On Mon, Apr 16, 2018 at 07:05:01PM +0200, Pavel Machek wrote: >Hi! > >> How do you know if a bug bothers someone? >> >> If a user is annoyed by a LED issue, is he expected to triage the bug, >> report it on LKML and patiently wait for the appropriate patch to be >> backported? > >If the user is annoyed by a LED issue, you are actually expected to >tell him that it is not going to be fixed, because it is not on the list: > > - It must fix a problem that causes a build error (but not for things > marked CONFIG_BROKEN), an oops, a hang, data corruption, a real > security issue, or some "oh, that's not good" issue. In short, > something critical. So if a user is operating a nuclear power plant, and has 2 leds: green one that says "All OK!" and a red one saying "NUCLEAR MELTDOWN!", and once in a blue moon a race condition is causing the red one to go on and cause panic in the little province he lives in, we should tell that user to fuck off? LEDs may not be critical for you, but they can be critical for someone else. Think of all the different users we have and the wildly different ways they use the kernel.