Am Mittwoch, den 10.06.2009, 21:13 -0300 schrieb Mauro Carvalho Chehab:
> First of all, I'm renaming the thread, since we're not discussing the pull
> request per se. So, let's create a separate thread for it.
> 
> Em Wed, 10 Jun 2009 23:18:52 +0200
> hermann pitton <hermann-pit...@arcor.de> escreveu:
> 
> > Hi,
> > 
> > Am Mittwoch, den 10.06.2009, 22:39 +0200 schrieb Hans Verkuil:
> > > On Wednesday 10 June 2009 22:20:03 Guennadi Liakhovetski wrote:
> > > > On Wed, 10 Jun 2009, Hans Verkuil wrote:
> > > > > On Wednesday 10 June 2009 20:17:53 Guennadi Liakhovetski wrote:
> > > > > > On Tue, 9 Jun 2009, Hans Verkuil wrote:
> > > > > > > Hi Mauro,
> > > > > > >
> > > > > > > Please pull from
> > > > > > > http://www.linuxtv.org/hg/~hverkuil/v4l-dvb-subdev2 for the
> > > > > > > following:
> > > > > > >
> > > > > > > - v4l2: add new s_config subdev ops and
> > > > > > > v4l2_i2c_new_subdev_cfg/board calls - v4l2-device: fix incorrect
> > > > > > > kernel check
> > > > > > > - v4l-compat: add I2C_ADDRS macro.
> > > > > > > - v4l2: update framework documentation.
> > > > > > > - v4l2-subdev: remove unnecessary check
> > > > > >
> > > > > > Do I understand this right, that these patches have not been posted
> > > > > > to the list?
> > > > >
> > > > > The idea is that you click on the link and look at the patches through
> > > > > the hg web frontend.
> > > >
> > > > And then?
> > > >
> > > > > > At least I haven't found them in online and in my local
> > > > > > archives. If it's really so, sorry, this doesn't seem very 
> > > > > > productive
> > > > > > to me... We have discussed this with Mauro on IRC, he didn't agree
> > > > > > with me, he thought it was acceptable in many cases... Sorry, cannot
> > > > > > agree.
> > > > >
> > > > > Both methods (a pull request or a patch series) are used and 
> > > > > personally
> > > > > I have no preference, although currently I have a script that
> > > > > simplifies these pull requests so I generally use that. A patch series
> > > > > makes it easier to reply with review comments, while I think a pull
> > > > > request reduces mailinglist traffic and actually makes it easier to do
> > > > > the actual reviews.
> > > >
> > > > I think, patches posted to the list for reviews with a following pull
> > > > request (if no rework needed of course) is the most reviewer-friendly,
> > > > which is also what I so far have seen on all other lists I subscribe to
> > > > (arm, ppc, usb, scsi, lkml, i2c,...).
> 
> On LKML, several patches are sent as pull requests.
> 
> > > >  Have you seen those huge mailing
> > > > threads from Greg K-H with all patches in his queue preceding his pull
> > > > requests (I hope I reproduce his work flow correctly here, any mistakes
> > > > are mine and unintended)?
> 
> The same happens here: All patches added at the staging tree are sent to
> linuxtv-commits ML. So, they are there for discussions before my pull 
> requests.
> 
> The main difference is that, in the case of Greg, his staging tree is a quilt
> one. On our case, our staging tree is mercurial.
> 
> > > > Are you really saying that it's equally convenient for you to review /
> > > > reply to patch on ML and to patch in some repository from a pull 
> > > > request?
> > > > Especially when there are multiple patches in that pull and you have to
> > > > click through them all, jumping back and forth between your mail client
> > > > and a browser?...
> > > >
> > > > If all are so much concerned about the ML traffic (which I don't
> > > > understand either, filtering and ignoring uninteresting mails is easy
> > > > enough these days), maybe we should split into devel and user? Sorry, I
> > > > really don't understand. I'll go ask members of other MLs what they 
> > > > think
> > > > about "clicking" through patches...
> > > 
> > > Um, you are asking the wrong person. It's one of the two methods used on 
> > > this list. Yes, pull requests are unusual compared to other lists (and so 
> > > is the use of hg instead of git for that matter due to historical 
> > > reasons).
> > > 
> > > If Mauro says: use patch series, then I'll modify my workflow. If you 
> > > prefer 
> > > to see these subdev patches as a patch series, then I can do that for 
> > > you. 
> > > I have no preference myself. It's also a discussion I have no wish to go 
> > > into.
> > > 
> > > So if you see a pull request from me and prefer to have it as a patch 
> > > series, just mail me and I'll do it. No problem.
> > > 
> > > Regards,
> > > 
> > >   Hans
> > 
> > on the pull requests is at least nothing new since years.
> > 
> > Previously all patches were on video4linux and the linux-dvb ML and
> > dealt with independently as far as possible.
> > 
> > Because of all the hybrid devices that changed, but still someone having
> > only analog TV reception likely doesn't want to read all about the
