* Moving drivers into staging (was Re: [GIT PULL] SCSI fixes for 2.6.32-rc3) [not found] ` <20091012145453.GD4565@elte.hu> @ 2009-10-12 15:09 ` Greg KH 2009-10-12 15:42 ` Ingo Molnar [not found] ` <20091012150911.GB1656-l3A5Bk7waGM@public.gmane.org> 0 siblings, 2 replies; 15+ messages in thread From: Greg KH @ 2009-10-12 15:09 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ingo Molnar Cc: James Bottomley, Linus Torvalds, Theodore Tso, Andrew Morton, linux-scsi, linux-kernel, Jing Huang, netdev, linux-wireless adding David Miller and the wireless developers who had this idea as well... On Mon, Oct 12, 2009 at 04:54:53PM +0200, Ingo Molnar wrote: > I think your interpretation is arbitrary - where did you get that ABI > rule from? I'm sure it cannot be from any of the drivers/staging/ > discussions on lkml, i've followed them quite closely. If 'has a messy > ABI' was the only requirement for drivers/staging/ then we could move > 90% of drivers/staging/ into drivers/ straight away - and that would be > counter-productive IMHO. I agree with this, and the other points you raised that I snipped out. > Sidenote, in fact i think we should expand on that: drivers/staging/ > should be used in the _other_ direction as well - to un-upstream stale > drivers that are abandoned and unused, in a gradual fashion. 'git mv' is > cheap. Ok, this is about the 3rd or 4th time I've heard this, from totally different people lately. It seems that I'm the only one that has the ability to drop drivers out of the kernel tree, which is a funny situation :) In thinking about this a lot more, I don't really mind it. If people want to push stuff out of "real" places in the kernel, into drivers/staging/ and give the original authors and maintainers notice about what is going on, _and_ provide a TODO file for what needs to happen to get the code back into the main portion of the kernel tree, then I'll be happy to help out with this and manage it. I think a 6-9 month window (basically 3 kernel releases) should be sufficient time to have a driver that has been in drivers/staging/ be cleaned up enough to move back into the main kernel tree. If not, it could be easily dropped. Any objections to this? > Basically, drivers/staging/ gives us an excellent opportunity to > _increase_ the quality of drivers by applying stronger upstream > inclusion filters, without having to hurt users/developers in the > process. We just have to start using it that way as well. I totally agree. And so far, it does seem to be working well for this. A number of companies have used it to successfully get their code into the main kernel, as well as driving them to clean up their code better to keep it from having to go into the staging tree. thanks, greg k-h ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: Moving drivers into staging (was Re: [GIT PULL] SCSI fixes for 2.6.32-rc3) 2009-10-12 15:09 ` Moving drivers into staging (was Re: [GIT PULL] SCSI fixes for 2.6.32-rc3) Greg KH @ 2009-10-12 15:42 ` Ingo Molnar [not found] ` <20091012154244.GA13323-X9Un+BFzKDI@public.gmane.org> [not found] ` <20091012150911.GB1656-l3A5Bk7waGM@public.gmane.org> 1 sibling, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread From: Ingo Molnar @ 2009-10-12 15:42 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Greg KH Cc: James Bottomley, Linus Torvalds, Theodore Tso, Andrew Morton, linux-scsi, linux-kernel, Jing Huang, netdev, linux-wireless * Greg KH <gregkh@suse.de> wrote: > > Sidenote, in fact i think we should expand on that: drivers/staging/ > > should be used in the _other_ direction as well - to un-upstream > > stale drivers that are abandoned and unused, in a gradual fashion. > > 'git mv' is cheap. > > Ok, this is about the 3rd or 4th time I've heard this, from totally > different people lately. [...] Heh. I guess i had a good crystal ball on that then - i raised that issue in my very first comments on drivers/staging/, 2.5 years ago - see the "Linux Kernel developer statement about closed source code" thread, where i wrote: | - We must accept open-source drivers (which are license-compatible | with the kernel) for new hardware the moment they are offered. No | ifs and when. No whining about quality, style, security, re-use, | non-reuse, obsolete APIs, overlapping functionality, the already | busy merge schedule of a maintainer or whatever other thing can come | up on lkml. | | We can create arbitrary quarantine mechanisms we wish to use: | CONFIG_REALLY_BROKEN. We could even create drivers/staging/ as a | temporary staging area for drivers. | | What we cannot