Re: Reporting bugs and bisection

From: Willy Tarreau
Date: Mon Apr 14 2008 - 06:08:16 EST


On Mon, Apr 14, 2008 at 11:58:08AM +0200, Andi Kleen wrote:
> Willy Tarreau <w@xxxxxx> writes:
>
> > Linux is the *only* product which requires
> > the bug reporter to find the fault change (yes, I know, it's scalable).
>
> It's a pretty common procedure for compilers (gcc, llvm) too, although
> they have the advantage that given a test case usually someone else
> can run the bisect procedure because they do not depend on the underlying
> hardware
>
> That's unfortunately not the case for most kernel bugs, although
> sometimes it is possible given a hardware independent test case. And
> while most of the kernel code is drivers and arch, a lot of it is
> still pretty hardware independent, so at least in some cases it is
> possible to submit test cases and then let someone else (like a bug
> master) do the bisect.
>
> Of course it is unclear if producing a submittable test case will be
> actually any faster than just running bisect for the user.
>
> That said I agree it's a big burden to run bisect for everything
> because it can take very long (especially if the problem
> is not trivially reproducable)
>
> It would be fair at least if maintainers always gave some candidate
> commit ids when asking for bisect for likely changes that could
> have matched the bug. Then those could be checked quickly first
> before doing the full run.
>
> While that will not always work it would be still a useful short cut
> and save a lot of time for the reporter.

And most of all, the reporter would not feel like the bisection is
the default response !

> -Andi

Willy

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