Andrew Bogott <abog...@wikimedia.org> writes: > I. As soon as a patch drops into common, the patch author should > submit merge-from-common patches to all affected projects. > A. (This should really be done by a bot, but that's not going to > happen overnight)
Actually, I think with our current level of tooling, we can have Jenkins do this (run by Zuul as a post-merge job on openstack-common). I very much believe that the long-term goal should be to make openstack-common a library -- so nothing I say here should be construed against that. But as long as it's in an incubation phase, if doing something like this would help move things along, we can certainly implement it, and fairly easily. Note that a naive implementation might generate quite a bit of review spam if several small changes land to openstack-common (there would then be changes*projects number of reviews in gerrit). We have some code laying around which might be useful here that looks for an existing open change and amends it; at least that would let us have at most only one open merge-from-common-change per-project. Okay, that's all on that; I don't want to derail the main conversation, and I'd much rather it just be a library if we're close to being ready for that. -Jim _______________________________________________ Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~openstack Post to : openstack@lists.launchpad.net Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~openstack More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp