On Wed 14-07-21 11:30:46, Sasha Levin wrote: > On Wed, Jul 14, 2021 at 09:52:58AM +0200, Michal Hocko wrote: > > On Tue 13-07-21 18:28:13, Andrew Morton wrote: > > > At present this -stable > > > promiscuity is overriding the (sometime carefully) considered decisions > > > of the MM developers, and that's a bit scary. > > > > Not only scary, it is also a waste of precious time of those who > > carefuly evaluate stable tree backports. > > I'm just as concerned with the other direction: we end up missing quite > a lot of patches that are needed in practice, and no one is circling > back to make sure that we have everything we need. > > I took a peek at SUSE's tree to see how things work there, and looking > at the very latest mm/ commit: > > commit c8c7b321edcf7a7e8c22dc66e0366f72aa2390f0 > Author: Michal Koutný <mkoutny@xxxxxxxx> > Date: Tue May 4 11:12:10 2021 +0200 > > mm: memcontrol: fix cpuhotplug statistics flushing > (bsc#1185606). > suse-commit: 3bba386a33fac144abf2507554cb21552acb16af > > This seems to be commit a3d4c05a4474 ("mm: memcontrol: fix cpuhotplug > statistics flushing") upstream, and I assume that it was picked because > it fixed a real bug someone cares about. Nope. It has been identified as potentially useful/nice to have. There was no actual bug report requiring it. We do that a lot. In fact we do have a full infrastructure around git fixes and backport fixes proactively. Mostly because stable tree, which we used to track in the past, has turned out to be overwhelming with questionable/risky backports. The thing, though, is that those fixes are carefully reviewed by a domain expert before backporting. > I can maybe understand that at the time that the patch was > written/committed it didn't seem like stable@ material and thus there > was no cc to stable. > > But once someone realized it needs to be backported, why weren't we told > to take it into stable too? We tend to do that for many real bug reports. -- Michal Hocko SUSE Labs