Re: [net-next PATCH 00/15] eth: fbnic: Add network driver for Meta Platforms Host Network Interface

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



On Tue, Apr 09, 2024 at 09:31:06AM -0700, Alexander Duyck wrote:

> > expectation is generally things like:
> >
> >  - The bug is fixed immediately because the issue is obvious to the
> >    author
> >  - Iteration and rapid progress is seen toward enlightening the author
> >  - The patch is reverted, often rapidly, try again later with a good
> >    patch
> 
> When working on a development branch that shouldn't be the
> expectation. I suspect that is why the revert was pushed back on
> initially. The developer wanted a chance to try to debug and resolve
> the issue with root cause.

Even mm-unstable drops patches on a hair trigger, as an example.

You can't have an orderly development process if your development tree
is broken in your CI.. Personally I'm grateful for the people who test
linux-next (or the various constituent sub trees), it really helps.

> Well much of it has to do with the fact that this is supposed to be a
> community. Generally I help you, you help me and together we both make
> progress. So within the community people tend to build up what we
> could call karma. Generally I think some of the messages sent seemed
> to make it come across that the Mellanox/Nvidia folks felt it "wasn't
> their problem" so they elicited a bit of frustration from the other
> maintainers and built up some negative karma.

How could it be NVIDIA folks problem? They are not experts in TCP and
can't debug it. The engineer running the CI systems did what he was
asked by Eric from what I can tell.

> phenomenon where if we even brushed against block of upstream code
> that wasn't being well maintained we would be asked to fix it up and
> address existing issues before we could upstream any patches.

Well, Intel has it's own karma problems in the kernel community. :(

> > In my view the vendor/!vendor distinction is really toxic and should
> > stop.
> 
> I agree. However that was essentially what started all this when Jiri
> pointed out that we weren't selling the NIC to anyone else. That made
> this all about vendor vs !vendor, 

That is not how I would sum up Jiri's position.

By my read he is saying that contributing code to the kernel that only
Meta can actually use is purely extractive. It is not about vendor or
!vendor, it is taking-free-forwardporting or not. You have argued,
and I would agree, that there is a grey scale between
extractive/collaborative - but I also agree with Jiri that fbnic is
undeniably far toward the extractive side.

If being extractive is a problem in this case or not is another
question, but I would say Jiri's objection is definitely not about
selling or vendor vs !vendor.

Jason




[Index of Archives]     [DMA Engine]     [Linux Coverity]     [Linux USB]     [Video for Linux]     [Linux Audio Users]     [Yosemite News]     [Linux Kernel]     [Linux SCSI]     [Greybus]

  Powered by Linux