Re: RFC: xserver update strategy in F21+

2014-11-18 Thread Adam Jackson
On Tue, 2014-11-18 at 08:24 +0100, Thorsten Leemhuis wrote:

 But in the end Fedora and its kernel maintainers didn't care. Which
 might be the right thing to do for X as well, because companies then
 learn that they need to keep track of ongoing development and users
 notice some of the risks these driver bear.

Holding free drivers hostage to closed ones is obviously off the table;
if I need to update X to get a feature into Fedora's radeon driver, and
catalyst hasn't caught up yet, catalyst is going to lose that fight.

But even the best free operating system is worthless if you can't use
it, and the binary drivers do have actual features beyond the free ones
that people do in fact depend on to get work done.  So, while we
continue to work on getting to feature parity, I don't want to be
arbitrarily harsh to people who don't have a choice in the matter.

It sounds like people are reasonably comfortable with a kernel-like
update policy.  If we run into that kind of ABI scenario with binary
drivers, presumably the best course of action is to bring it up for
discussion case by case and refer it to FESCO if it's especially
contentious.

Meanwhile, I've started assembling a crib sheet:

https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/RebasingXserver

I'll flesh that out more as we approach the first actual rebase like
this, which if I had to guess would likely be early 2015.

- ajax

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Re: RFC: xserver update strategy in F21+

2014-11-18 Thread Josh Boyer
On Tue, Nov 18, 2014 at 2:24 AM, Thorsten Leemhuis fed...@leemhuis.info wrote:
 Lo!

 Adam Jackson wrote on 17.11.2014 20:06:

 With that in mind, I ask for feedback on how we'd actually like that to
 work.  The kernel rebase policy seems like a pretty reasonable model:
 F21 would stay on 1.16.x until there's an upstream 1.17.1 release, and
 (if F20 were to be affected by this policy) F20 would wait until 1.17.1
 had been tested in F21.

 One thing we might have to play by ear is the interaction with binary
 drivers.  The nvidia legacy driver, for instance, does not always have
 builds available for arbitrarily new servers, which means updating the X
 server might change you to an nvidia driver that no longer supports your
 hardware.  Depending on how severe that cutoff is, it might be cause to
 pin a particular Fedora release at a given server version.  I don't
 think this is presently a problem, but it could be in the future.

 The same problem can and did arise with the kernel updates Fedora does.
 Fglrx/catalyst in the past more than once got broken when Fedora shipped
 a new major version (3.x - 3.(x+1)) as a regular update, because the
 flgrx/catalyst kernel module the flgrx/catalyst driver for X.org relies
 on was incompatible with the new kernel. Sometimes (but not always!)
 there were patches to work around that (and yes, they often got
 integrated into RPM Fusion packages).

 But in the end Fedora and its kernel maintainers didn't care. Which

It's not that we don't care.  That can come off like we're gleefully
breaking people's machines for fun, which is certainly not the case.
However, as Adam said, we aren't going to hold the kernel package
hostage to closed drivers.  Unlike XServer, people have parallel
installed kernels and can boot into the older one while they wait for
their proprietary driver to update it really isn't as dire as people
make the situation sound.

josh
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RFC: xserver update strategy in F21+

2014-11-17 Thread Adam Jackson
Since the modular X repackaging in FC5, we have limited X server updates
such that the ABI does not change.  F20 shipped with xserver 1.14.4, for
example, so we might update it to 1.14.7 but not to 1.15.0.  With the
reduced driver set in F21 it's now much more reasonable to push updates
to older releases as well.

With that in mind, I ask for feedback on how we'd actually like that to
work.  The kernel rebase policy seems like a pretty reasonable model:
F21 would stay on 1.16.x until there's an upstream 1.17.1 release, and
(if F20 were to be affected by this policy) F20 would wait until 1.17.1
had been tested in F21.

One thing we might have to play by ear is the interaction with binary
drivers.  The nvidia legacy driver, for instance, does not always have
builds available for arbitrarily new servers, which means updating the X
server might change you to an nvidia driver that no longer supports your
hardware.  Depending on how severe that cutoff is, it might be cause to
pin a particular Fedora release at a given server version.  I don't
think this is presently a problem, but it could be in the future.

This would also want some coordination with the various desktop
environments; the version of KDE in F21 might have latent bugs only
exposed by switching to F22's X, for example.  I have a reasonable idea
of how to test Gnome for that kind of thing, but for the others I'd need
some pointers.

So what do we think?  Good idea?  Bad idea?  Other things to watch for?

- ajax

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Re: RFC: xserver update strategy in F21+

2014-11-17 Thread Kevin Kofler
Adam Jackson wrote:
 One thing we might have to play by ear is the interaction with binary
 drivers.  The nvidia legacy driver, for instance, does not always have
 builds available for arbitrarily new servers, which means updating the X
 server might change you to an nvidia driver that no longer supports your
 hardware.  Depending on how severe that cutoff is, it might be cause to
 pin a particular Fedora release at a given server version.  I don't
 think this is presently a problem, but it could be in the future.

