yeah - but we had that behavior for quite some time.
This is how the patch cycle works normally: we had a fair chance to
discover this problem in your testing then in -tip testing and then in
linux-next or -mm but we didnt find it at any stage.
Now we are in the upstream release cycle so unless there's some
immediate fix available (or there are _really_ strong reasons against
the revert) doing the revert is the right approach.
A revert is not necessarily the indicator of the quality of the change
in question, it is a tester-driven exception event that guarantees that
the kernel improves in a monotonic way. (for all testers who opt to help
us in doing so)
And given that the problem was readily reproducible for Mike, it should
be reproducible for you as well - so we dont actually make the bug
harder to fix by doing the revert.
Perhaps we should introduce the notion of "Defer-to-next-release"
reverts - which this really is - in contrast to "Revert-because-bad",
which your change definitely is not.
ok, under which thread/subject is that? Not queued in tip/sched/* yet,
correct?
Ingo
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