From: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
To: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Cc: Christian Borntraeger <borntraeger@de.ibm.com>,
Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>,
QEMU Developers <qemu-devel@nongnu.org>
Subject: Re: [Qemu-devel] virtio-gpu doesn't build if you do a linux-headers update from kvm/next
Date: Thu, 5 Nov 2015 15:58:12 +0100 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <563B6E84.9090709@redhat.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <CAFEAcA_5wpbGew+UCAHNsyiZrbcrM8SGD8+Q5E-mLRBkVWV43g@mail.gmail.com>
On 05/11/2015 15:30, Peter Maydell wrote:
> I suspect at least some of the other subsystems work the same way.
I try not to have a for-this-release tree during hard freeze. :)
> > The main issue is that shorter cycles may mean fewer and bigger pull
> > requests. It also means more awareness of conflicts is needed. We
> > definitely lack the continuous integration infrastructure that is needed
> > for that.
>
> I think it works for the kernel because the different subsystems
> have large communities of their own and the subtrees get a
> reasonable amount of testing as a result, plus there are
> efforts like linux-next to pre-check subtrees for conflicts
> before an actual merge attempt happens.
Yes, that's what I meant for continuous integration.
My hunch is that conflicts outside .json or trace-events are rare. It
would be an interesting experiment if someone was willing to prepare a
daily or bi-weekly (Mon/Thu) "qemu-next" branch for a few weeks during
the 2.6 development.
> I don't think the QEMU
> community is big enough for the kernel's dev practices to be
> reasonably applicable to us.
On the other hand, something like "qemu-next" would be much easier to
use daily than linux-next.
I think the main issue is that right now we have a very long freeze
period. It would be nice to know why (e.g. what kind of bugs are fixed?
are they release blockers only?) and whether a shorter development
period could also lead to a shorter hard freeze period.
Perhaps even 2-ish months, for example it could be 1 month development
(4.5 weeks) + 2 weeks to rc0 + 3.5 weeks to final (i.e. aim for final
equal to -rc3).
Or even change soft freeze to "time to respin pending pull requests if
they fail" (i.e. *pull requests* must be on the list, not patches!) and
shorten it to 1 week. That would give 4.5 weeks development + 1 week to
rc0 + 3.5 weeks to final. This is still very different from the
kernel's merge window model. OTOH with such a 2 months cadence we could
probably get rid of stable releases altogether, limiting them to
security issues.
So, there's room for experimenting. That said, we probably agree that 4
months and staying on time is better than saying officially 3 months and
delaying every release.
Paolo
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2015-11-05 14:58 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 26+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2015-11-05 11:42 [Qemu-devel] virtio-gpu doesn't build if you do a linux-headers update from kvm/next Peter Maydell
2015-11-05 11:49 ` Paolo Bonzini
2015-11-05 12:13 ` Gerd Hoffmann
2015-11-05 12:32 ` Peter Maydell
2015-11-05 13:23 ` Christian Borntraeger
2015-11-05 13:44 ` Peter Maydell
2015-11-05 13:46 ` Christian Borntraeger
2015-11-05 14:01 ` Paolo Bonzini
2015-11-05 14:30 ` Peter Maydell
2015-11-05 14:52 ` Peter Maydell
2015-11-05 15:03 ` Paolo Bonzini
2015-11-05 14:58 ` Paolo Bonzini [this message]
2015-11-05 18:56 ` Peter Maydell
2015-11-05 13:48 ` Laszlo Ersek
2015-11-05 15:52 ` Alex Bennée
2015-11-05 17:05 ` Laszlo Ersek
2015-11-05 17:09 ` Paolo Bonzini
2015-11-05 14:42 ` Gerd Hoffmann
2015-11-05 14:45 ` Peter Maydell
2015-11-05 14:58 ` Gerd Hoffmann
2015-11-05 15:11 ` Peter Maydell
2015-11-05 17:15 ` Laszlo Ersek
2015-11-05 18:13 ` Cornelia Huck
2015-11-05 18:51 ` Laszlo Ersek
2015-11-06 16:34 ` Alex Bennée
2015-11-06 16:43 ` Peter Maydell
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