do is to _deny_ the distribution channel and exclude | users. The moment we do that (and we still do that in way too many | areas of the kernel) we have lost the availability race. [...] | If it's not maintained actively(sc) (i.e. it's a fire-and-forget | driver) then it can get marked BROKEN with time, and can get removed | as well. Hm, i think i even gave drivers/staging/ its name? > [...] It seems that I'm the only one that has the ability to drop > drivers out of the kernel tree, which is a funny situation :) You are the only one who has the ability to send a warning shot towards drivers _without hurting users_, and by moving it into the focus of a team of cleanup oriented developers. I think that's an important distinction ;-) > In thinking about this a lot more, I don't really mind it. If people > want to push stuff out of "real" places in the kernel, into > drivers/staging/ and give the original authors and maintainers notice > about what is going on, _and_ provide a TODO file for what needs to > happen to get the code back into the main portion of the kernel tree, > then I'll be happy to help out with this and manage it. > > I think a 6-9 month window (basically 3 kernel releases) should be > sufficient time to have a driver that has been in drivers/staging/ be > cleaned up enough to move back into the main kernel tree. If not, it > could be easily dropped. > > Any objections to this? Sounds excellent to me! > > Basically, drivers/staging/ gives us an excellent opportunity to > > _increase_ the quality of drivers by applying stronger upstream > > inclusion filters, without having to hurt users/developers in the > > process. We just have to start using it that way as well. > > I totally agree. And so far, it does seem to be working well for > this. A number of companies have used it to successfully get their > code into the main kernel, as well as driving them to clean up their > code better to keep it from having to go into the staging tree. Yeah. I think we were hurting from an under-estimated trust problem: driver authors couldnt trust _us maintainers_ to follow through with upstreaming. drivers/staging/ improved that IMHO. I.e. the old process of upstreaming drivers was too arbitrary, incurred big latencies and was dependent on the whims of maintainers. I.e. new developers got exposed to some of the worst social aspects of a distributed development process. Now there's basically a single (and friendly! ;-) upstreaming channel that people (yet-)unfamilar with Linux practices can standardize on. This reduces the pressure on maintainers and also creates a reference point for upstreaming honesty - which is almost unconditionally good i think. Ingo ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
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* Re: Moving drivers into staging (was Re: [GIT PULL] SCSI fixes for 2.6.32-rc3) [not found] ` <20091012154244.GA13323-X9Un+BFzKDI@public.gmane.org> @ 2009-10-12 23:24 ` Greg KH 2009-10-13 18:08 ` Luis R. Rodriguez 0 siblings, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread From: Greg KH @ 2009-10-12 23:24 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ingo Molnar Cc: James Bottomley, Linus Torvalds, Theodore Tso, Andrew Morton, linux-scsi, linux-kernel, Jing Huang, netdev-u79uwXL29TY76Z2rM5mHXA, linux-wireless-u79uwXL29TY76Z2rM5mHXA On Mon, Oct 12, 2009 at 05:42:44PM +0200, Ingo Molnar wrote: > Hm, i think i even gave drivers/staging/ its name? Yes you did, and I appreciate it :) > > [...] It seems that I'm the only one that has the ability to drop > > drivers out of the kernel tree, which is a funny situation :) > > You are the only one who has the ability to send a warning shot towards > drivers _without hurting users_, and by moving it into the focus of a > team of cleanup oriented developers. > > I think that's an important distinction ;-) Good point. > > In thinking about this a lot more, I don't really mind it. If people > > want to push stuff out of "real" places in the kernel, into > > drivers/staging/ and give the original authors and maintainers notice > > about what is going on, _and_ provide a TODO file for what needs to > > happen to get the code back into the main portion of the kernel tree, > > then I'll be happy to help out with this and manage it. > > > > I think a 6-9 month window (basically 3 kernel releases) should be > > sufficient time to have a driver that has been in drivers/staging/ be > > cleaned up enough to move back into the main kernel tree. If not, it > > could be easily dropped. > > > > Any objections to this? > > Sounds excellent to me! Great, I'll await the patches to move stuff to drivers/staging/ now. Wireless developers, warm up your editors :) thanks, greg k-h -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-wireless" in the body of a message to majordomo-u79uwXL29TY76Z2rM5mHXA@public.gmane.