> Bugs don't expire because they are not initially reported on the latest BIOS. They expire because they remain in the Incomplete Status for too long.
Don't play stupid, please. I know they expire because they remain in the incomplete status. The wrong policy I'm talking about is that they are systematically put in the "incomplete" status every time they are reported with an outdated bios. And that's what eventually causes them to expire, because me updating the bios is just not going to happen (until it can be done easily and safely in Ubuntu). > If linux upstream thinks you have a bug due to an outdated BIOS... The problem here is that bugs aren't put in the incomplete status because somebody upstream actually "thinks" the bug is due to an outdate BIOS, nor even because there is the slightest reason to suspect that, but simply because the bios is not updated. That is, it is ASSUMED that every bug that is reported under an outdated bios is due to the outdated bios. That's a ridiculous assumption. If one had to assume something (until any evidence is found), it would be safer to assume the exact opposite, as that has much more chances to be the case (i.e. the bug be in the OS). If the goal is to fix the highest number of bugs, to have Ubuntu work better, to provide a better UX, and to support the widest set of hardware, this strategy is obiously wrong. The requirement to update the BIOS should be made only when there is a strong reason to suspect that the outdated bios is related. And note that EVEN in the extremely unlikely case that the bug exists only on the outdated bios, that does not necessarily mean that the bug is DUE to a bug in the bios. The bug may be just triggered by some "legitimate" (i.e. non-buggy) characteristic in the bios that has been removed in the latest version, hence not triggering the bug in the OS any more, which doesn't make it less of a bug. Also note that I reported this bug against Linux just because I have no idea what package it may belong to. This happens pretty often to me, and I guess to many other users, because ¿how on earth is an end user supposed to figure out what package a bug belongs to? (no need to reply with a link to the guide, I already read that, it doesn't help in most cases) So, because of this policy of marking as incomplete every linux bug that happens to be reported on outdated bios, bugs like this don't even reach the stage where somebody more knowleadgeable than the reporter targets it to the correct package. > While I haven't surveyed all the vendors in a while, I'm not presently aware > of vendors explicitly providing in-Ubuntu/(other linux vendor) methods of > updating the BIOS. That's exactly why you can't depend on bios updates to discard bug reports. Whether or not that depends solely on vendors, that makes updating BIOS for Ubuntu users risky and complicated. I won't take all the time to create another OS's boot disk and do all that stuff, and especially the risk to brick my computer, just to check whether or not a bug I've found in Ubuntu disappears, when there's a 0.0000001% chance that that may happen. So, while the reality remains that updating the BIOS for an Ubuntu user is complicated as hell, putting that "barreer" to bug reports (i.e. requiring bios update before a bug report is taken into consideration) means: - failing to investigate and fix a huge lot of bugs that actually would turn out to be bugs in the OS (whether it's Linux or whatever other component of Ubuntu), letting them remain unfixed for ages - and yes, perhaps in a ridiculously small percentage of cases, save developers the unnecessary work to triage an issue that is actually due to a bug in the BIOS > Hence, it is expected you update your BIOS. The more time you spend > complaining about updating, instead of either updating or asking for help on > doing so, is just causing a longer and longer delay of your problem being > resolved. Padon, "MY" problem? It's not like I'm complaining for some product I've bought, nor is it like I'm asking for a support which I may get if I deserve it, or if I've done my job. The bug affects the community of users. I simply happen to be one person who found it and reported it. I could do a greater effort, that's true, I could update my bios and add that tiny, most-probably-insignificant bit of information by confirming the bug on the newer bios. I could as well learn C/C++ programming and the Linux code and help fix it, for that matter. That's not the case. I reported the issue, that's how far I can go. Now you can choose whether to use that information to try to improve Ubuntu, or discard it for a silly reason. You're choosing the second. That is causing a longer and longer delay of everybody's problem being solved. Regarding bios updates being offered only for other OSes by vendors. There has been a long history of hardware vendors not giving proper support for linux. And of the linux community filling that gap by reverse-engineering vendor's software (drivers and the like) for other OSes and writing the equivalent for Linux. Perhaps something like that can be done for bios updates? -- You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu. https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1335409 Title: [Acer Aspire V3-571G] Mousepad stopped working To manage notifications about this bug go to: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/1335409/+subscriptions -- ubuntu-bugs mailing list [email protected] https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-bugs
