Re: New releases for bugfixes

2022-09-20 Thread Reindl Harald




Am 19.09.22 um 14:57 schrieb Neal Gompa:

On Sat, Sep 10, 2022 at 5:41 AM Reindl Harald  wrote:


Am 09.09.22 um 11:42 schrieb samuel ammonius:

Thanks. I hadn't thought of a lot of these issues before.

I think the biggest one is that If there's an update that the package
manager didn'tknow about, the user would have to update right after installing, 
and
the bug would come back if the user re-installed or updated the app. Sorry 
everybody

no the biggest issue on the userside is that nobody wants every random
application tamper the system

if i want applications asking me about updates i could have stayed at
windows and "yum upgrade" was the main reason for Linux

when you open that can of worms imagine where it ends

security wise it's a nightmare because you not only have the
distribution you need to trust - intrusion on any upstream would
directly hit you at any random point in time while distribution updates
are usually tested at least by some people and changes reviewed by
downstream maintainers

and who does the work and deal with bugreports "the update of kate
destroyed it on my system and i don't know why nor how i revert it"

with the package manager i type "dnf downgrade kate", file a bug against
the distribution and kde upstream isn't involved at all

upstream opensource developers write the code, that's it, they don't and
shouldn't need to care about every downstream distribution and it's
pitfalls - it's wasted time because that's what downstream component
maintainers are for

the fedora maintainer from kde likely has no knowledge about Gentoo,
Ubuntu, SuSE for good reasons and you think blow that load to upstream
developers would help anybody?


Well, actually, most of us do know each other and we do collaborate
from time to time. I personally know Fabian Vogt (the maintainer of
the KDE stack in SUSE distributions) and I talk to Rik Mills (the
Kubuntu maintainer) every once in a while. Same goes for Mageia,
OpenMandriva, Debian, and others.


don't change the fact that downstream and upstream are different worlds 
at the end of the day when it comes to apply a bufix patch



Admittedly, I don't know who works on KDE Plasma for Gentoo, but I'm
peripherally aware of their work.

As maintainers of KDE software in our respective distributions, it's
our job to bring our concerns upstream as needed. But also, when
distributions have a conflict, we *all* have to work together to
figure out a solution. If we don't, we risk a situation where KDE
eventually evolves into other similarly-sized desktop environment
projects where they give the downstream stakeholders the finger
because they don't trust them.


but the proposed idea was BYPASS you and apply updates directly from 
upstream



Also, many of the upstream KDE Plasma developers are in fact distro
developers. It's not the majority anymore like it was in the old days,
but a good chunk of them are.
but hardly the majority and even if that could change any time - 
especailly for small bugfix patches it's irrelevant when one comes to 
the idea apply them directly from upstream up to "build them local from 
source automagically"


the general rule is "upstream is upstream, distro is distro" and for the 
sake of god that don#t mean they don't talk to each other


Re: New releases for bugfixes

2022-09-19 Thread Neal Gompa
On Sat, Sep 10, 2022 at 5:41 AM Reindl Harald  wrote:
>
>
>
> Am 09.09.22 um 11:42 schrieb samuel ammonius:
> > Thanks. I hadn't thought of a lot of these issues before.
> >
> > I think the biggest one is that If there's an update that the package
> > manager didn'tknow about, the user would have to update right after 
> > installing, and
> > the bug would come back if the user re-installed or updated the app. Sorry 
> > everybody
> no the biggest issue on the userside is that nobody wants every random
> application tamper the system
>
> if i want applications asking me about updates i could have stayed at
> windows and "yum upgrade" was the main reason for Linux
>
> when you open that can of worms imagine where it ends
>
> security wise it's a nightmare because you not only have the
> distribution you need to trust - intrusion on any upstream would
> directly hit you at any random point in time while distribution updates
> are usually tested at least by some people and changes reviewed by
> downstream maintainers
>
> and who does the work and deal with bugreports "the update of kate
> destroyed it on my system and i don't know why nor how i revert it"
>
> with the package manager i type "dnf downgrade kate", file a bug against
> the distribution and kde upstream isn't involved at all
>
> upstream opensource developers write the code, that's it, they don't and
> shouldn't need to care about every downstream distribution and it's
> pitfalls - it's wasted time because that's what downstream component
> maintainers are for
>
> the fedora maintainer from kde likely has no knowledge about Gentoo,
> Ubuntu, SuSE for good reasons and you think blow that load to upstream
> developers would help anybody?
>

Well, actually, most of us do know each other and we do collaborate
from time to time. I personally know Fabian Vogt (the maintainer of
the KDE stack in SUSE distributions) and I talk to Rik Mills (the
Kubuntu maintainer) every once in a while. Same goes for Mageia,
OpenMandriva, Debian, and others.