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: Moving drivers into staging (was Re: [GIT PULL] SCSI fixes for 2.6.32-rc3) 2009-10-12 23:24 ` Greg KH @ 2009-10-13 18:08 ` Luis R. Rodriguez 2009-10-14 4:45 ` Greg KH 0 siblings, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread From: Luis R. Rodriguez @ 2009-10-13 18:08 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Greg KH Cc: Ingo Molnar, James Bottomley, Linus Torvalds, Theodore Tso, Andrew Morton, linux-scsi, linux-kernel, Jing Huang, netdev, linux-wireless On Mon, Oct 12, 2009 at 4:24 PM, Greg KH <gregkh@suse.de> wrote: > On Mon, Oct 12, 2009 at 05:42:44PM +0200, Ingo Molnar wrote: >> Hm, i think i even gave drivers/staging/ its name? > > Yes you did, and I appreciate it :) > >> > [...] It seems that I'm the only one that has the ability to drop >> > drivers out of the kernel tree, which is a funny situation :) >> >> You are the only one who has the ability to send a warning shot towards >> drivers _without hurting users_, and by moving it into the focus of a >> team of cleanup oriented developers. >> >> I think that's an important distinction ;-) > > Good point. > >> > In thinking about this a lot more, I don't really mind it. If people >> > want to push stuff out of "real" places in the kernel, into >> > drivers/staging/ and give the original authors and maintainers notice >> > about what is going on, _and_ provide a TODO file for what needs to >> > happen to get the code back into the main portion of the kernel tree, >> > then I'll be happy to help out with this and manage it. >> > >> > I think a 6-9 month window (basically 3 kernel releases) should be >> > sufficient time to have a driver that has been in drivers/staging/ be >> > cleaned up enough to move back into the main kernel tree. If not, it >> > could be easily dropped. >> > >> > Any objections to this? >> >> Sounds excellent to me! > > Great, I'll await the patches to move stuff to drivers/staging/ now. > > Wireless developers, warm up your editors :) OK -- prism54 seems like a good candidate, instead of removing it completely as I originally outlined on the feature removal schedule. Do we have a file to give notices to move drivers to staging because they are old as with the feature removal schedule? The more visible these things become the better it is for users. Luis ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: Moving drivers into staging (was Re: [GIT PULL] SCSI fixes for 2.6.32-rc3) 2009-10-13 18:08 ` Luis R. Rodriguez @ 2009-10-14 4:45 ` Greg KH [not found] ` <20091014044519.GA19199-l3A5Bk7waGM@public.gmane.org> 0 siblings, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread From: Greg KH @ 2009-10-14 4:45 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Luis R. Rodriguez Cc: Ingo Molnar, James Bottomley, Linus Torvalds, Theodore Tso, Andrew Morton, linux-scsi, linux-kernel, Jing Huang, netdev, linux-wireless On Tue, Oct 13, 2009 at 11:08:15AM -0700, Luis R. Rodriguez wrote: > On Mon, Oct 12, 2009 at 4:24 PM, Greg KH <gregkh@suse.de> wrote: > > On Mon, Oct 12, 2009 at 05:42:44PM +0200, Ingo Molnar wrote: > >> Hm, i think i even gave drivers/staging/ its name? > > > > Yes you did, and I appreciate it :) > > > >> > [...] It seems that I'm the only one that has the ability to drop > >> > drivers out of the kernel tree, which is a funny situation :) > >> > >> You are the only one who has the ability to send a warning shot towards > >> drivers _without hurting users_, and by moving it into the focus of a > >> team of cleanup oriented developers. > >> > >> I think that's an important distinction ;-) > > > > Good point. > > > >> > In thinking about this a lot more, I don't really mind it. ??If people > >> > want to push stuff out of "real" places in the kernel, into > >> > drivers/staging/ and give the original authors and maintainers notice > >> > about what is going on, _and_ provide a TODO file for what needs to > >> > happen to get the code back into the main portion of the kernel tree, > >> > then I'll be happy to help out with this and manage it. > >> > > >> > I think a 6-9 month window (basically 3 kernel releases) should be > >> > sufficient time to have a driver that has been in drivers/staging/ be > >> > cleaned up enough to move back into the main