We all know that review can be a bottleneck for Nova patches.Not only that, but a patch lingering in review, no matter how trivial, will eventually accrue rebases which sap gate resources, developer time, and will to live.
It occurs to me that there are a significant class of patches which simply don't require the attention of a core reviewer. Some examples: * Indentation cleanup/comment fixes * Simple code motion * File permission changes * Trivial fixes which are obviously correct The advantage of a core reviewer is that they have experience of the whole code base, and have proven their ability to make and judge core changes. However, some fixes don't require this level of attention, as they are self-contained and obvious to any reasonable programmer. Without knowing anything of the architecture of gerrit, I propose something along the lines of a '+1 (trivial)' review flag. If a review gained some small number of these, I suggest 2 would be reasonable, it would be equivalent to a +2 from a core reviewer. The ability to set this flag would be a privilege. However, the bar to gaining this privilege would be low, and preferably automatically set, e.g. 5 accepted patches. It would be removed for abuse. Is this practical? Would it help? Matt -- Matthew Booth Red Hat Engineering, Virtualisation Team Phone: +442070094448 (UK) GPG ID: D33C3490 GPG FPR: 3733 612D 2D05 5458 8A8A 1600 3441 EA19 D33C 3490 _______________________________________________ OpenStack-dev mailing list [email protected] http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack-dev