Admittedly, I don't know who works on KDE Plasma for Gentoo, but I'm
peripherally aware of their work.

As maintainers of KDE software in our respective distributions, it's
our job to bring our concerns upstream as needed. But also, when
distributions have a conflict, we *all* have to work together to
figure out a solution. If we don't, we risk a situation where KDE
eventually evolves into other similarly-sized desktop environment
projects where they give the downstream stakeholders the finger
because they don't trust them.

Also, many of the upstream KDE Plasma developers are in fact distro
developers. It's not the majority anymore like it was in the old days,
but a good chunk of them are.


-- 
真実はいつも一つ!/ Always, there's only one truth!


Re: New releases for bugfixes

2022-09-10 Thread Reindl Harald




Am 09.09.22 um 11:42 schrieb samuel ammonius:

Thanks. I hadn't thought of a lot of these issues before.

I think the biggest one is that If there's an update that the package 
manager didn'tknow about, the user would have to update right after installing, and 
the bug would come back if the user re-installed or updated the app. Sorry everybody
no the biggest issue on the userside is that nobody wants every random 
application tamper the system


if i want applications asking me about updates i could have stayed at 
windows and "yum upgrade" was the main reason for Linux


when you open that can of worms imagine where it ends

security wise it's a nightmare because you not only have the 
distribution you need to trust - intrusion on any upstream would 
directly hit you at any random point in time while distribution updates 
are usually tested at least by some people and changes reviewed by 
downstream maintainers


and who does the work and deal with bugreports "the update of kate 
destroyed it on my system and i don't know why nor how i revert it"


with the package manager i type "dnf downgrade kate", file a bug against 
the distribution and kde upstream isn't involved at all


upstream opensource developers write the code, that's it, they don't and 
shouldn't need to care about every downstream distribution and it's 
pitfalls - it's wasted time because that's what downstream component 
maintainers are for


the fedora maintainer from kde likely has no knowledge about Gentoo, 
Ubuntu, SuSE for good reasons and you think blow that load to upstream 
developers would help anybody?


wasted time and resources


Re: New releases for bugfixes

2022-09-09 Thread samuel ammonius
Thanks. I hadn't thought of a lot of these issues before.

I think the biggest one is that If there's an update that the package
manager didn't
know about, the user would have to update right after installing, and the
bug would
come back if the user re-installed or updated the app. Sorry everybody.


Re: New releases for bugfixes

2022-09-09 Thread Jeremy Whiting
On Thu, Sep 8, 2022 at 12:51 PM samuel ammonius 
wrote:

> Bug fixes don't change the entire package, only the executable, so
> why can't apps just be programmed to update themselves? There
> could be precompiled binaries stored on the git repos of each project
> for a few CPU architectures, or maybe the app could even recompile
> itself inside /tmp since most systems KDE runs on come with a compiler
> by default (and macros could also be stored so that apps have the
> same configuration throughout updates).
>

That depends entirely on whether the fix was in the executable or a library
that it links to. If a library we can't be
updating libraries willy nilly on user devices. Plus think about how it was
built, which use flags in gentoo, which
compile flags, etc. Which distribution specific patches were applied. Once
you take all that into account there are many
many ways to build kde applications.

>
> Cheers,
> Sam
>
> On Thu, Sep 8, 2022 at 11:58 AM Heiko Becker  wrote:
>
>> On Thursday, 8 September 2022 13:59:43 CEST, Ahmad Samir wrote:
>> > From the git-archive manual page:
>> >
>> > «git archive behaves differently when given a tree ID versus
>> > when given a commit ID or tag ID. In the first case the current
>> > time is used as the modification time of each file in the
>> > archive. In the latter case the commit time as recorded in the
>> > referenced commit object is used instead. Additionally the
>> > commit ID is stored in a global extended pax header if the tar
>> > format is used; it can be extracted using git get-tar-commit-id.
>> > In ZIP files it is stored as a file comment.»
>>
>> Before anybody tries that *now*, at least for Gear the tarballs are
>> currently created with git archive --remote=kde:$repo $branch ..
>> So they currently won't have that information.
>>
>> Regards,
>> Heiko
>>
>>


Re: New releases for bugfixes

2022-09-09 Thread Konstantin Kharlamov
I'm sad other emails sound kinda harsh and without detailed elaboration. Folks,
please, let's keep the discussion peaceful. Different people have different set
of knowledge, that's life. Angry comments would push people away from the
community.

