On Mon, 3 Jan 2022 18:20:23 +0100 Thorsten Leemhuis wrote: > On 03.01.22 18:07, Jakub Kicinski wrote: > > On Mon, 3 Jan 2022 10:50:50 +0100 Thorsten Leemhuis wrote: > >> +How to see which regressions regzbot tracks currently? > >> +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > >> + > >> +Check `regzbot's web-interface <https://linux-regtracking.leemhuis.info/regzbot/>`_ > >> +for the latest info; alternatively, `search for the latest regression report > >> +<https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/?q=%22Linux+regressions+report%22+f%3Aregzbot>`_, > >> +which regzbot normally sends out once a week on Sunday evening (UTC), which is a > >> +few hours before Linus usually publishes new (pre-)releases. > > > > Cool, I wonder if it would be a useful feature to be able to filter by > > mailing lists involved or such to give maintainers a quick overview of > > regressions they are on the hook for? > > Ha, that's a great idea, many thx. I have been scratching my head for a > while already how to give maintainers a better overview, but the only > thing I came up with was "check the merge path a commit causing the > regression took", which has a few obvious downsides (it for example > won't work if the culprit is not known yet). This should work a lot better. > > But be warned, will likely take a few weeks (months?) before I get to > implement that: I have less time to work on the regzbot code than in the > past weeks, as I have to take care of a few other things first (most of > them related to regzbot). No worries, do ping when you got it ready tho :)