Re: [LSFMMBPF TOPIC] Killing LSFMMBPF

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On 3/6/20 10:56 AM, Theodore Y. Ts'o wrote:
On Fri, Mar 06, 2020 at 09:35:41AM -0500, Josef Bacik wrote:
This has been a topic that I've been thinking about a lot recently, mostly
because of the giant amount of work that has been organizing LSFMMBPF.  I
was going to wait until afterwards to bring it up, hoping that maybe it was
just me being done with the whole process and that time would give me a
different perspective, but recent discussions has made it clear I'm not the
only one.....

I suggest that we try to decouple the question of should we have
LSF/MM/BPF in 2020 and COVID-19, with the question of what should
LSF/MM/BPF (perhaps in some transfigured form) should look like in
2021 and in the future.


Yes this is purely about 2021 and the future, not 2020.

A lot of the the concerns expressed in this e-mails are ones that I
have been concerned about, especially:

2) There are so many of us....

3) Half the people I want to talk to aren't even in the room.  This may be a
uniquely file system track problem, but most of my work is in btrfs, and I
want to talk to my fellow btrfs developers....

4) Presentations....

These *exactly* mirror the dynamic that we saw with the Kernel Summit,
and how we've migrated to a the Maintainer's Summit with a Kernel
centric track which is currently colocated with Plumbers.

I think it is still useful to have something where we reach consensus
on multi-subsystem contentious changes.  But I think those topics
could probably fit within a day or maybe a half day.  Does that sound
familiar?  That's essentially what we now have with the Maintainer'st
Summit.

The problem with Plumbers is that it's really, really full.  Not
having invitations doesn't magically go away; Plumbers last year had
to deal with long waitlist, and strugglinig to make sure that all of
the critical people who need be present so that the various Miniconfs
could be successful.

Ah ok, I haven't done plumbers in a few years, I knew they would get full but I didn't think it was that bad.


This is why I've been pushing so hard for a second Linux systems
focused event in the first half of the year.  I think if we colocate
the set of topics which are currently in LSF/MM, the more file system
specific presentations, the ext4/xfs/btrfs mini-summits/working
sessions, and the maintainer's summit / kernel summit, we would have
critical mass.  And I am sure there will be *plenty* of topics left
over for Plumbers.


I'd be down for this. Would you leave the thing open so anybody can register, or would you still have an invitation system? I really, really despise the invitation system just because it's inherently self limiting. However I do want to make sure we are getting relevant people in the room, and not making it this "oh shit, I forgot to register, and now the conference is full" sort of situations. Thanks,

Josef



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