On Thu, 2022-09-08 at 19:23 -0230, samuel ammonius wrote:
> > and you marry upstream binaries with the distribution update-manager how?
> 
> You don't need to. The app can just check the latest bugfix for that version
> on git
> and install it if it isn't installed. I don't understand why you stress the
> need for the
> package manager to have anything to do with the update if it's just a bug fix.

You see: when you have versioning of the same file managed by two or more
programs, you will inevitably get into conflicts. One program updated the file
to one version, then another program overwrote the file with something else. I
think it is clear that this will result in all kinds of problems. The obvious
one is that your bugfix-update may get overwritten by something else. And this
is exactly what you suggest. You suggest we have program update itself,
disregarding the package manager. That's not gonna end well.

Then there's another problem: tracking of the files. If your "autoupdater" put a
new file to the system, and later the user decides "I'm not using the app, let's
just remove it", the file would just be left there. Because only package manager
knows what files contains the program, but your autoupdater didn't communicate
that new file to the package manager. So, as the number of such apps grows
bigger, you would have junk all over the system.

On a related note, you as a user or developer often want to know where a file on
your syste came from. At my $WORK we bulid a system with some proprietary apps,
it's a very old project, and the building process for quite some time would just
put configs/binaries/stuff into the system, without consulting package manager.
While this didn't result in conflicts since the filenames were mostly unique,
however this did have a problem, where you often just don't know where a given
file came from. You can't run a package manager, point it to the file, and ask
it "do you know who owns this file?". We later migrated to creating packages
that hold all of that stuff, which greatly simplified things.


Re: New releases for bugfixes

2022-09-09 Thread Reindl Harald




Am 08.09.22 um 23:53 schrieb samuel ammonius:

 > and you marry upstream binaries with the distribution update-manager how?

You don't need to. The app can just check the latest bugfix for that 
version on git
and install it if it isn't installed. I don't understand why you stress 
the need for the
package manager to have anything to do with the update if it's just a 
bug fix


no it's not just a bugfix when you start mixing random binaries or self 
compiled stuff with distribution binaries


maybe you guys inform yourself how a linux distribution works - on 
Fedoar at example every Fedoar releaae builds everything from scratch 
with the same GCC, glibc and tons of other libraries which differ 
largely between distro releases


what you dream about is flatpak - sorry, one of my main reasons 
switching to linux was a central pakcage management




Re: New releases for bugfixes

2022-09-08 Thread samuel ammonius
> and you marry upstream binaries with the distribution update-manager how?

You don't need to. The app can just check the latest bugfix for that
version on git
and install it if it isn't installed. I don't understand why you stress the
need for the
package manager to have anything to do with the update if it's just a bug
fix.

> in the way that distributions have different library versions

Ok, I think I get your point. Some libraries add/remove/replace features
and KDE
projects may be using macros to make all library versions work. I hadn't
thought
of that.

> bla

So the teensy weensy security risk is suddenly a huge deal and when I try
to fix it for you I'm talking nonsense?

> more space than some of my systems at a whole

It's like 30 megabytes.

> a little bit of more realistic view for such nosense would be nice too
> if anything you propose would become real i had to switch away from KDE

If you got a notification saying "Minor bug fix released for Kate. Would
you like
to install an update without using the package manager?", would it be so bad
that you would drop KDE? Because that's all I was suggesting (only without
the
"without the package manager" part because I was just communicating my
point).


Re: New releases for bugfixes

2022-09-08 Thread Reindl Harald




Am 08.09.22 um 22:24 schrieb samuel ammonius:

 > because outside the windows world central package management is the norm
 > and based on "least privileges" applications must not have the
 > permissions to change itself

I didn't mean a background update. I meant the user could get a dialog or
notification asking them to update, and if they press "yes" they can 
enter their

root password and the app can update itself and restart.


and you marry upstream binaries with the distribution update-manager how?


