* Christoph Hellwig <hch@infradead.org> wrote:well it was Auke who compared it to the libata transition not me ... firstly, a good deal of our alpha testers use =y drivers. Secondly, your kind of constructive email is exactly what i wanted to see in the first place... i dont really care _how_ this gets solved - i'm not maintaining this code. What forced me to deal with it was this outright denial of my problem, the ridiculing and NACK-ing of it and general stonewalling. I'd have preferred to have sent only my first report. The networking driver guys on the other hand: 1) forced me to send a full bugreport about something that i described adequately in my very first mail already, and which they should have immediately recognized, based on the trouble they had with Linus. (i wasnt aware of that back when i made my report) 2) repeatedly denied that there is any problem. Claimed that "this is a careful migration balance we decided" and other babbling. 3) forced me to write a patch for code they are supposed to be maintaining to actually get things moving. 4) moved the regression bugzilla entry to REJECTED+INVALID without actually resolving the bug and forced me to write several comments there too. (See http://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=10427) 5) forced me to write 20 mails with still no clear resolution yet at this point. it's insane and i'm really curious what kind of language you'd use in your replies if i ever forced you through such an excercise in arch/x86 or the scheduler ;-) and no, it wasnt a case of miscommunication. My bug was i think well-understood in the very first mailings already, but it was discounted as unimportant and resolution was delayed all the way up until this point. That shows fundamental insensitivity to bug reporters which is more worrisome than the bug itself (the bug is fairly minor and i never claimed otherwise). Hours of my time wasted on something that should have been a 2 minutes matter - and yes, as i go through these chores i do get increasingly annoyed about it, and rightfully so. I cannot just let this happen silently, way too much crap like this gets pulled off. If the networking driver guys are pulling off a show like that with a fellow kernel developer how do they manage to deal with plain users (who, in comparison, are in essence defense-less against rejections from maintainers)? and yes, moving those IDs over into e1000e in v2.6.26 might work out fine in the end, if the migration is all totally problem free up to that point. We simply cannot make that determination right now. What exactly is so hard to understand about the concept of not degrading the quality of an existing, rather well-working driver? Ingo -- 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
| Dave Hansen | Re: [RFC/PATCH] Documentation of kernel messages |
| Ingo Molnar | [patch] CFS scheduler, -v19 |
| Karl Meyer | PROBLEM: 2.6.23-rc "NETDEV WATCHDOG: eth0: transmit timed out" |
| Greg KH | [patch 02/60] SCSI: ses: fix VPD inquiry overrun |
git: | |
| Linus Torvalds | Re: git on MacOSX and files with decomposed utf-8 file names |
| Matthieu Moy | git push to a non-bare repository |
| linux | Re: Change set based shallow clone |
| Jon Smirl | Something is broken in repack |
| GVG GVG | ssh_exchange_identification: Connection closed by remote host |
| Otto Moerbeek | Re: identifying sparse files and get ride of them trick available? |
| Richard Stallman | Real men don't attack straw men |
| Jon Morby | IPv6 and OpenBGPD - Protocol not available |
| Linux Kernel Mailing List | [ALSA] hda - Fix ALC262 fujitsu model |
| Linux Kernel Mailing List | USB Serial Sierra: clean-up |
| Linux Kernel Mailing List | ssb: Fix watchdog access for devices without a chipcommon |
| Linux Kernel Mailing List | USB Serial Sierra: Dynamic interface detection |
