----- Original Message -----
> From: "Raghavendra Talur" <rta...@redhat.com>
> To: "Gluster Devel" <gluster-devel@gluster.org>
> Sent: Tuesday, November 10, 2015 3:10:34 AM
> Subject: [Gluster-devel] Gerrit review, submit type and Jenkins testing
> 
> Hi,
> 
> While trying to understand how our gerrit+jenkins setup works, I realized of
> a possibility of allowing bugs to get in.
> 
> Currently, our gerrit is setup to have cherry-pick as the submit type. Now
> consider a case where:
> 
> Dev1 sends a commit B with parent commit A(A is already merged).
> Dev2 sends a commit C with parent commit A(A is already merged).
> 
> Both the patches get +2 from Jenkins.
> 
> Maintainer merges commit B from Dev1.
> Another maintainer merges commit C from Dev2.
> 
> If the two commits B and C changed code which had no merge conflicts but were
> conflicting in logic,
> then we have a master which has bugs.
> 
> If Dev3 now sends a commit D with re-based master as parent, we have the
> following cases:
> 
> 1. If bug introduced above is not racy, we have tests always failing for Dev3
> on commit D. Tests that fail would be from components that commit B and C
> changed. Dev3 has no idea on how to fix them and has to enlist help from
> Dev1 and Dev2.
> 
> 2. If bug introduced above is racy, then there is a probability that Dev3
> escapes from this trouble and someone else will bear it later. Even if the
> racy code is hit and test fails, Dev3 will probably re-trigger the tests
> given that they failed for a component which is not related to his/her code
> and the bug stays in code longer.
> 
> The most obvious but not practical solution to the above problem is to change
> the submit type in gerrit to "fast-forward only". It would then ensure that
> once commit B is merged, Dev2 has to re-base and re-run the tests on commit
> C with commit B as parent, before it could be merged. It is not practical
> because it will cause all patches in review to get re-based and re-triggered
> whenever a patch is merged.
> 
> A little modification to the above solution would be to
> 
> 
>     * change submit type to fast-forward only
>     * don't run any jenkins job on patches till they get +2 from reviewers
>     * once a +2 is given, run jenkins job on patch and automatically submit
>     it if test passes.
>     * automatically rebase all patches on review with new master and mark
>     conflict if merge conflict arises.

Seems like a good suggestion. How about a slight variation to the above 
process? Can we run one initial set of regression immediately after submission, 
but before any reviews? That way reviewers can prioritize those patches that 
have passed regression over the ones that have failed? Flip side is that 
minimum two sets of regressions are needed to merge any patch. I am making this 
suggestion with the assumption that dev/reviewer time is more precious than 
machine time. Of course, this will have issues with patches that need to get in 
urgently (user/customer hot fix etc) where time is a constraint. But that can 
be worked around on a case-by-case basis.

> 
> As a side effect of this, Dev would now be forced to run a complete
> regression on dev machine before sending a patch for review.
> 
> Any thoughts on the above solutions or other suggestions?
> 
> Thanks,
> Raghavendra Talur
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
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