 > and for each distribution with different dependencies and libraries

How does KDE have different dependencies for different distros? (To be 
honest
though, I only mentioned this method because I thought having multiple 
options

would advertise the idea in the second method)


in the way that distributions have different library versions


if you don't care for security


The security risk is very small, and it can be fixed in a lot of 
different ways. The
app could create a folder that only root can access within the /tmp 
folder. If even

that's not secure enough, the app could create source files with just
"#define MAIN_CPP_SOURCE" and compile with "-DMAIN_CPP_SOURCE=[the
source code] so that it never has to be stored on the disk before being 
compiled.


bla


 > which distribution installs a compiler by default so that one can avoid
 > touching it?

I don't think I've ever used one that /doesn't/ come with at least gcc 
installed


i didn't see a defualt install for a long time but have a compiler on 
99,9% of all systems is useless bloatware


I've tried Ubuntu, Debian, Fedora, and OpenSUSE. Now that I think about 
it though,
they don't come with g++ installed, and they definitely don't come with 
Qt headers

installed, but they don't take that much space

more space than some of my systems at a whole

It didn't take me 10 minutes to answer these questions in my head, so I 
don't
see why you're trying to scrap the idea so quickly for its faults 
instead of trying

to fix them. A bit of constructive criticism would be nice


a little bit of more realistic view for such nosense would be nice too

if anything you propose would become real i had to switch away from KDE


Re: New releases for bugfixes

2022-09-08 Thread samuel ammonius
> because outside the windows world central package management is the norm
> and based on "least privileges" applications must not have the
> permissions to change itself

I didn't mean a background update. I meant the user could get a dialog or
notification asking them to update, and if they press "yes" they can enter
their
root password and the app can update itself and restart.

> and for each distribution with different dependencies and libraries

How does KDE have different dependencies for different distros? (To be
honest
though, I only mentioned this method because I thought having multiple
options
would advertise the idea in the second method)

> if you don't care for security

The security risk is very small, and it can be fixed in a lot of different
ways. The
app could create a folder that only root can access within the /tmp folder.
If even
that's not secure enough, the app could create source files with just
"#define MAIN_CPP_SOURCE" and compile with "-DMAIN_CPP_SOURCE=[the
source code] so that it never has to be stored on the disk before being
compiled.

> which distribution installs a compiler by default so that one can avoid
> touching it?

I don't think I've ever used one that *doesn't* come with at least gcc
installed.
I've tried Ubuntu, Debian, Fedora, and OpenSUSE. Now that I think about it
though,
they don't come with g++ installed, and they definitely don't come with Qt
headers
installed, but they don't take that much space, and maybe they can also
just be
placed in /tmp and removed after the update.

It didn't take me 10 minutes to answer these questions in my head, so I
don't
see why you're trying to scrap the idea so quickly for its faults instead
of trying
to fix them. A bit of constructive criticism would be nice.

Cheers,
Sam


Re: New releases for bugfixes

2022-09-08 Thread Reindl Harald




Am 08.09.22 um 20:50 schrieb samuel ammonius:

Bug fixes don't change the entire package, only the executable, so
why can't apps just be programmed to update themselves? 


because outside the windows world central package management is the norm 
and based on "least privileges" applications must not have the 
permissions to change itself



could be precompiled binaries stored on the git repos of each project
for a few CPU architectures


and for each distribution with different depencdencies and libraries


or maybe the app could even recompile
itself inside /tmp 


if you don't care for security


since most systems KDE runs on come with a compiler
by default


which distribution installs a compiler by default so that one can avoid 
touching it?




Re: New releases for bugfixes

2022-09-08 Thread samuel ammonius
Bug fixes don't change the entire package, only the executable, so
why can't apps just be programmed to update themselves? There
could be precompiled binaries stored on the git repos of each project
for a few CPU architectures, or maybe the app could even recompile
itself inside /tmp since most systems KDE runs on come with a compiler
by default (and macros could also be stored so that apps have the
same configuration throughout updates).

