point reached
On 2013-11-19 22:40, Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk wrote: On Mon, Nov 18, 2013 at 06:19:46PM +0000, George Dunlap wrote:This information will be mirrored on the Xen 4.4 Roadmap wiki page: http://wiki.xen.org/wiki/Xen_Roadmap/4.4 (And I actually updated the wiki this time.) The code "freezing point" is today; which means that starting today non-bug fixes need a freeze exception to be included. Remember our goal for the release: 1. A bug-free release 2. An awesome release 3. An on-time release Accepting a new feature may make Xen more awesome; but it also introduces a risk that it will introduce more bugs. That bug may be found before the release (threatening #3), or it may not be found until after the release (threatening #1). Each freeze exception request will attempt to balance the benefits (how awesome the exception is) vs the risks (will it cause the release to slip, or worse, cause a bug which goes un-noticed into the final release). The idea is that today we will be pretty permissive, but that we will become progressively more conservative until the first RC, which is scheduled for 3 weeks' time (6 December). After that, we will only accept bug fixes. Bug fixes can be checked in without a freeze exception throughout the code freeze, unless the maintianer thinks they are particularly high risk. In later RC's, we may even begin rejecting bug fixes if the broken functionality is small and the risk to other functionality is high. Features which are currently marked "experimental" or do not at the moment work at all cannot be broken really; so changes to code only used by those features should be able to get a freeze exception easily. (Tianocore is something which would probably fall under this.) Features which change or add new interfaces which will need to be supported in a backwards-compatible way (for instance, vNUMA) will need freeze exceptions to make sure that the interface itself has enough time to be considered stable. These are guidelines and principles to give you an idea where we're coming from; if you think there's a good reason why making an exception for you will help us achieve goals 1-3 above better than not doing so, feel free to make your case.I am wondering in which category the tmem cleanup patches fall? They aren't bug-fixes, they could be considered a feature. They were posted before the deadline. I posted the GIT PULL (see http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.emulators.xen.devel/178043) to one of the folks who has write access to the repository (as documented in http://www.xenproject.org/governance.html)?== Open == * qemu-upstream not freeing pirq > http://www.gossamer-threads.com/lists/xen/devel/281498 status: patches posted; latest patches need testingDuan, ping? I didn't have a test env to test this. This need to reimage the env. Regards zduan _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xen.org/xen-devel
|
Lists.xenproject.org is hosted with RackSpace, monitoring our |