On Thu, Feb 17, 2022 at 12:00:05PM -0500, Steven Rostedt wrote: > > I personally believe that there's potential that this can be helpful and we > will want to merge it. > > But, what I believe Ted is trying to say is, if you do not know if the > report is a bug or not, please do not ask the maintainers to determine it > for you. This is a good opportunity for you to look to see why your tool > reported an issue, and learn that subsystem. Look at if this is really a > bug or not, and investigate why. I agree there's potential here, or I would have ignored the ext4 "bug report". When we can get rid of the false positives, I think it should be merged; I'd just rather it not be merged until after the false positives are fixed, since otherwise, someone well-meaning will start using it with Syzkaller, and noise that maintainers need to deal with (with people requesting reverts of two year old commits, etc) will increase by a factor of ten or more. (With Syzbot reproducers that set up random cgroups, IP tunnels with wiregaurd enabled, FUSE stress testers, etc., that file system maintainers will be asked to try to disentangle.) So from a maintainer's perspective, false positives are highly negative. It may be that from some people's POV, one bug found and 20 false positive might still be "useful". But if your tool gains a reputation of not valuing maintainers' time, it's just going to make us (or at least me :-) cranky, and it's going to be very hard to recover from perception. So it's probably better to be very conservative and careful in polishing it before asking for it to be merged. Cheers, - Ted