Cheers,
Sam

On Thu, Sep 8, 2022 at 11:58 AM Heiko Becker  wrote:

> On Thursday, 8 September 2022 13:59:43 CEST, Ahmad Samir wrote:
> > From the git-archive manual page:
> >
> > «git archive behaves differently when given a tree ID versus
> > when given a commit ID or tag ID. In the first case the current
> > time is used as the modification time of each file in the
> > archive. In the latter case the commit time as recorded in the
> > referenced commit object is used instead. Additionally the
> > commit ID is stored in a global extended pax header if the tar
> > format is used; it can be extracted using git get-tar-commit-id.
> > In ZIP files it is stored as a file comment.»
>
> Before anybody tries that *now*, at least for Gear the tarballs are
> currently created with git archive --remote=kde:$repo $branch ..
> So they currently won't have that information.
>
> Regards,
> Heiko
>
>


Re: New releases for bugfixes

2022-09-08 Thread Heiko Becker

On Thursday, 8 September 2022 13:59:43 CEST, Ahmad Samir wrote:

From the git-archive manual page:

«git archive behaves differently when given a tree ID versus 
when given a commit ID or tag ID. In the first case the current 
time is used as the modification time of each file in the 
archive. In the latter case the commit time as recorded in the 
referenced commit object is used instead. Additionally the 
commit ID is stored in a global extended pax header if the tar 
format is used; it can be extracted using git get-tar-commit-id. 
In ZIP files it is stored as a file comment.»


Before anybody tries that *now*, at least for Gear the tarballs are 
currently created with git archive --remote=kde:$repo $branch ..

So they currently won't have that information.

Regards,
Heiko



Re: New releases for bugfixes

2022-09-08 Thread Nate Graham

On 9/8/22 05:51, Nicolas Fella wrote:

Hi,

I don't think Nate or anyone wants to propose a strict policy that when
X then Y has to happen. That's just not how we operate in KDE. I do
think it is valuable though to discuss and create some guidelines/shared
understanding/soft policy that maintainers can use as a reference when
making decisions. That would match very well how decisions and policies
are made in KDE.


Correct. My suggestion for a basic set of criteria was designed to be a 
suggestion, not an iron straitjacket. :) Things in KDE are not so rigid 
that we need to bind ourselves with strict rules that we never deviate from.


Nate


Re: New releases for bugfixes

2022-09-08 Thread Ahmad Samir

On 8/9/22 13:51, Nicolas Fella wrote:

Hi,

I don't think Nate or anyone wants to propose a strict policy that when
X then Y has to happen. That's just not how we operate in KDE. I do
think it is valuable though to discuss and create some guidelines/shared
understanding/soft policy that maintainers can use as a reference when
making decisions. That would match very well how decisions and policies
are made in KDE.

Cheers

Nico



As I said somewhere else in this thread, any fixes should be backported to the stable branch/tag in 
git (that is most likely the current work flow for the release teams).


From the git-archive manual page:

«git archive behaves differently when given a tree ID versus when given a commit ID or tag ID. In 
the first case the current time is used as the modification time of each file in the archive. In the 
latter case the commit time as recorded in the referenced commit object is used instead. 
Additionally the commit ID is stored in a global extended pax header if the tar format is used; it 
can be extracted using git get-tar-commit-id. In ZIP files it is stored as a file comment.»


so:
- backport fix to the stable branch
- packagers can look at that branch to find what extra commits their downstream 
packages don't have yet

Regards,
Ahmad Samir



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Re: New releases for bugfixes

2022-09-08 Thread Nicolas Fella

Hi,

I don't think Nate or anyone wants to propose a strict policy that when
X then Y has to happen. That's just not how we operate in KDE. I do
think it is valuable though to discuss and create some guidelines/shared
understanding/soft policy that maintainers can use as a reference when
making decisions. That would match very well how decisions and policies
are made in KDE.

Cheers

Nico



Re: New releases for bugfixes

2022-09-08 Thread Sven Brauch

Hi,

I think all 3 of us envision very similar things, we just have different 
things we think/talk about, and different understandings of Nate's 
suggestion. I for example understood that Nate suggests to make bugs 
matching the named criteria the *trigger* for making (or discussing) a 
new release. I think you understood it differently, i.e. the maintainers 
initiate this discussion.


On 9/8/22 12:25, Harald Sitter wrote:
> The way I understand the maintainer would do this?

I'd also imagine pretty much this to happen, yes. But as you say, what 
actually triggers the release discussion is "you ask the release team to 
spin an emergency release". To me this is the decision which matters, 
made by the maintainer(s), and everything else is just paperwork to back 
that up.


> Just to be clear, I'm not sure we need the paperwork of having a bug
> and setting it vhi, but we probably do need some workflow to hold on
> to.

