"Michael S. Tsirkin" <m...@redhat.com> writes: > On Tue, Oct 21, 2014 at 02:22:41PM +0200, Markus Armbruster wrote: >> "Michael S. Tsirkin" <m...@redhat.com> writes: >> >> > On Tue, Oct 21, 2014 at 11:31:12AM +0200, Markus Armbruster wrote: >> >> "Michael S. Tsirkin" <m...@redhat.com> writes: >> >> >> >> > On Mon, Oct 20, 2014 at 03:19:52PM +0100, Peter Maydell wrote: >> >> >> On 20 October 2014 15:15, Michael S. Tsirkin <m...@redhat.com> wrote: >> >> >> > On Mon, Oct 20, 2014 at 03:04:44PM +0100, Peter Maydell wrote: >> >> >> >> On 20 October 2014 10:19, Markus Armbruster >> >> >> >> <arm...@redhat.com> wrote: >> >> >> >> > Contributors rely on this script to find maintainers to copy. The >> >> >> >> > script falls back to git when no exact MAINTAINERS pattern >> >> >> >> > matches. >> >> >> >> > When that happens, recent contributors get copied, which >> >> >> >> > tends not be >> >> >> >> > particularly useful. Some contributors find it even annoying. >> >> >> >> > >> >> >> >> > Flip the default to "don't fall back to git". Use >> >> >> >> > --git-fallback to >> >> >> >> > ask it to fall back to git. >> >> >> >> >> >> >> Good idea. >> >> >> >> >> >> > What do you want to happen in this case? >> >> >> >> >> >> It should mail the people who are actually maintainers, >> >> >> not anybody who happened to touch the code in the last >> >> >> year. >> >> > >> >> > Right but as often as not there's no data about that >> >> > in MAINTAINERS. >> >> >> >> The way to fix that is finding maintainers, not scatter-shooting patches >> >> to random contributors in the vague hope of hitting someone who cares. >> >> >> >> >> > I'm yet to see contributors who are annoyed but we >> >> >> > can always blacklist specific people. >> >> >> >> >> >> At the moment I just don't use get_maintainers.pl at >> >> >> all because I tried it a few times and it just cc'd >> >> >> a bunch of irrelevant people... >> >> >> >> >> >> I suspect anybody using it at the moment is either >> >> >> using the --no-git-fallback flag or trimming the >> >> >> cc list a lot. >> >> >> >> >> >> thanks >> >> >> -- PMM >> >> > >> >> > I'm using it: sometimes with --no-git-fallback, sometimes without. >> >> >> >> I'm using it, but I absolutely want to know when it falls back to git, >> >> because then I want to cheack and trim or ignore its output every single >> >> time. >> > >> > >> > Well it tells you the role. What else is necessary? >> >> For my own use in sending patches, nothing. I know how to use it to >> help me copy the right people. >> >> >> > IIUC the default is to have up to 5 people on the Cc list >> >> > (--git-max-maintainers). >> >> > It's not like it adds 200 random people, is it? >> >> > >> >> > Anyway experienced contributors can figure it out IMHO. >> >> >> >> Experienced contributors can figure out --git-fallback, too. >> > >> > Exactly. >> > >> >> What we see is contributors, especially less experienced ones, copying >> >> whatever get_maintainers.pl spits out, because they have no idea what >> >> get_maintainers.pl actually does. >> > >> > Exactly. And this seems better than just sending to qemu ML >> > and not copying anyone. >> >> That's where we disagree. >> >> Personally, I don't mind getting punished for contributing patches by >> getting copied indiscriminately all that much. It's a drain on my time, >> but I can cope. However, I know people who do mind, and some of them >> have spoken up in this thread. >> >> Copying people is not free. You should *think* before you copy. >> >> An entry in MAINTAINERS dispenses you from this obligation, because the >> people listed explicitly asked for a copy. >> >> Finding someone in git-log does not! >> >> get_maintainers.pl encourages its users to treat people found in git-log >> exactly like the ones in MAINTAINERS. Treating them the same is >> *wrong*. >> >> >> > Question in my mind is what do we want a casual contributor >> >> > to do if there's no one listed in MAINTAINERS. >> >> > "Look in MAINTAINERS, if not there, look in git log" >> >> > sounds very reasonable to me, better than "CC no one". >> >> >> >> But that's not what we do! We do "copy whatever get_maintainers.pl >> >> coughs up", which boils down to "use MAINTAINERS, if not there, grab >> >> some random victims from git-log". >> > >> > Sorry, what's the difference? >> > "look in" versus "random victims"? what makes them random? >> >> The difference is using get_maintainers.pl to help finding whom to copy >> vs. blindly copying whoever get_maintainers.pl coughs up. >> >> > Maybe you just want to increase git-min-percent? >> > >> >> Perhaps we'd get slightly better results if get_maintainers.pl told its >> >> users clearly about the two kinds of output it may produce: maintainers >> >> (must be copied on patches), and recent contributors (you're in trouble; >> >> copying some of them may or may not help). >> > >> > That's what it does: it reports the role, and the percent. >> >> Boldly assumes the user of get_maintainers.pl knows what it does, and >> knows how to interpret runes like (commit_signer:14/22=64%). > > OK so you would like a flag for a more readable output? > Sounds very reasonable.
Inexperienced contributors are unlikely to find a flag, so it better be the default. >> > What's missing? >> >> What's really missing is decent coverage by MAINTAINERS. I figure my >> patch is controversial only because MAINTAINERS is so woefully >> incomplete. > > In fact if MAINTAINERS covered everything your patch won't be needed > right? Correct. The more MAINTAINERS covers, the less of a difference my patch makes. >> My patch to get_maintainers.pl triggered a whole thread, while the >> message I sent on MAINTAINERS coverage got just one reply so far, and >> even that one's really just about get_maintainers.pl. Disappointing. >> Looks like we're still looking for an easy technical fix. I doubt there >> is one. > > At least for myself, that's because I'm Cc'd directly on the patch > but not on the MAINTAINERS coverage mail. > And that's ... because get_maintainers picks my mail from git? > > See how it's useful now? Except that's not what happened. $ scripts/get_maintainer.pl --git-fallback -f scripts/get_maintainer.pl No output. I picked you from git-log manually. >> If you have better ideas on how to mitigate the excessive and useless >> copying we now see, please post a patch. > > We need more maintainers :) Yes, we do. Until we got them, we need fewer useless copies.