kernel tree. ??If not, it > >> > could be easily dropped. > >> > > >> > Any objections to this? > >> > >> Sounds excellent to me! > > > > Great, I'll await the patches to move stuff to drivers/staging/ now. > > > > Wireless developers, warm up your editors :) > > OK -- prism54 seems like a good candidate, instead of removing it > completely as I originally outlined on the feature removal schedule. > Do we have a file to give notices to move drivers to staging because > they are old as with the feature removal schedule? The more visible > these things become the better it is for users. We've found that the feature removal file is also ignored :) How about when it was scheduled to be removed, we put it in staging and I'll add it to my announcements about the staging tree every release? Unless you can think of a better way? thanks, greg k-h ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
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* Re: Moving drivers into staging (was Re: [GIT PULL] SCSI fixes for 2.6.32-rc3) [not found] ` <20091014044519.GA19199-l3A5Bk7waGM@public.gmane.org> @ 2009-10-14 5:19 ` Joe Perches 2009-10-14 6:33 ` Ingo Molnar 0 siblings, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread From: Joe Perches @ 2009-10-14 5:19 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Greg KH Cc: Luis R. Rodriguez, Ingo Molnar, James Bottomley, Linus Torvalds, Theodore Tso, Andrew Morton, linux-scsi, linux-kernel, Jing Huang, netdev-u79uwXL29TY76Z2rM5mHXA, linux-wireless-u79uwXL29TY76Z2rM5mHXA On Tue, 2009-10-13 at 21:45 -0700, Greg KH wrote: > How about when it was scheduled to be removed, we put it in staging and > I'll add it to my announcements about the staging tree every release? > Unless you can think of a better way? staging/to_be_removed_unless_fixed_by/v.x.y ? -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-wireless" in the body of a message to majordomo-u79uwXL29TY76Z2rM5mHXA@public.gmane.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: Moving drivers into staging (was Re: [GIT PULL] SCSI fixes for 2.6.32-rc3) 2009-10-14 5:19 ` Joe Perches @ 2009-10-14 6:33 ` Ingo Molnar 2009-10-14 14:13 ` James Smart ` (2 more replies) 0 siblings, 3 replies; 15+ messages in thread From: Ingo Molnar @ 2009-10-14 6:33 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Joe Perches Cc: Greg KH, Luis R. Rodriguez, James Bottomley, Linus Torvalds, Theodore Tso, Andrew Morton, linux-scsi, linux-kernel, Jing Huang, netdev, linux-wireless * Joe Perches <joe@perches.com> wrote: > On Tue, 2009-10-13 at 21:45 -0700, Greg KH wrote: > > How about when it was scheduled to be removed, we put it in staging and > > I'll add it to my announcements about the staging tree every release? > > Unless you can think of a better way? > > staging/to_be_removed_unless_fixed_by/v.x.y ? Yes, that's a real worry. Some time ago i suggested: drivers/staging/good/ drivers/staging/bad/ drivers/staging/ugly/ good: drivers that are to go upstream in the next cycle bad: outgoing drivers being obsoleted or abandoned ugly: incoming messy drivers with active developers The messaging of this looks nice and the names are short and obvious. An added benefit is that this kind of separation makes it easy for people interested in drivers/staging to follow the 'status' of drivers. Once stuff goes into 'good' a different kind of review is needed than if a driver goes into 'ugly'. The main disadvantage would be the PR angle: putting new drivers into a path named 'ugly'. Not something you want to put into a quarterly status report, right? If we put drivers/staging/ugly/ drivers into drivers/staging/ itself, we'd solve that problem. I.e. we'd keep the current scheme, but we'd also add drivers/staging/good/ and drivers/staging/bad/ as two extra stages for incoming and outgoing drivers. A third version would be a more neutral name: drivers/staging/incoming/ drivers/staging/outgoing/ I think it has many advantages, but (of course!) it all depends on whether Greg wants to have any separation like this. Ingo ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: Moving drivers into staging (was Re: [GIT PULL] SCSI fixes for 2.6.32-rc3) 2009-10-14 6:33 ` Ingo Molnar @ 2009-10-14 14:13 ` James Smart 2009-10-14 17:52 ` Stefan Richter 2009-10-14 19:11 ` Greg KH 2 siblings, 0 replies; 15+ messages in thread From: James Smart @ 2009-10-14 14:13 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ingo Molnar Cc: Joe Perches, Greg KH, Luis R. Rodriguez, James Bottomley, Linus Torvalds, Theodore Tso, Andrew Morton, linux-scsi, linux-kernel, Jing