Yes, agreed. IMO requiring a bug with certain flags set isn't very 
helpful. I'd rather suggest to go for something like "Out-of-schedule 
bugfix releases are only considered to fix bugs which severely impact an 
application's functionality for one of its core use cases" or the like, 
and then one can argue about whether this definition is met.


At which point the whole thing has nothing to do with bug tickets any 
more, which I understood was the core point Francis was also trying to make.


Greetings,
Sven


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Re: New releases for bugfixes

2022-09-08 Thread Harald Sitter
On Thu, Sep 8, 2022 at 8:30 AM Sven Brauch  wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> On 9/7/22 17:28, Harald Sitter wrote:
> > On Wed, Sep 7, 2022 at 5:20 PM  wrote:
> >> In most projects the maintainers who'd make a release decision are the
> >> same people who triage bugs
> >
> > You quite clearly have no idea how this community works. I'll thank
> > you not to misdirect discussions.
>
> in kate it also works very much like this, so while "most projects" is a
> bit of a stretch, there are certainly relevant projects where this is
> the case, so Francis' point is well worth discussing.

You'll really have to enlighten me what it looks like when kate makes
a release decision. I suspect we are talking about different things.

> In fact I share Francis' concern, and I think re-using the
> severity/priority fields to make this decision will add more confusion
> than it provides value.

Why?

> Also consider that a lot of people will set
> these fields in the tracker which are not aware of this policy.

I am sure Nate was envisioning some sort of auditing :) A random user
setting their bug vhi most certainly wouldn't warrant an emergency
release.

> I'd
> instead leave the decision to the project maintainers and they can voice
> it by writing an email to some list.

The way I understand the maintainer would do this?

- user creates bug report: foo crashes on startup
- you identify this as a serious problem because it crashes on first start
- you set the priority vhi
- you fix the bug
- you ask the release team to spin an emergency release on account of
having fixed a vhi bug
- release team makes release

Just to be clear, I'm not sure we need the paperwork of having a bug
and setting it vhi, but we probably do need some workflow to hold on
to. The release team won't be happy if everyone starts asking for
releases because they fixed some random bug. There certainly needs to
be some explanation of why this bug requires immediate fixing. So,
long story short the release team would have to ultimately decide if
this fix is really worth the hassle based on "something".

HS


Re: New releases for bugfixes

2022-09-08 Thread Harald Sitter
I'm sorry, I neither wanted to upset nor insult.

frameworks has 83 projects, plasma has 65 projects, release service
has 297 = 445 projects to which your blanket statement does not apply.
Their releases run on rails, that's why Nate suggests a way to
introduce additional stops, as it were.

On Thu, Sep 8, 2022 at 3:44 AM  wrote:
>
> On 2022-09-07 16:28, Harald Sitter wrote:
> > On Wed, Sep 7, 2022 at 5:20 PM  wrote:
> >> In most projects the maintainers who'd make a release decision are the
> >> same people who triage bugs
> >
> > You quite clearly have no idea how this community works. I'll thank
> > you not to misdirect discussions.
> >
> > Ta
>
> I find that quite insulting.
>
> I've *been* the guy who had to ask for a new KDevelop release because a
> trivial patch turned out to crash the parser with a specific distro's
> Python setup.
>
> When I had time to work on kdev-python I spent quite a bit of effort
> triaging our bugs and deciding which to work on, and then wbich fixes
> were reasonable to backport.
> I was in the room at Akademy with the whole team doing much the same.
> We never had any separation between the people regularly doing bug
> triaging and the maintainers, and until KDevelop joined the release
> service quite recently the same people did all the releases too.
>
> If you think my perspective from one corner of KDE is skewed, or
> outdated because I've not been active much in the last couple of years,
> I'd be happy to hear it and you'd probably be right.
>
> But a one-line brush-off as if I've never been part of the
> community...that does upset me.
>
> -Francis H


Re: New releases for bugfixes

2022-09-08 Thread Sven Brauch

Hi,

On 9/7/22 17:28, Harald Sitter wrote:

On Wed, Sep 7, 2022 at 5:20 PM  wrote:

In most projects the maintainers who'd make a release decision are the
same people who triage bugs


You quite clearly have no idea how this community works. I'll thank
you not to misdirect discussions.


in kate it also works very much like this, so while "most projects" is a 
bit of a stretch, there are certainly relevant projects where this is 
the case, so Francis' point is well worth discussing.


