Wed, Apr 10, 2024 at 03:46:11PM CEST, kuba@xxxxxxxxxx wrote: >On Wed, 10 Apr 2024 09:42:14 +0200 Jiri Pirko wrote: >> > - not get upset when we delete those drivers if they stop participating >> >> Sorry for being pain, but I would still like to see some sumarization of >> what is actually the gain for the community to merge this unused driver. >> So far, I don't recall to read anything solid. > >From the discussion I think some folks made the point that it's >educational to see what big companies do, and seeing the work >may lead to reuse and other people adopting features / ideas. Okay, if that's all, does it justify the cons? Will someone put this on weights? > >> btw: >> Kconfig description should contain: >> Say N here, you can't ever see this device in real world. > >We do use standard distro kernels in some corners of the DC, AFAIU. I find it amusing to think about a distro vendor, for example RedHat, to support driver for a proprietary private device. > >> >If you think that the drivers should be merged *without* setting these >> >expectations, please speak up. >> > >> >Nobody picked me up on the suggestion to use the CI as a proactive >> >check whether the maintainer / owner is still paying attention, >> >but okay :( >> > >> > >> >What is less clear to me is what do we do about uAPI / core changes. >> >Of those who touched on the subject - few people seem to be curious / >> >welcoming to any reasonable features coming out for private devices >> >(John, Olek, Florian)? Others are more cautious focusing on blast >> >radius and referring to the "two driver rule" (Daniel, Paolo)? >> >Whether that means outright ban on touching common code or uAPI >> >in ways which aren't exercised by commercial NICs, is unclear. >> >> For these kind of unused drivers, I think it would be legit to >> disallow any internal/external api changes. Just do that for some >> normal driver, then benefit from the changes in the unused driver. > >Unused is a bit strong, and we didn't put netdevsim in a special >directory. Let's see if more such drivers appear and if there >are practical uses for the separation for scripts etc? The practical use I see that the reviewer would spot right away is someone pushes a feature implemented in this unused driver only. Say it would be a clear mark for a driver of lower category. For the person doing API change it would be an indication that he does not have that cautious to not to break anything in this driver. The driver maintainer should be the one to deal with potential issues. With this clear marking and Documentation to describe it, I think I would be ok to let this in, FWIW.