Dear Jakub and list, I also have my fair share of concerns about the "if the maintainers don't ACK it, merge it in case of doubt" approach. What is the point of having a maintainer in the first place?
I don't really want to imagine the state of a codebase where everything gets merged by default, unless somebody clearly and repeatedly actively NACKs it. Furthermore, for anyone who is maintaining a small portion of the code, like a single driver, the suggested "two days" review cycle is simply not possible. Such people, like myself, are not full-time kernel developers, but people who may only have a few hours per month to spend on maintenance related duties of a rather small and exotic driver with few users. We are not talking about a security related fix, or a bugfix, but the introduction of massive changes (compared to the size of the gtp driver) and new features. I did see your ping for review, but the end of the year brings unfortunately an incredible amount of work that needs to be done. I work 60+ hours each week as it is, and end of the year + financial year with closing of accounts, changing of VAT rates, brexit related changes, inventory counting, ... as a small business owner, I simply could not provide feedback as quickly as I wanted. I would have to build a kernel with that patch, then set up some related test VMs, test with at least one existing userspace software like OpenGGSN before I could ACK any change. Given the low amount of changes, and the lack of any commercial interest in funding, there is no automatic test setup that involves the kernel GTP driver yet. In Osmocom we do have extensive automatic test suites for OpenGGSN, but only with the userspace data plane, not with the gtp.ko kernel data plane :( SO this means manual testing, likely taking half a day to get an idea about potential regressions. > > Worse though, is the insinuation that anything unreviewed > > gets blindly merged... No, the two day target should be for the merging > > of ACK:ed patches. > > Well, certainly, the code has to be acceptable to the person merging it. Indeed. But given the highly exotic use case of the GTP driver, I would say it needs at least an ACK from somebody who is actively using it, to have some indication that there don't seem to be regressions at least at first sight. Compliance with kernel coding style and the general network architecture alone is one part, but I would expect that virtually nobody except 2-3 people on this list have ever used the GTP kernel driver... > Sorry, a week is far too long for netdev. If we were to wait that long > we'd have a queue of 300+ patches always hanging around. I would actually consider 300 in-flight patches a relatively small number for such a huge project, but I don't want to get off-topic. > > Sincerely frustrated because rebasing my IPv6 series on top of this mess > > will take days, > > I sympathize, perhaps we should document the expectations we have so > less involved maintainers know the expectations :( As far as I remember, the IPv6 patches have appeared before, and I had also hoped/wished for them to be merged before any large changes (percentage of numbers of lines touched vs. size of the driver) like this flow-based tunneling change. Yes, I should have communicated better, that clearly was my fault. But I was operating under the assumption that code only gets merged if the maintainers actually ACK it. At least that's how I remember it from my more active kernel hacking days ~20 years ago. Regards, Harald -- - Harald Welte <lafo...@gnumonks.org> http://laforge.gnumonks.org/ ============================================================================ "Privacy in residential applications is a desirable marketing option." (ETSI EN 300 175-7 Ch. A6)