In fact I share Francis' concern, and I think re-using the 
severity/priority fields to make this decision will add more confusion 
than it provides value. Also consider that a lot of people will set 
these fields in the tracker which are not aware of this policy. I'd 
instead leave the decision to the project maintainers and they can voice 
it by writing an email to some list.


It would be nice if you could address the point if you disagree, instead 
of brushing it off without explanation.


Greetings,
Sven



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Re: New releases for bugfixes

2022-09-07 Thread mail

On 2022-09-07 16:28, Harald Sitter wrote:

On Wed, Sep 7, 2022 at 5:20 PM  wrote:

In most projects the maintainers who'd make a release decision are the
same people who triage bugs


You quite clearly have no idea how this community works. I'll thank
you not to misdirect discussions.

Ta


I find that quite insulting.

I've *been* the guy who had to ask for a new KDevelop release because a 
trivial patch turned out to crash the parser with a specific distro's 
Python setup.


When I had time to work on kdev-python I spent quite a bit of effort 
triaging our bugs and deciding which to work on, and then wbich fixes 
were reasonable to backport.

I was in the room at Akademy with the whole team doing much the same.
We never had any separation between the people regularly doing bug 
triaging and the maintainers, and until KDevelop joined the release 
service quite recently the same people did all the releases too.


If you think my perspective from one corner of KDE is skewed, or 
outdated because I've not been active much in the last couple of years, 
I'd be happy to hear it and you'd probably be right.


But a one-line brush-off as if I've never been part of the 
community...that does upset me.


-Francis H


Re: New releases for bugfixes

2022-09-07 Thread Harald Sitter
On Wed, Sep 7, 2022 at 5:20 PM  wrote:
> In most projects the maintainers who'd make a release decision are the
> same people who triage bugs

You quite clearly have no idea how this community works. I'll thank
you not to misdirect discussions.

Ta


Re: New releases for bugfixes

2022-09-07 Thread mail

On 2022-09-06 19:41, Nate Graham wrote:

To revive this thread, I think the issue is that it feels sort of
subjective what kind of bugs are bad enough that we think like a new
release is worth it. So maybe we can try to get specific and say that
we should make a new release for fixes of Bugzilla bug reports where:
- Priority is VHI or HI
- Severity is critical, grave, or major
- Possibly also the "crash" severity?

What do people think about that?

Nate


Thanks for trying to progress this, but I don't see the purpose of such 
a policy.


The decision to make an extra release is quite objective really -- it's 
a concrete yes/no decision with known costs and a fairly clear estimate 
of the benefit to users.


Triaging of bugs is far *more* subjective, especially if they're 
(partially) feature requests, because the solution and its impact are 
often rather hypothetical and because there are so many more options to 
select.


In most projects the maintainers who'd make a release decision are the 
same people who triage bugs, so this policy would only add 'paperwork' 
while leaving the choice in the same hands.


Such a rigid policy would frequently give undesired decisions in 
practice, for example fixes for "HI" issues that involve code changes 
too large for a bugfix release or "crash" bugs that only occur in very 
rare circumstances.


The result would either be routine exceptions to the policy, which would 
undermine the point of having it, or maintainers being pressured to 
alter bug priorities to produce the correct decision at the cost of 
wasted time and possibly less-accurate bug tagging.


-Francis H


Re: New releases for bugfixes

2022-09-06 Thread Nate Graham
To revive this thread, I think the issue is that it feels sort of 
subjective what kind of bugs are bad enough that we think like a new 
release is worth it. So maybe we can try to get specific and say that we 
should make a new release for fixes of Bugzilla bug reports where:

- Priority is VHI or HI
- Severity is critical, grave, or major
- Possibly also the "crash" severity?

What do people think about that?

Nate


Re: New releases for bugfixes

2022-08-26 Thread Nate Graham

On 8/25/22 22:59, Albert Astals Cid wrote:

c) Who decides which bugs "are important" because for every bug, there's
always a person out there that thinks it's the most important bug ever.

d) What do we release? i.e. imagine we find one of those "important bugs" in
dolphin and we have to release 22.08.0.1. Do we just release the 22.08 branch
with any changes it may have had since the 22.08.0 release or do we create a
special branch that only contains the new patch and release that?


It's always subjective, but I was specifically thinking of bugs like 
https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=458099 in which we accidentally 
introduced an API break and then fixed it.


I was going to send out a patch request, but something like this really 
deserves a new release IMO, just in the interest of our API 
compatibility promise.


