On Sun, Apr 10, 2011 at 12:45:56PM -0400, Doug Ledford wrote: > And here we are, about to go down the same road again. I have an update > in updates-testing, it's getting no love, and the package that's in the > release is *known broken*. It has not been updated for systemd to begin > with. Nor for tmpfs /var/run. And just like last time, I put out a > call for testers on this mailing list. I had a closer look at the raid setup on my f15-box and as the raid was up as expected and poking at the raid with mdadm didn't turn up any issues, I've given it positive karma which has made it "Critpath approved". I mostly agree that Fedora as a whole has gone too far in the restrictions that are put in front of packagers to get updates pushed out to the distribution (and I'm not even maintaining any critpath packages). Back when this all started I felt that the promise was that "we'll put all this in place now and once AutoQA is ready, it'll all become much easier for everyone". And while AutoQA seems to have come a long way in the last 8 months or so it's still not ready/solid/... enough to be used to base automatic decisions on (I'm not complaining - just stating facts) - so I'm still hopeful that the thumbscrews can be loosened somewhat. > But like I tried to explain after F14's fiasco, most people simply don't > have the knowledge and hardware to truly test mdadm. It doesn't render my system unbootable, my raid still comes up after the update and casual mdadm calls don't turn up anything suspicious. That is all what I have tested and I don't feel that it's 'not enough'. The requirements on testing updates aren't very high - there just aren't enough testers (also many are testing not-yet-released versions in a vm and those are most likely not set up with a raid array ...). > Well, I'm heading out of town for two weeks and will be away from net > connectivity. This release's mdadm is what it is and it ain't getting > any better. Looking at mdadm I notice two things: 1. The package doesn't have a single co-maintainer. Having two or more people work on it would make "I'll be gone for two weeks" a non- issue. There must be others interested and knowledgeable in the area that could serve as a backup? 2. You're working on it in bursts - mostly a few weeks before the release. Submitting updates (especially rawhide-updates) more often would also make things easier right before the release. -- sven === jabber/xmpp: sven@xxxxxxxxxx -- devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel