Hi Sasha,

On Tue, May 1, 2018 at 6:38 PM, Sasha Levin
<alexander.le...@microsoft.com> wrote:
> Working on AUTOSEL, it became even more obvious to me how difficult it is for 
> a
> patch to get a proper review. Maintainers found it difficult to keep up with
> the upstream work for their subsystem, and reviewing additional -stable 
> patches
> put even more load on them which some suggested would be more than what they
> can handle.

Thanks for your work!

>  - For some reason, the odds of a -rc commit to be targetted for -stable is
>    over 20%, while for merge window commits it's about 3%. I can't quite
> explain why that happens, but this would suggest that -rc commits end up
> hurting -stable pretty badly.

Aren't more -rc commits targeted for -stable because they are bugfixes?
Ideally, new features are supposed to be merged during the merge window,
while -rc commits fix bugs.

So they can be categorized like:
  1. Plain -rc commits,
  2. -rc commits fixing a bug:
       a. in the same release cycle,
       b. in a previous release.

2a assumes the bug was backported to -stable, too, doesn't it?

Do you have statistics for which categories are most buggy?

Gr{oetje,eeting}s,

                        Geert

-- 
Geert Uytterhoeven -- There's lots of Linux beyond ia32 -- ge...@linux-m68k.org

In personal conversations with technical people, I call myself a hacker. But
when I'm talking to journalists I just say "programmer" or something like that.
                                -- Linus Torvalds

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