Jakub Kicinski wrote: [..] > Would it help if we speak of "open forums" instead of mailing list? > I think LPC including "hallway track" fall squarely under "conducted > in a manner typical for the larger subsystem." Here's slightly edited > version: > > Open development > ---------------- > > Discussions about user reported issues, and development of new code > should be conducted in a manner typical for the larger subsystem. > It is common for development within a single company to be conducted > behind closed doors. However, development and discussions initiated > by community members must not be redirected from public to closed forums > or to private email conversations. Reasonable exceptions to this guidance > include discussions about security related issues. > > > The only issues I see with such talks is that the work when > > co-authored should be properly marked as such and that > > reviewews/acks taken behind doors don't have the same meaning > > as an upstream review, as they may be due to some internal > > formalities. > > > > IMO, the best would instead to give a positive message. E. g. > > something like: > > > > Maintainers must encourage discussions and reviews to happen > > at public mailing lists, avoiding whenever possible to have > > internal discussions. > > That's not the message, tho. If someone emails a company privately > that's fine. If company has internal processes for its development - > also fine (as explicitly called out). I'm trying to set the baseline, > not describe the ideal world. > > I am specifically calling out that if someone submits a patch, or > reports a regression the correct response is to review it on the list. > Like a normal person. > Not reply privately that "it's on the company roadmap, just wait" :| > Or reply with a patch company has "forgotten to upstream".. > > Maybe it's a cultural thing, but to me this is where the relentless > positivity is counter-productive. I don't want to encourage people > to be angles. I want them not to do the shitty thing. > To be honest I am lost trying to understand who the audience is and what the actionable takeaway is from the guidance. It sounds like you are trying to educate drive-by submitters to push back against requests to take issues off the list. I think that's a reasonable education campaign, but doesn't that kind of "submitter bill-of-rights" note belong in Documentation/admin-guide/reporting-{issues,regressions}.rst as explicit "how to work your issue upstream" guidance?