[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] RFC: LTS and stable release scheme
On 10/08/2015 02:22 PM, Jan Beulich wrote: On 08.10.15 at 13:49, <JGross@xxxxxxxx> wrote:On 10/08/2015 01:34 PM, Jan Beulich wrote:On 08.10.15 at 12:59, <Ian.Jackson@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:Jan Beulich writes ("Re: [Xen-devel] RFC: LTS and stable release scheme"):Perhaps there's room for further automation here, yet as with any automation the question is how quickly getting this in place will amortize itself.Even with the current situation I think much more automation would be good. (But then I'm someone who really (a) likes automating things (b) likes sitting back and watching the automation do its thing and even (c) likes debugging the automation when it goes wrong.) I think that maybe as a starting point, Jan and I could agree that instead of build-testing our backports locally, we will throw them at osstest and see what sticks.Well, yes, we could. Otoh the overhead of fixing something that didn't build but got committed already means more mechanical work (revert, or create a fixup patch) compared to fixing it before pushing to the respective staging tree. What I would see as possibly useful would be a queue like thing where backports could be added, and automation would take care of committing and pushing as much of it as it can validate to build (more severe problems are pretty rare in stable trees, and hence relying on the normal osstest there like we do now would seem reasonable). Yet again this would mean one may have to turn attention to the respective tree more often (since right now this is needed just once for each batch of backports, unless something really odd happens).Couldn't that purely mechanical work be spread to others? I can't believe this would require exceptional skills and I think your time is to precious for stuff like that. In the beginning the workflow could be the same as yours today, there would be just the queue you mentioned and someone either doing the builds and committing or just look after the results of any automatism. It just wouldn't be you.I really dislike considering my time more precious than that of other people. Hence I'm rather hesitant to push work onto others, albeit I've learned that I can't do entirely without (but then on the basis of them being more knowledgeable about things or it really being their responsibility, not their time being less valuable). Okay, let me rephrase this: You are already doing quite a lot for the Xen project (committer, x86 maintainer, a huge amount of reviews) resulting in your time being available to productive topics seems to be of higher priority than not spreading more or less mechanical work to others. I can understand you are feeling a little bit uneasy letting others do this maybe even dumb work (no offence), but I hope there would be someone volunteering for that task. If not, this discussion is moot, of course. You can put it this way: you are seeing a problem with a shorter release cycle due to the suspected higher workload required doing purely mechanical work. Maybe the desire for a shorter release cycle is so high that someone steps up and says: "hey, no problem, let me do that purely mechanical work, so your problem isn't existing any more." Juergen _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xen.org/xen-devel
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