Huang, netdev@vger.kernel.org, linux-wireless@vger.kernel.org Ingo Molnar wrote: > Yes, that's a real worry. Some time ago i suggested: > > drivers/staging/good/ > drivers/staging/bad/ > drivers/staging/ugly/ > > good: drivers that are to go upstream in the next cycle > bad: outgoing drivers being obsoleted or abandoned > ugly: incoming messy drivers with active developers > > The messaging of this looks nice and the names are short and obvious. > > An added benefit is that this kind of separation makes it easy for > people interested in drivers/staging to follow the 'status' of drivers. > Once stuff goes into 'good' a different kind of review is needed than if > a driver goes into 'ugly'. > > The main disadvantage would be the PR angle: putting new drivers into a > path named 'ugly'. Not something you want to put into a quarterly status > report, right? If we put drivers/staging/ugly/ drivers into > drivers/staging/ itself, we'd solve that problem. I.e. we'd keep the > current scheme, but we'd also add drivers/staging/good/ and > drivers/staging/bad/ as two extra stages for incoming and outgoing > drivers. Change "ugly" to "wip" (work in progress). Should remove the negative connotation and keeps things short. Does miss the spaghetti western theme though :) -- james s ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: Moving drivers into staging (was Re: [GIT PULL] SCSI fixes for 2.6.32-rc3) 2009-10-14 6:33 ` Ingo Molnar 2009-10-14 14:13 ` James Smart @ 2009-10-14 17:52 ` Stefan Richter 2009-10-14 18:36 ` Ingo Molnar 2009-10-14 19:11 ` Greg KH 2 siblings, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread From: Stefan Richter @ 2009-10-14 17:52 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ingo Molnar Cc: Joe Perches, Greg KH, Luis R. Rodriguez, James Bottomley, Linus Torvalds, Theodore Tso, Andrew Morton, linux-scsi, linux-kernel, Jing Huang, netdev, linux-wireless Ingo Molnar wrote: > * Joe Perches <joe@perches.com> wrote: > >> On Tue, 2009-10-13 at 21:45 -0700, Greg KH wrote: >> > How about when it was scheduled to be removed, we put it in staging and >> > I'll add it to my announcements about the staging tree every release? >> > Unless you can think of a better way? >> >> staging/to_be_removed_unless_fixed_by/v.x.y ? > > Yes, that's a real worry. Some time ago i suggested: > > drivers/staging/good/ > drivers/staging/bad/ > drivers/staging/ugly/ How well do "git am", "quilt import" and friends cope with ever changing directories? How about using drivers/staging/this_driver/TODO and (or) its Kconfig help text to leave a note about the plans for this driver? The worry that these will be ignored like Documentation/feature-removal-schedule.txt is being ignored may apply to the path name based solution too, I'm afraid. (Besides, Greg's release announcements are a good channel for this. These announcements are actually picked up by the specialized press.) -- Stefan Richter -=====-==--= =-=- -===- http://arcgraph.de/sr/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: Moving drivers into staging (was Re: [GIT PULL] SCSI fixes for 2.6.32-rc3) 2009-10-14 17:52 ` Stefan Richter @ 2009-10-14 18:36 ` Ingo Molnar 2009-10-14 19:00 ` Stefan Richter 0 siblings, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread From: Ingo Molnar @ 2009-10-14 18:36 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Stefan Richter Cc: Joe Perches, Greg KH, Luis R. Rodriguez, James Bottomley, Linus Torvalds, Theodore Tso, Andrew Morton, linux-scsi, linux-kernel, Jing Huang, netdev, linux-wireless * Stefan Richter <stefanr@s5r6.in-berlin.de> wrote: > Ingo Molnar wrote: > > * Joe Perches <joe@perches.com> wrote: > > > >> On Tue, 2009-10-13 at 21:45 -0700, Greg KH wrote: > >> > How about when it was scheduled to be removed, we put it in staging and > >> > I'll add it to my announcements about the staging tree every release? > >> > Unless you can think of a better way? > >> > >> staging/to_be_removed_unless_fixed_by/v.x.y ? > > > > Yes, that's a real worry. Some time ago i suggested: > > > > drivers/staging/good/ > > drivers/staging/bad/ > > drivers/staging/ugly/ > > How well do "git am", "quilt import" and friends cope with ever > changing directories? Once a driver is in a tree it's in Git and git mv is easy. People working with Linux better familiarize themselves with Git workflow - the sooner the better. If it's not in tree then it will adopt to whatever layout there is once it gets into Greg's tree. I dont see the problem. > How about using drivers/staging/this_driver/TODO and (or) its Kconfig > help text to