Nate


Re: New releases for bugfixes

2022-08-26 Thread Jonathan Riddell
As a distro packaging it's much easier and more reliable to just let the
new version get added automatically to our builds.  As a release manager it
shouldn't be any harder to automate making a new bugfix release.  I do this
already for Plasma when requested.  It should be the default method.

Jonathan


On Thu, 25 Aug 2022 at 17:55, Nate Graham  wrote:

> Hello everyone,
> Right now when we fix a significant bug in our software that may take a
> while to reach users to to the release schedule of its repo, we contact
> distros and ask them to backport it. This puts the burden on distros to
> react to us. I'm wondering how people feel about KDE instead making
> immediate point releases ourselves. Thus we would take responsibility
> for releasing fixes for our own regressions, and distros that monitor
> KDE infrastructure for new tarballs could be notified automatically.
>
> Thoughts?
>
> Nate
>


Re: New releases for bugfixes

2022-08-25 Thread Albert Astals Cid
El dijous, 25 d’agost de 2022, a les 18:55:08 (CEST), Nate Graham va escriure:
> Hello everyone,
> Right now when we fix a significant bug in our software that may take a
> while to reach users to to the release schedule of its repo, we contact
> distros and ask them to backport it. This puts the burden on distros to
> react to us. I'm wondering how people feel about KDE instead making
> immediate point releases ourselves. Thus we would take responsibility
> for releasing fixes for our own regressions, and distros that monitor
> KDE infrastructure for new tarballs could be notified automatically.
> 
> Thoughts?

In theory it makes sense but there's some issues that need working out.

a) Which version number to use if it's part of a (bigger release, Plasma, 
Frameworks, Gear). 

I guess the answer is to do x.y.z.k but we need to make sure all our tooling 
supports that

b) Again, for repos that are part of a bigger release, this creates more work 
on the (from what i can see) relatively overloaded release folks so we may 
need to make sure this happens very seldom or recruit more releasers

c) Who decides which bugs "are important" because for every bug, there's 
always a person out there that thinks it's the most important bug ever.

d) What do we release? i.e. imagine we find one of those "important bugs" in 
dolphin and we have to release 22.08.0.1. Do we just release the 22.08 branch 
with any changes it may have had since the 22.08.0 release or do we create a 
special branch that only contains the new patch and release that? 

Cheers,
  Albert

> 
> Nate






Re: New releases for bugfixes

2022-08-25 Thread Justin Zobel
Same here, I like the idea of point releases to fix impactful bugs.

On Thu, Aug 25, 2022 at 6:56 PM Harald Sitter  wrote:

> make sense to me
>
> On Thu, Aug 25, 2022 at 6:55 PM Nate Graham  wrote:
> >
> > Hello everyone,
> > Right now when we fix a significant bug in our software that may take a
> > while to reach users to to the release schedule of its repo, we contact
> > distros and ask them to backport it. This puts the burden on distros to
> > react to us. I'm wondering how people feel about KDE instead making
> > immediate point releases ourselves. Thus we would take responsibility
> > for releasing fixes for our own regressions, and distros that monitor
> > KDE infrastructure for new tarballs could be notified automatically.
> >
> > Thoughts?
> >
> > Nate
>


Re: New releases for bugfixes

2022-08-25 Thread Harald Sitter
make sense to me

On Thu, Aug 25, 2022 at 6:55 PM Nate Graham  wrote:
>
> Hello everyone,
> Right now when we fix a significant bug in our software that may take a
> while to reach users to to the release schedule of its repo, we contact
> distros and ask them to backport it. This puts the burden on distros to
> react to us. I'm wondering how people feel about KDE instead making
> immediate point releases ourselves. Thus we would take responsibility
> for releasing fixes for our own regressions, and distros that monitor
> KDE infrastructure for new tarballs could be notified automatically.
>
> Thoughts?
>
> Nate


New releases for bugfixes

2022-08-25 Thread Nate Graham

Hello everyone,
Right now when we fix a significant bug in our software that may take a 
while to reach users to to the release schedule of its repo, we contact 
distros and ask them to backport it. This puts the burden on distros to 
react to us. I'm wondering how people feel about KDE instead making 
immediate point releases ourselves. Thus we would take responsibility 
for releasing fixes for our own regressions, and distros that monitor 
KDE infrastructure for new tarballs could be notified automatically.


Thoughts?

Nate