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From: Josh Berkus <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Cc: Dave Page <[email protected]>
Cc: Bruce Momjian <[email protected]>
Cc: Tom Lane <[email protected]>
Cc: Heikki Linnakangas <[email protected]>
Cc: Simon Riggs <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Feature freeze progress report
Date: Tue, 1 May 2007 09:43:19 -0700
Message-ID: <[email protected]> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <[email protected]>
References: <[email protected]>
	<[email protected]>

Bruce, 

> > The bottom line is if you had a system that was 100% perfect in
> > capturing all information about a patch, it only helps us 2% toward
> > reviewing the patch, and what is the cost of keeping 100% information?
>
> 2% for you or Tom reviewing a recently discussed, run-of-the mill patch.
> I suspect that %age will rise as the patch complexity increases and the
> reviewers experience decreases - which is exactly the situation that it
> would help to improve.

Moreover, what I'm looking for is tools which will:
1) allow existing reviewers to make better use of the time that they have, and
2) encourage/assist new reviewers in helping out, and
3) not bottleneck on the availability of a single project member

The current patch-queue process is failing to scale with the project: every 
release it gets to be more work for you & Tom to integrate the patches.  We 
need to think of new approaches to make the review process scale.  As a 
pointed example, you're about to go on tour for 2 weeks and patch review will 
stall while you're gone.  That's not sustainable.

If you don't think that a web tool will help, then what *do* you think will 
help?  Just "soldiering on" isn't really an answer, and I notice that you're 
very quick to come up with reasons why anything we might try will fail, but 
extremely reluctant to make suggestions for improvement.

==============

Dave,

> Also note that I'm not saying I can produce a system that's 100% correct
> - just one that will capture the posts that keep the patch ID in their
> subject line *automatically* - meaning you don't have to worry about
> keeping threads for the existing queue or tracking the patch status.

Is there a reason why the system needs to be primarily based on e-mail?  I was 
thinking that the patch manager would be entirely a web tool, with people 
submitting and modifying a patch directly through a web interface.  This 
would be lots easier to build than an e-mail based system, and also far more 
useful from a monitoring standpoint.  I've worked with e-mail based systems 
like RT and OTRS, and frankly they're extremely high-maintenance and suffer a 
large amount of "lost" information.

We could also build a number of other things into the web tool, like a "You 
are submitting this patch under BSD" disclaimer and pointers to the Developer 
FAQ and other relevant documents.

-- 
Josh Berkus
PostgreSQL @ Sun
San Francisco



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