leave a note about the plans for this driver? Well, the answer is obvious i think. Tell me, at a glance, if you see a patch on lkml, which one is for a staging driver to be obsoleted, and which one is the one going upstream real soon? The patches say: +++ a/drivers/staging/foo/x.c +++ a/drivers/staging/bar/y.c Then tell me the same at a glance if you see patches for: +++ a/drivers/staging/wip/x.c +++ a/drivers/staging/bad/y.c > The worry that these will be ignored like > Documentation/feature-removal-schedule.txt is being ignored may apply > to the path name based solution too, I'm afraid. It wont be 'ignored', as it's in every patch, it's in every commit, it's in every substantial communication about that driver. The problem with feature-removal-schedule.txt is that it's too much out of sight and not part of the regular patch workflow. Same goes for any TODO file. Experience has shown that the actual _path_ were drivers end up does matter quite a bit, to general visibility and to mindset. That's one of the reasons why we have _half a thousand_ directories in drivers/ to begin with. The directory namespace is very powerful, and we use it to convey all sorts of information about the logical category a driver is in. Using it in drivers/staging/ instead of the current flat hierarchy would thus be pretty natural. Ingo ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: Moving drivers into staging (was Re: [GIT PULL] SCSI fixes for 2.6.32-rc3) 2009-10-14 18:36 ` Ingo Molnar @ 2009-10-14 19:00 ` Stefan Richter 2009-10-15 6:03 ` Ingo Molnar 0 siblings, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread From: Stefan Richter @ 2009-10-14 19:00 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ingo Molnar Cc: Joe Perches, Greg KH, Luis R. Rodriguez, James Bottomley, Linus Torvalds, Theodore Tso, Andrew Morton, linux-scsi, linux-kernel, Jing Huang, netdev, linux-wireless On 14 Oct, Ingo Molnar wrote: > * Stefan Richter <stefanr@s5r6.in-berlin.de> wrote: >> How well do "git am", "quilt import" and friends cope with ever >> changing directories? [Perhaps the -p option does the trick. And git-am could be done on a temporary branch from before the move of the files.] > Once a driver is in a tree it's in Git and git mv is easy. People > working with Linux better familiarize themselves with Git workflow - the > sooner the better. Even if author and committer both work with git, they often use e-mail to transfer patches. > If it's not in tree then it will adopt to whatever layout there is once > it gets into Greg's tree. Many "good" drivers will start as "ugly" or "bad" ones. >> How about using drivers/staging/this_driver/TODO and (or) its Kconfig >> help text to leave a note about the plans for this driver? > > Well, the answer is obvious i think. Tell me, at a glance, if you see a > patch on lkml, which one is for a staging driver to be obsoleted, and > which one is the one going upstream real soon? The patches say: > > +++ a/drivers/staging/foo/x.c > > +++ a/drivers/staging/bar/y.c > > Then tell me the same at a glance if you see patches for: > > +++ a/drivers/staging/wip/x.c > > +++ a/drivers/staging/bad/y.c Does this information matter much? What's more interesting is whether development activity will _lead_ to a driver being moved from bad or ugly to good. -- Stefan Richter -=====-==--= =-=- -===- http://arcgraph.de/sr/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: Moving drivers into staging (was Re: [GIT PULL] SCSI fixes for 2.6.32-rc3) 2009-10-14 19:00 ` Stefan Richter @ 2009-10-15 6:03 ` Ingo Molnar 0 siblings, 0 replies; 15+ messages in thread From: Ingo Molnar @ 2009-10-15 6:03 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Stefan Richter Cc: Joe Perches, Greg KH, Luis R. Rodriguez, James Bottomley, Linus Torvalds, Theodore Tso, Andrew Morton, linux-scsi, linux-kernel, Jing Huang, netdev, linux-wireless * Stefan Richter <stefanr@s5r6.in-berlin.de> wrote: > > Well, the answer is obvious i think. Tell me, at a glance, if you > > see a patch on lkml, which one is for a staging driver to be > > obsoleted, and which one is the one going upstream real soon? The > > patches say: > > > > +++ a/drivers/staging/foo/x.c > > > > +++ a/drivers/staging/bar/y.c > > > > Then tell me the same at a glance if you see patches for: > > > > +++ a/drivers/staging/wip/x.c > > > > +++ a/drivers/staging/bad/y.c > > Does this information matter much? Yes. You might not appreciate it as you are active in a relatively narrow field (so all patches in your world have an 'obvious' place) - but i for example take most