* Andy Whitcroft <apw@shadowen.org> wrote:what matters is that only items should be displayed that i _can_ fix. With v8 i was able to make kernel/sched*.c almost noise-free, but with v9 and v10 that's not possible anymore. And the moment the default output of the tool cannot be made 'empty', we've lost the biggest battle. Seeing the same bogus (or borderline) warnings again and again destroys the biggest dynamic that could get people to use this tool more often: the gratification of having a 'perfectly clean' file/patch. And this is not about any particular false positive. I dont mind an "advanced mode" non-default opt-in option for the script, if someone is interested in borderline or hard to judge warnings too, but these default false positives are _lethal_ for a tool like this. (and i made this point before.) This is a _fundamental_ thing, and i'm still not sure whether you accept and understand that point. This is very basic and very important, and this isnt the first (or second) time i raised this. Ingo -
| debian developer | Re: Dual-Licensing Linux Kernel with GPL V2 and GPL V3 |
| Greg KH | [GIT PATCH] driver core patches against 2.6.24 |
| James Bottomley | Re: Integration of SCST in the mainstream Linux kernel |
| Tony Lindgren | [PATCH 75/90] ARM: OMAP: 243x: Add mappings for SDRC and SMS |
git: | |
| Antonio Almeida | HTB accuracy for high speed |
| Radu Rendec | htb parallelism on multi-core platforms |
| Christoph Lameter | Network latency regressions from 2.6.22 to 2.6.29 |
| Linus Torvalds | Re: [GIT]: Networking |