> > digital stuff and in the other direction I assume in counts even more.
> > 
> > So far the mercurial pull requests from the more active developers
> > worked quite well. Historically seen you would have had a need at some
> > point to see _all_ patches on both lists, if you follow the rule _all_
> > patches must be on the list(s).
> > 
> > Now, with linux-media, everybody subscribed has the traffic of both of
> > the old lists. Means for most people 50% are off topic.
> > 
> > But the really funny thing comes now, we have with you and all the
> > others suddenly about 70% of traffic on the list about cams :)
> > 
> > I'm sure that more than 90% of the old v4l and dvb list members are not
> > interested in that stuff at all :)
> 
> We're currently merging about 900 patches per kernel window, on a window of
> about 10-12 weeks. This means about 90 patches per week, or about 13 patches
> per day (for a 7 days week), or 18 patches per day (for a 5 days week).
> 
> So, if people just send one email per patch, this will increase our traffic by
> 18 emails by day. It can be worse than that, if we consider that patches can 
> be
> replied, and that people use to write a patch 0 to describe a patch series.
> 
> Considering about 50 messages per day, currently (today and yesterday's
> statistics - not sure those are typical days), this would increase the ML by
> about 36%. 
> 
> On the other hand, part of those patches are already discussed previously at
> the ML (on today's case, none of the patches sent were RFC patches and patches
> that were resent - so, we would add 36% of traffic today, plus the extra patch
> 0 and comments - so, it would have increased it by something like 40% to 50%).
> 
> We should also consider the type of patches we have here:
> 
> 1) trivial patches (typo fixes, coding style, simple board additions, Kbuild
> fixes, etc);
> 
> 2) bug fix patches at drivers;
> 
> 3) new drivers;
> 
> 4) core changes.
> 
> However, several driver maintainers don't care (or just forget about they) 
> for (1)
> type. Before patchwork, lots of such patches were lost forever in the middle 
> of
> dvb and v4l mailing lists. They are happy when someone (me) get those patches
> and apply at the tree or remind they to check and apply on their trees.
> 
> patches of type (2) and (3) are in general sent via a driver maintainer and
> generally doesn't generate discussions.
> 
> >From my previous experiences, even patches (1), (2) and (3) are reviewed 
> >when a
> pull request is sent. That's one of the reasons why I sometimes wait for some
> time before committing. Especially on the cases where the patches are more
> complex, bigger or are likely to cause more discussions, I tend to wait more
> before merging they.
> 
> I have no doubts that patches of type (4) need previous discussions. However,
> even in this case, in general, the developers that propose such patches tend 
> to
> previously discuss they with the others at the ML and at IRC. For example, in
> this specific case, at the first version of the pull request, Hans said:
> 
>       "I would prefer to see this go into 2.6.31 since this will help the 
>        development of embedded v4l drivers, but if you prefer to delay this 
> until 
>        the 2.6.31 window closes, then that is OK by me. But I do not know if 
> that 
>        is also OK by Guennadi, Eduardo and Karicheri. All three (and probably 
>        others I missed as well) are waiting for this functionality."
> 
> So, I understood that Hans, Guennadi, Eduardo and Karicheri are all OK with 
> this
> approach. Yet, I agree that a wider discussion should be done.
> 
> That's said, I can't see much ways to improve this situation. 
> 
> While patchwork actually helped a lot to avoid missing a patch, it has some
> limitations. Due to that, instead of just reading a patch at my patchwork 
> queue
> (that I get via a xmlrpc script), I need also to read the patchwork thread 
> and,
> on some cases, follow the patches thread at the ML. So, instead of increasing
> my merge speed, on several cases, it just add more work. On the other hand, on
> most cases, a pull request is a way faster.
> 
> Also, for the developer, using the pull request is better, since they can
> better track when a patch series got merged.
> 
> The usage of a mix of PULL and PATCH requests has an extra trouble: it means
> that we'll receive most of the patches duplicated. So, it means that I need to
> manually mark all merged patches at patchwork queue, on _each_ pull request.
> 
> So, this adds an extra cost that will probably make life worse for everybody,
> with almost no gain (since there are really very few complaints about badly
> merged patches).
> 
> That's said, I'm open to listen to opinions on how to improve our current proc

So, people should also say what we have done wrong in the past.

;)

Cheers,
Hermann




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