of the context of a change from the email itself and the more self-descriptive it is, the better. I would be more likely to review work-in-progress patches while not bother about obsolete drivers on the way out. YMMV. > What's more interesting is whether development activity will _lead_ to > a driver being moved from bad or ugly to good. ... a prerequisite of which is for more developers to be accutely aware of in what state a driver is. Anyway ... it's all up to Greg and he indicated that he wants the simplest structure, which is fair enough. Ingo ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: Moving drivers into staging (was Re: [GIT PULL] SCSI fixes for 2.6.32-rc3) 2009-10-14 6:33 ` Ingo Molnar 2009-10-14 14:13 ` James Smart 2009-10-14 17:52 ` Stefan Richter @ 2009-10-14 19:11 ` Greg KH 2 siblings, 0 replies; 15+ messages in thread From: Greg KH @ 2009-10-14 19:11 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ingo Molnar Cc: Joe Perches, Luis R. Rodriguez, James Bottomley, Linus Torvalds, Theodore Tso, Andrew Morton, linux-scsi, linux-kernel, Jing Huang, netdev, linux-wireless On Wed, Oct 14, 2009 at 08:33:08AM +0200, Ingo Molnar wrote: > > * Joe Perches <joe@perches.com> wrote: > > > On Tue, 2009-10-13 at 21:45 -0700, Greg KH wrote: > > > How about when it was scheduled to be removed, we put it in staging and > > > I'll add it to my announcements about the staging tree every release? > > > Unless you can think of a better way? > > > > staging/to_be_removed_unless_fixed_by/v.x.y ? > > Yes, that's a real worry. Some time ago i suggested: > > drivers/staging/good/ > drivers/staging/bad/ > drivers/staging/ugly/ > > good: drivers that are to go upstream in the next cycle > bad: outgoing drivers being obsoleted or abandoned > ugly: incoming messy drivers with active developers > > The messaging of this looks nice and the names are short and obvious. Yeah, but they make my life much harder than it needs to be. I'd prefer to stick with the directory naming scheme we have today, it seems to work well so far. thanks, greg k-h ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
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* Re: Moving drivers into staging (was Re: [GIT PULL] SCSI fixes for 2.6.32-rc3) [not found] ` <20091012150911.GB1656-l3A5Bk7waGM@public.gmane.org> @ 2009-10-12 15:43 ` James Bottomley 2009-10-12 23:26 ` Greg KH 0 siblings, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread From: James Bottomley @ 2009-10-12 15:43 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Greg KH Cc: Ingo Molnar, Linus Torvalds, Theodore Tso, Andrew Morton, linux-scsi, linux-kernel, Jing Huang, netdev-u79uwXL29TY76Z2rM5mHXA, linux-wireless-u79uwXL29TY76Z2rM5mHXA On Mon, 2009-10-12 at 08:09 -0700, Greg KH wrote: > adding David Miller and the wireless developers who had this idea as > well... > > On Mon, Oct 12, 2009 at 04:54:53PM +0200, Ingo Molnar wrote: > > I think your interpretation is arbitrary - where did you get that ABI > > rule from? I'm sure it cannot be from any of the drivers/staging/ > > discussions on lkml, i've followed them quite closely. If 'has a messy > > ABI' was the only requirement for drivers/staging/ then we could move > > 90% of drivers/staging/ into drivers/ straight away - and that would be > > counter-productive IMHO. > > I agree with this, and the other points you raised that I snipped out. > > > Sidenote, in fact i think we should expand on that: drivers/staging/ > > should be used in the _other_ direction as well - to un-upstream stale > > drivers that are abandoned and unused, in a gradual fashion. 'git mv' is > > cheap. > > Ok, this is about the 3rd or 4th time I've heard this, from totally > different people lately. It seems that I'm the only one that has the > ability to drop drivers out of the kernel tree, which is a funny > situation :) > > In thinking about this a lot more, I don't really mind it. If people > want to push stuff out of "real" places in the kernel, into > drivers/staging/ and give the original authors and maintainers notice > about what is going on, _and_ provide a TODO file for what needs to > happen to get the code back into the main portion of the kernel tree, > then I'll be happy to help out with this and manage it. > > I think a 6-9 month window (basically 3 kernel releases) should be > sufficient time to have a driver that has been in drivers/staging/ be > cleaned up enough to move back into the main kernel tree. If not, it > could be easily dropped. > > Any objections to this? Not as an optional tool to use when necessary. If you