On 06/28/2013 11:39 AM, Geoffrey Wehrman wrote:
On Fri, Jun 28, 2013 at 12:32:04PM +1000, Dave Chinner wrote: | On Fri, Jun 28, 2013 at 12:09:12PM +1000, Dave Chinner wrote: | > Mount options are perfectly fine to be removed - they've been given | > deprecated warnings for quite some time now (the most recent is the | > delaylog which has been doing that since 3.1 IIRC). So they are all | > fine to actually remove - 12 months warning is usually considered | > sufficient. I hardly consider 12 years to be sufficient. I have no problem with deprecating and disabling mount options so that they are ineffective, but removing them so that an administrator gets an error when upgrading his system is irresponsible product management, especially when it requires almost no effort to keep the deprecated, disabled interface.
In my opinion, 12 years is way more than enough time to let a user know that a mount option no longer works.
I think that you need to keep a clear and crisp difference in your mind between XFS as an upstream project and something commercially supported.
What you do as a vendor is entirely your call. Feel free to keep things supported for 12 years if you like, but that is unreasonable to do to an open source project that is shared by multiple users (individual and corporate).
Of course, if you dislike a patch that upstream does or a whole feature set, it is usually pretty easy to carry vendor specific patches to disable it.
Regards, Ric
You move to newer kernels much faster than most people. Doesn't Red Hat still support Red Hat 5? How old is that kernel? One of the reasons I and others dread upgrading systems is because there are always interfaces that change, always data conversions that have to be run, always new processes to learn. I realize that XFS is still an evolving filesystem, by historically one of its greatest achievements has been that of backward compatibility. When XFS was ported from IRIX to Linux, the same filesystem could be used without any conversion. Why force a user to modify his fstab just because he has upgraded his kernel? | > As to the sysctls - they haven't had any effect since 3.5 when the | > xfsbufd was removed, so it's time to mark them deprecated so we can | > remove them in a year's time. That gives anyone using them | > (including distros) plenty of time to fix whatever is using them | > before they get removed. | > | > > I'm thinking of the 3.3 glusterfs and 3.8 pulseaudio reakeage. And I would | > > really like to have a nice holiday weekend. ;) | > | > I think you're being overly paranoid here - I'm simply following the | > normal deprecation protocol here.... | | Documenation/ABI/README: | | We have four different levels of ABI stability, as shown by the four | different subdirectories in this location. Interfaces may change levels | of stability according to the rules described below. | .... | obsolete/ | This directory documents interfaces that are still remaining in | the kernel, but are marked to be removed at some later point in | time. The description of the interface will document the reason | why it is obsolete and when it can be expected to be removed. | I think you'll find that what I done follows this policy. If you | really want, I'll move them to Documenation/ABI/obsolete. And, of | course, if removing them proves to be a problem, as Eric said we can | always reinstate them or remove the deprecation notices. It is great that Linux has a documented life cycle for kernel to userspace interfaces. These are guidelines for the minimum requirements. Move the mount options to obsolete. I have no problems with making mount options obsolete. Remove them and people will make a big fuss.
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