Op 1 mei 2014, om 19:02 heeft Richard Purdie <richard.pur...@linuxfoundation.org> het volgende geschreven:
> I was asked what I thought were things that needed discussion at OEDAM. > Sadly I won't be there but I thought it might help to write down my > thoughts in a few areas. > > Developer Workflow > ------------------ > > Firstly, I think the big piece we need to address as a project is > "developer workflow" as this is where people are struggling using it. > > Unfortunately "developer workflow" means different things to different > people? Which one do I mean then? I actually mean all of them. As some > examples: [snip use cases] I notice none of the use case mention distro developers, but the paragraph above is vague enough to be interpreted as "we rock at distro stuff, we suck at app/product development". To clear up my confusion, could you say something about distro development? Something like "bitbake-prserv-tool import won't be glacially slow in the future" :) After 5 OE-core based angstrom releases I can say that the 'Core OS' quality has improved a lot and I've made peace with the version update policy, but the overall experience for a downstream distro is painful. A lot of small, stupid and preventable mistakes combined are tedious to deal with. The most recent example I hit was xinput-calibrator losing XDG autolaunch support in the move to OE-core without mentioning it in the commit log. It took me a week (admittingly a spare time week, so maybe a single workday) to track it down and come up with a patch. And there's a *big* stupid and preventable issue that is not really OE-cores fault, but more the yocto-projects fault: BSPs using linux-yocto.bbappend and doing: SRCREV = "githash" LINUX_VERSION = "3.12" BSP maintainers assume only their BSP will be affected, but it affects *all* BSPs using linux-yocto.bbappends. This applied to all bbappends, but I've seen all meta-handheld machines jump up and down in PV due to other BSPs setting global vars. Ross deserves a big thank you for obsoleting mesa bbappends, that issues prevented angstrom from having a working GL version for >1 ARM silicon vendor. > So my first ask is that we actually try and write down all these > different cases which is no small task in itself. I've a start of a list > above, we should probably put this into the wiki and have people add > their own use cases (or use cases of those around them in their company > etc.). The trouble is there are some many different variants! > > Once we have some idea of the cases, we can start to put together some > kind of plan about how we intend to help the given use cases and to try > and prioritise them. Perhaps we should put some kind of weighting > against them in the wiki and people can increase the numbers of say > their top three desires. > > Whilst this looks like an impossible problem, the good news is that I > believe we can solve it and we actually already have a rather powerful > toolbox to help work on it. I have a rough idea of a roadmap that can > move us forward: > > a) locked sstate - I know its not in master yet but I believe this is > key to allowing some of the use cases where you want to change some > number of things but keep the rest of the system the same. This is something I would very much like to see happening. I've noticed at least 3 patches in the 'dora' stable branch that triggered pretty much a complete rebuild due to sstate+prserv. And when I apply a buildfix for recent host distros to e.g. gcc to meta-linaro-toolchain I trigger a complete rebuild as well. It would be a lot less churn in the package feeds if I could lock down everything in console-image. That way the 'core OS' packages won't have as much spurious updates as they have now. regards, Koen -- _______________________________________________ Openembedded-core mailing list Openembedded-core@lists.openembedded.org http://lists.openembedded.org/mailman/listinfo/openembedded-core