want to make this a mandatory path for old drivers, then, I think it's far too rigid, yes. There's a huge amount of danger to changing working drivers simply on grounds of code cleanup and that danger increases exponentially as they get older and the hardware gets rarer. Look at what happened to the initio driver in 2008 for instance. That was cleaned up by Alan Cox, no mean expert in the field, with the assistance of a tester with the actual card, so basically a textbook operation. However, a bug crept in during this process that wasn't spotted by the tester. When it was spotted (bug report ~6 months later) the original tester wasn't available and code inspection across the cleanup was very hard. Fortunately, the reporter was motivated to track down and patch the driver, so it worked out all right in the end, but a lot of bug reporters aren't so capable (or so motivated). Plus most clean up patches for old hardware tend only to be compile tested, so the potential for bugs is far greater. James > > Basically, drivers/staging/ gives us an excellent opportunity to > > _increase_ the quality of drivers by applying stronger upstream > > inclusion filters, without having to hurt users/developers in the > > process. We just have to start using it that way as well. > > I totally agree. And so far, it does seem to be working well for this. > A number of companies have used it to successfully get their code into > the main kernel, as well as driving them to clean up their code better > to keep it from having to go into the staging tree. > > thanks, > > greg k-h -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-wireless" in the body of a message to majordomo-u79uwXL29TY76Z2rM5mHXA@public.gmane.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: Moving drivers into staging (was Re: [GIT PULL] SCSI fixes for 2.6.32-rc3) 2009-10-12 15:43 ` James Bottomley @ 2009-10-12 23:26 ` Greg KH 0 siblings, 0 replies; 15+ messages in thread From: Greg KH @ 2009-10-12 23:26 UTC (permalink / raw) To: James Bottomley Cc: Ingo Molnar, Linus Torvalds, Theodore Tso, Andrew Morton, linux-scsi, linux-kernel, Jing Huang, netdev, linux-wireless On Mon, Oct 12, 2009 at 10:43:06AM -0500, James Bottomley wrote: > If you want to make this a mandatory path for old drivers, then, I think > it's far too rigid, yes. There's a huge amount of danger to changing > working drivers simply on grounds of code cleanup and that danger > increases exponentially as they get older and the hardware gets rarer. > Look at what happened to the initio driver in 2008 for instance. That > was cleaned up by Alan Cox, no mean expert in the field, with the > assistance of a tester with the actual card, so basically a textbook > operation. However, a bug crept in during this process that wasn't > spotted by the tester. When it was spotted (bug report ~6 months later) > the original tester wasn't available and code inspection across the > cleanup was very hard. Fortunately, the reporter was motivated to track > down and patch the driver, so it worked out all right in the end, but a > lot of bug reporters aren't so capable (or so motivated). Plus most > clean up patches for old hardware tend only to be compile tested, so the > potential for bugs is far greater. I understand the potential for bugs, and am not saying to do this for all drivers, so it is not mandatory at all. I have just received a bunch of people asking me if we can use drivers/staging/ to get stuff that is known broken, or has other problems (style issues[1]), out into an area where people know it needs to be fixed up otherwise it will be dropped. thanks, greg k-h [1] No, floppy.c doesn't count, no matter how much people might want it to :) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
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2009-10-12 15:09 ` Moving drivers into staging (was Re: [GIT PULL] SCSI fixes for 2.6.32-rc3) Greg KH
2009-10-12 15:42 ` Ingo Molnar
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2009-10-12 23:24 ` Greg KH
2009-10-13 18:08 ` Luis R. Rodriguez
2009-10-14 4:45 ` Greg KH
[not found] ` <20091014044519.GA19199-l3A5Bk7waGM@public.gmane.org>
2009-10-14 5:19 ` Joe Perches
2009-10-14 6:33 ` Ingo Molnar
2009-10-14 14:13 ` James Smart
2009-10-14 17:52 ` Stefan Richter
2009-10-14 18:36 ` Ingo Molnar
2009-10-14 19:00 ` Stefan Richter
2009-10-15 6:03 ` Ingo Molnar
2009-10-14 19:11 ` Greg KH
[not found] ` <20091012150911.GB1656-l3A5Bk7waGM@public.gmane.org>
2009-10-12 15:43 ` James Bottomley
2009-10-12 23:26 ` Greg KH
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