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Re: Adopt a patch!


From: Hartmut Goebel
Subject: Re: Adopt a patch!
Date: Wed, 20 Sep 2017 13:48:54 +0200
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:52.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/52.3.0

Am 19.09.2017 um 16:22 schrieb Arun Isaac:
> Just thinking out loud: Maybe, we need more people with commit
> access. Theoretically, anyone can review a patch, but ultimately it is
> people with commit access who will have to finally apply and push the
> patch. As the rate of submission of patches grows, this increases the
> work load on those with commit access.

It is not only the work load, but also the work-flow which makes it hard
for occasional reviewers and committers. The mail-interface might be
great for those who are used to it, but it requires one to subscribe to
the patch-mainling-list, keep an eye on review, download the patch, lint
the patch, reply to the mail. If the patch is okay, I need to
pull--rebase on the current master, push, write a mail for closing the
bug-entry. This means switching forth and back between mail, shell, and
browser.

These are far too much manual steps. An if I only have little time,
patches are piling up. The mailbox  get cluttered by patches I do not
follow.

This woes! And this is why I'm not regularly reviewing patches.

Compare it with an integrated workflow on e.g. Gitlab or github: The
list of patches to review is always up to date, same for the state and
comments. Using CI (gitlabs integrated pipeline are great!) saves me a
lot of work, e.g. linting. If the patch is okay, it is a single click
(okay, maybe 5 clicks) to rebase i on top of master. The patch is closed
automatically, the submitter is notified, bookkeeping (referencing to
the commit) is done.

We already discussed using e.g. goks last year with no result. Maybe
it's time to restart the approach.

-- 
Regards
Hartmut Goebel

| Hartmut Goebel          | address@hidden               |
| www.crazy-compilers.com | compilers which you thought are impossible |





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