On 4/17/19 10:56 AM, Cole Robinson wrote:

> 
> So broadly I think the options are
> 
> - Flip the switch. Double error reporting until we remove now redundant
> calls. Worse error reporting in some cases like tristate and
> virstoragetype without special consideration. No or less issues with
> having half converted codebase. IMO Easier to patch out the redundant
> calls and easier to review the removals because we can do it per file
> rather than per enum usage which might be spread across multiple files.
> 
> - Do it incrementally: will force us to consider each case individually
> resulting in better overall error reporting. Until codebase is
> converted, possible dev confusion and risk of new code neglecting to
> raise an error. IMO the total dev and reviewer time is likely to be
> significantly higher
> 
> I definitely favor 'flip the switch' mostly because I think it will get
> this done the quickest, and once it's in git it distributes the load of
> working out the kinks to the whole dev team. Depending on uptake the
> incremental approach might never get finished, it's not clear. But
> beyond that I'm not tied to any specific naming or method so I'm open to
> ideas.
> 
> If consensus is to go for the incremental approach then I will support that

I can live with 'flip the switch'. I know my incremental backup patches
will have to rebase to the new style, but that's true for either style
(and more a question of whether we can detect unconverted code via
compilation failure or syntax-check once the bulk of the code base is
converted).

-- 
Eric Blake, Principal Software Engineer
Red Hat, Inc.           +1-919-301-3226
Virtualization:  qemu.org | libvirt.org

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