On Tue, 13 November 2007 15:18:07 -0500, Mark Lord wrote:Given a decent bug report, I agree that having the bug not looked at is shameful. But what can a developer do if a bug report effectively reads "there is some bug somewhere in recent kernels"? How can I know that in this particular case it is my bug that I introduced? It could just as easily be 50 other people and none of them are eager to debug it unless they suspect it to be their bug. This is a common problem and fairly unrelated to linux in general or the kernel in particular. Who is going to be the sucker that figures out which developer the bug belongs to? And I have yet to find a project, commercial or opensource, where volunteers flock to become such a sucker. One option is to push this role to the bug reporter. Another is to strong-arm some developers into this role, by whatever means. A third would be for $LARGE_COMPANY to hire some people. If you have a better idea or would volunteer your time, I'd be grateful. Simply blaming one side, whether bug reporter or a random developer, for not being the sucker doesn't help anyone. Jörn -- Joern's library part 2: http://www.art.net/~hopkins/Don/unix-haters/tirix/embarrassing-memo.html - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe netdev" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
| Andrew Morton | -mm merge plans for 2.6.23 |
| Rafael J. Wysocki | [Bug #11207] VolanoMark regression with 2.6.27-rc1 |
| Zhang, Yanmin | AIM7 40% regression with 2.6.26-rc1 |
| Con Kolivas | [PATCH][RSDL-mm 0/7] RSDL cpu scheduler for 2.6.21-rc3-mm2 |
git: | |
| Gregory Haskins | [RFC PATCH 03/17] vbus: add connection-client helper infrastructure |
| David Woodhouse | [PATCH 03/30] solos: FPGA and firmware update support. |
| Natalie Protasevich | [BUG] New Kernel Bugs |
| Gerrit Renker | [PATCH 15/37] dccp: Set per-connection CCIDs via socket options |
