Romano Giannetti wrote: > This was what I did in my (in the end almost successful) bisecting when > trying to find the mmc problem (see the thread named "2.6.24-rc1 eat my > SD card"). This is true in theory, but it has some problem. The "this > commit does not compile is the easiest and in man git-bisect it's > explained how to solve it. The changes in .config options, added or > removed, are another problem when jumping back and forth from version. > > The main problem I had, and that stopped me to arrive to a definite is > this situation: [...] > (d was the series to change drivers to use sg helpers, and g was a "fix > fallout from sg helpers" patch). Now I have a series of kernels (d, e, > f) that did not work at all and so I cannot mark them good or bad. With > the number of patches added in the free-for-all week, this is a very > probable scenario. There is a way out from this using bisect? I think there are three strategies you can use in this case: - create a kernel config that is as simple as possible, but still supports your hardware and reproduces your problem; a simpler config will often avoid compilation issues in parts of the kernel that you're not using anyway and has the benefit of speeding up the compiles too - if you know/suspect in what part of the tree the bug is, first limit the bisection to that; you will have to verify that you did indeed find the correct (broken) change by doing a compile for the "last good commit + 1" - if you find a broken commit, use 'git-reset --hard' to try to jump past the bad set of commits, but of course that does not help in the case: g version-bad f unrelated bug corrected e d the broken commit that caused your problem c b unrelated bug that breaks compilation or system introduced a version-good in that case the best you can reasonably be expected to do is report that you narrowed it down to "between a and g" and leave the rest to the developers Cheers, FJP - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-ide" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html