On 03/18/2010 12:50 PM, Ingo Molnar wrote:
quoted text > * Avi Kivity<avi@redhat.com> wrote:
>
>
>>> The moment any change (be it as trivial as fixing a GUI detail or as
>>> complex as a new feature) involves two or more packages, development speed
>>> slows down to a crawl - while the complexity of the change might be very
>>> low!
>>>
>> Why is that?
>>
> It's very simple: because the contribution latencies and overhead compound,
> almost inevitably.
>
It's not inevitable, if the projects are badly run, you'll have high
latencies, but projects don't have to be badly run.
quoted text > If you ever tried to implement a combo GCC+glibc+kernel feature you'll know
> ...
>
> Even with the best-run projects in existence it takes forever and is very
> painful - and here i talk about first hand experience over many years.
>
Try sending a patch to qemu-devel@, you may be pleasantly surprised.
quoted text >> I the maintainers of all packages are cooperative and responsive, then the
>> patches will get accepted quickly. If they aren't, development will be
>> slow. [...]
>>
> I'm afraid practice is different from the rosy ideal you paint there. Even
> with assumed 'perfect projects' there's always random differences between
> projects, causing doubled (tripled) overhead and compounded up overhead:
>
> - random differences in release schedules
>
> - random differences in contribution guidelines
>
> - random differences in coding style
>
None of these matter for steady contributors.
quoted text >> [...] It isn't any different from contributing to two unrelated kernel
>> subsystems (which are in fact in different repositories until the next merge
>> window).
>>
> You mention a perfect example: contributing to multipe kernel subsystems. Even
> _that_ is very noticeably harder than contributing to a single subsystem - due
> to the inevitable buerocratic overhead, due to different development trees,
> due to different merge criteria.
>
> So you are underlining my point (perhaps without intending to): treating
> closely related bits of technology as a single project is much better.
>
> Obviously arch/x86/kvm/, virt/ and tools/kvm/ should live in a single
> development repository (perhaps micro-differentiated by a few topical
> branches), for exactly those reasons you mention.
>
How is a patch for the qemu GUI eject button and the kvm shadow mmu
related? Should a single maintainer deal with both?
--
error compiling committee.c: too many arguments to function
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Messages in current thread:
Re: [RFC] Unify KVM kernel-space and user-space code into ... , Avi Kivity , (Thu Mar 18, 4:30 am)