IMHO, we should not let proprietary drivers hold us hostage that way. We do 
not and should not support them. We don't even ship them. So we should just 
upgrade X if the software we ship is ready for it. If some proprietary 
driver breaks, its users get to keep the pieces.

Kevin Kofler

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Re: RFC: xserver update strategy in F21+

2014-11-17 Thread Samuel Sieb

On 11/17/2014 12:54 PM, Chris Adams wrote:

Once upon a time, Kevin Kofler kevin.kof...@chello.at said:

IMHO, we should not let proprietary drivers hold us hostage that way. We do
not and should not support them. We don't even ship them. So we should just
upgrade X if the software we ship is ready for it. If some proprietary
driver breaks, its users get to keep the pieces.


I agree to some extent, but in the real world, there are a significant
number of Fedora users that use such third-party software.  Breaking it
with no consideration will end up pushing users to other distributions,
which shouldn't be done without forethought.

My opinion is strongly in line with Kevin, but Chris has a good point. 
However, isn't it possible to have both.  I'm not familiar with the 
proprietary drivers other than knowing that the NVidia one is available 
through rpmfusion.  (Out of the many varieties of laptops I've installed 
Fedora on (at least 30 different models from various manufacturers), 
I've only had one that required the NVidia driver.)  If the proprietary 
driver has a strong dependency on a certain X version, won't that just 
stop the X server from being upgraded?  In that case, everyone using the 
open drivers can upgrade and the others will just not get the new X 
server until they have new drivers available.  I expect this doesn't 
work if you compile from source though.  Are there many people that do that?

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Re: RFC: xserver update strategy in F21+

2014-11-17 Thread Rahul Sundaram
On Mon, Nov 17, 2014 at 4:50 PM, Samuel Sieb wrote:

My opinion is strongly in line with Kevin, but Chris has a good point.
 However, isn't it possible to have both.  I'm not familiar with the
 proprietary drivers other than knowing that the NVidia one is available
 through rpmfusion.  (Out of the many varieties of laptops I've installed
 Fedora on (at least 30 different models from various manufacturers), I've
 only had one that required the NVidia driver.)  If the proprietary driver
 has a strong dependency on a certain X version, won't that just stop the X
 server from being upgraded?  In that case, everyone using the open drivers
 can upgrade and the others will just not get the new X server until they
 have new drivers available.  I expect this doesn't work if you compile from
 source though.  Are there many people that do that?


1) proprietary drivers depend on the kernel
2)  yes people do build from source but indirectly via the akmod system
used in RPM Fusion

Whether we should care about those users depends on whether we care about
users or just our own repositories.   We have in the past done new releases
that broke the proprietary drivers and that's somewhat unavoidable but
breaking them in an update might too problematic.  I would suggest avoiding
that if we can.

Rahul
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Re: RFC: xserver update strategy in F21+

2014-11-17 Thread Samuel Sieb

On 11/17/2014 04:16 PM, Rahul Sundaram wrote:

1) proprietary drivers depend on the kernel


Aren't there two parts, the kernel driver and the X driver?  From the 
earlier discussion, it sounds like some part depends on the X server ABI.



2)  yes people do build from source but indirectly via the akmod system
used in RPM Fusion


Those should be able to control the dependencies.  Wouldn't that work?
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Re: RFC: xserver update strategy in F21+

2014-11-17 Thread Thorsten Leemhuis
Lo!

Adam Jackson wrote on 17.11.2014 20:06:

 With that in mind, I ask for feedback on how we'd actually like that to
 work.  The kernel rebase policy seems like a pretty reasonable model:
 F21 would stay on 1.16.x until there's an upstream 1.17.1 release, and
 (if F20 were to be affected by this policy) F20 would wait until 1.17.1
 had been tested in F21.
 
 One thing we might have to play by ear is the interaction with binary
 drivers.  The nvidia legacy driver, for instance, does not always have
 builds available for arbitrarily new servers, which means updating the X
 server might change you to an nvidia driver that no longer supports your
 hardware.  Depending on how severe that cutoff is, it might be cause to
 pin a particular Fedora release at a given server version.  I don't
 think this is presently a problem, but it could be in the future.

The same problem can and did arise with the kernel updates Fedora does.
Fglrx/catalyst in the past more than once got broken when Fedora shipped
a new major version (3.x - 3.(x+1)) as a regular update, because the
flgrx/catalyst kernel module the flgrx/catalyst driver for X.org relies
on was incompatible with the new kernel. Sometimes (but not always!)
there were patches to work around that (and yes, they often got
integrated into RPM Fusion packages).

But in the end Fedora and its kernel maintainers didn't care. Which
might be the right thing to do for X as well, because companies then
learn that they need to keep track of ongoing development and users
notice some of the risks these driver bear.

CU
knurd
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