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Re: Why we should avoid new submodules if possible
From: |
Philippe Mathieu-Daudé |
Subject: |
Re: Why we should avoid new submodules if possible |
Date: |
Sat, 2 Jul 2022 02:05:47 +0200 |
On Fri, Jul 1, 2022 at 5:37 AM Thomas Huth <thuth@redhat.com> wrote:
> On 29/06/2022 08.28, Ani Sinha wrote:
> > On Tue, Jun 28, 2022 at 11:30 PM Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@redhat.com> wrote:
> >> On Tue, Jun 28, 2022 at 05:15:05PM +0100, Daniel P. Berrangé wrote:
> >>> FYI, the reason much of this is intentionally NOT under the /qemu-project
> >>> gitlab namespace is that we did not want to be responsible for
> >>> distributing
> >>> arbitrary binary blobs/images. That in turn makes the QEMU project
> >>> responsible
> >>> for license compliance, which is non-trivial todo correctly for much of
> >>> this
> >>> stuff. As such it is highly desirable to delegate both the hosting the
> >>> binaries and source to the third party who builds it.
> >>
> >> This might be understadable for random guest OS images which include tons
> >> of stuff
> >> and are thus hard to audit. But not to biosbits which has its own
> >> license (more or less bsd) + gpl for grub:
> >> https://github.com/biosbits/bits/blob/master/COPYING
> >
> > These are all the dependencies:
> > https://github.com/biosbits/bits/tree/master/deps
> >
> > We can go through the licenses for each and make a determination. The
> > audit would be lost easier because there is a bounded number of
> > dependencies for bits.
>
> That's quite a bit of dependencies already ... I don't think that we should
> put the burden of keeping up with the licenses of those projects to the QEMU
> project. So just make sure that the binaries are available somewhere and
> then include your test into the avocado framework or download via curl/wget
> as suggested in other mails.
"available somewhere" until they get moved or deleted...
This happened a few times with archives/artifacts Avocado tests fetch.
We ended up committing one or a set of URLs pointing to a file, its
usual name and its hash.
If you downloaded the file in time and don't flush the Avocado cache,
you can keep testing.
If it is too late (the file disappeared) and you have time to dig for
such a file online, and are lucky because you found it and its hash
matches, then you can run some tests. As a maintainer I find this
feature useful, and find it worse to lose the ability to test
something that used to work.
My 2¢...
Phil.
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