On Wed, Oct 22, 2014 at 11:35:00PM +0100, Ian Malone wrote:
> On 22 October 2014 20:07, Michael Stahl <mst...@redhat.com> wrote:
> > On 17.09.2014 13:58, Miroslav Suchý wrote:
> >> On 09/17/2014 11:54 AM, Bastien Nocera wrote:
> >>> All those OSes require reboots when updating the OS.
> >>
> >> Define OS.
> >>
> >> Firefox is definitely not OS. While systemd is OS.
> >> I am fine with reboot after systemd upgrade, but not after upgrading 
> >> Firefox.
> >
> > the important point in that case is not reboot after upgrading Firefox
> > but *before* upgrading Firefox, which means that at the time of the
> > upgrade no Firefox will be running and potentially crashing because one
> > of the 100s of DSOs it loads on-demand has changed in an incompatible way.
> >
> > there used to be quite a few ABRT crashes reported against desktop
> > applications with impossible looking stack traces (although with the
> > automatic micro-reports it's less of a problem nowadays as they are
> > easier to ignore), and sometimes the reporter gives feedback that the
> > application was running across a yum update...
> >
> 
> While it can be a bit confusing the first time it happens to you, the
> solution is just to start and stop firefox again in that case. If it
> the goal is just to tidy ABRT crash reports (and I'm not sure it is)
> then forcing reboots on users wouldn't be very kind.

Beyond cleaning crash reports and reducing them, there is also the perception
of users. 

If we want to have the same reputation as some older windows with "this 
software 
crashed and I do not know why" from our users, then having regular random 
crashes 
after a random delay after upgrade is the way to go. If we still aim for "the 
software
is solid and stable", then we should try to reduce the random crash.

-- 
Michael Scherer
-- 
devel mailing list
devel@lists.fedoraproject.org
https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel
Fedora Code of Conduct: http://fedoraproject.org/code-of-conduct

Reply via email to