Hi Thorsten, Thank you for your reply! On 26/03/2023 13:28, Thorsten Leemhuis wrote: > On 24.03.23 19:52, Matthieu Baerts wrote: >> Making sure a bug tracker is up to date is not an easy task. For >> example, a first version of a patch fixing a tracked issue can be sent a >> long time after having created the issue. But also, it can take some >> time to have this patch accepted upstream in its final form. When it is >> done, someone -- probably not the person who accepted the patch -- has >> to remember about closing the corresponding issue. >> >> This task of closing and tracking the patch can be done automatically by >> bug trackers like GitLab [1], GitHub [2] and hopefully soon [3] >> bugzilla.kernel.org when the appropriated tag is used. The two first >> ones accept multiple tags but it is probably better to pick one. >> >> [...] >> >> diff --git a/Documentation/process/5.Posting.rst b/Documentation/process/5.Posting.rst >> index 7a670a075ab6..20f0b6b639b7 100644 >> --- a/Documentation/process/5.Posting.rst >> +++ b/Documentation/process/5.Posting.rst >> @@ -217,6 +217,15 @@ latest public review posting of the patch; often this is automatically done >> by tools like b4 or a git hook like the one described in >> 'Documentation/maintainer/configure-git.rst'. >> >> +Similarly, there is also the "Closes:" tag that can be used to close issues >> +when the underlying public bug tracker can do this operation automatically. >> +For example:: >> + >> + Closes: https://example.com/issues/1234 >> + >> +Private bug trackers and invalid URLs are forbidden. For other public bug >> +trackers not supporting automations, keep using the "Link:" tag instead. >> [...] > > This more and more seems half-hearted to me. > > One reason: it makes things unnecessarily complicated for developers, as > they'd then have to remember `is this a public bug tracker that is > supporting automations? Then use "Closes", otherwise "Link:"`. > > Another reason: the resulting situation ignores my regression tracking > bot, which (among others) tracks emailed reports. It would benefit from > "Closes" as well to avoid the ambiguity problem Konstantin brought up > (the one about "Link: might just point to a report for background > information in patches that don't address the problem the link points > to"[1]. But FWIW, I'm not sure if this ambiguity is much of a problem in > practice, I have a feeling that it's rare and most of the time will > happen after the reported problem has been addressed or in the same > patch-set. Even if they are rare, I think it might be good to avoid false-positives that can be frustrating or create confusions. Using a dedicated tag plus some safeguards help then be required. (And it is not compatible with existing forges.) > I thus think we should use either of these approaches: > > * just stick to "Link: <url>" > > * go "all-in" and tell developers to use "Closes: <url>"[2] all the time > when a patch is resolving an issue that was reported in public > > I'm not sure which of them I prefer myself. Maybe I'm slightly leaning > towards the latter: it avoids the ambiguity, checkpatch.pl will yell if > it's used with something else than a URL, it makes things easier for > MPTCP & DRM developers, and (maybe most importantly) is something new > developers are often used to already from git forges. I think it makes sense not to restrict this tag to bug trackers with automations as long as they are public of course. After having looked at the comments from v1, I didn't feel like it would have been OK to extend its usage but I can send a v3 taking this direction hoping to get more feedback. After all, thanks to regzbot, we can also say that there are some automations behind lore.kernel.org and other ML's :) If we do that, would it be blocking to have this included in v6.3? > [1] > https://lore.kernel.org/linux-doc/20230317185637.ebxzsdxivhgzkqqw@meerkat.local/ > > [2] fwiw, I still prefer "Resolves:" over "Closes". Yes, I've seen > Konstantin's comment on the subtle difference between the two[3], but as > he said, Bugbot can work with it as well. But to me "Resolves" sounds > way friendlier and more descriptive to me; but well, I'm not a native > speaker, so I don't think my option should count much here. As a non-native speaker, I'm open to use either of them. But as a developer, I feel like I'm more used to see the "Closes:" tag than the "Resolves" one. When looking at the Git history, the "Closes:" tag with a link has been used ~500 times, compared to ~14 times for "Resolves:". Maybe "Closes:" is more natural for developers who first want to have their assigned tickets being "closed" automatically than issues being "resolved"? :) Cheers, Matt -- Tessares | Belgium | Hybrid Access Solutions www.tessares.net