Adrian Bunk wrote:
quoted text > On Tue, Nov 13, 2007 at 12:50:08PM -0500, Mark Lord wrote:
>> Ingo Molnar wrote:
>>> for example git-bisect was godsent. I remember that years ago bisection of
>>> a bug was a very laborous task so that it was only used as a final,
>>> last-ditch approach for really nasty bugs. Today we can autonomouly bisect
>>> build bugs via a simple shell command around "git-bisect run", without any
>>> human interaction! This freed up testing resources
>> ..
>>
>> It's only a godsend for the few people who happen to be kernel developers
>
> It's also godsend for users who want a regression they observe fixed.
>
> If you can tell which patch broke it you often turned a very hard to
> debug problem into a relatively easy fixable problem.
..
Oh yes, definitely. When that use happens to be a kernel dev + git user,
it saves the *fool who broke it* a hell of a lot of time, because they can
slough it off onto the poor bloke who notices it.
Mind you, no arguing that this is effective when that poor bloke
has a day free to download the git-tree and build/reboot a dozen times.
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Messages in current thread:
Re: [BUG] New Kernel Bugs , Mark Lord , (Tue Nov 13, 11:18 am)