On 1/7/21 5:22 PM, Ján Tomko wrote:
On a Thursday in 2021, Laine Stump wrote:
On 1/7/21 10:09 AM, Michal Privoznik wrote:
When defining/creating a network the bridge name may be filled in
automatically by libvirt (if none provided in the input XML or
the one provided is a pattern, e.g. "virbr%d"). During the
bridge name generation process a candidate name is generated
which is then checked with the rest of already defined/running
networks for collisions.

Problem is, that there is no mutex guarding this critical section
and thus if two threads line up so that they both generate the
same candidate they won't find any collision and the same name is
then stored.

Closes: https://gitlab.com/libvirt/libvirt/-/issues/78


"Closes:"? I'm guessing other people have also been using this tag to get 
gitlab to automatically close PRs and I just haven't noticed it until now, but according 
to this page:

https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/user/project/issues/managing_issues.html#closing-issues

"Resolves:" also works, and is a tag that has already been used quite a bit in 
libvirt in the past.


Even for GitLab issues, Resolves is slightly winning at 7 vs 5.


I'm using 'Resolves: <gitlab bug link>' because I saw someone else doing
it. I thought that the reasoning behind it is that 'Resolves' is when you
want to say that 'this fixes the following bug entry', which differs from
'Fixes', which is used generally in the format 'Fixes: <commit>' to indicate
that it's an amend of another commit.



On the other hand, I've had some people tell me that they want just the URL of 
the issue that was fixed, with no explicit tag (although that was for bugzilla 
bugs)


If we can make it a standard, like, every time a bug link is posted in the end
of a commit message means 'this patch fixes this bug', then sure, why not.





Yes, I considered it nicer and less deceitful (because you're not really
claiming anything just by including the link), back then when I cared about 
things.


It's a good time to stop caring too much. We're barely a week in 2021 and stuff 
is
already weirder than before.



Is it worth trying to pick one of these to always use, or is that just 
pointless micromanagement?

Of course, that's what a mailing list is for.

Deep down, I'm replying to this because I'm expecting Laine to tell some
good story dowm the road and I want to be in the CC.



Thanks


DHB


Or maybe there was already a discussion and I just missed it... (I'm undecided whether I 
lean towards OCD, or "Freedum!!")


As long as both people and machines can read it, either is fine.

Jano


Signed-off-by: Michal Privoznik <mpriv...@redhat.com>


Reviewed-by: Laine Stump <la...@redhat.com>



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