On 07/04/2014 03:57 AM, Luke Gorrie wrote:
On 3 July 2014 19:02, Jay Pipes mailto:jaypi...@gmail.com>> wrote:
devstack-gate works very well for what it is supposed to do:
Yeah, I would actually love to use devstack-gate.
I tried that first. There are two problems for me as a user:
First
On 3 July 2014 19:02, Jay Pipes wrote:
> devstack-gate works very well for what it is supposed to do:
>
Yeah, I would actually love to use devstack-gate.
I tried that first. There are two problems for me as a user:
First I didn't manage to get it up and running reliably in a reasonable
time fr
>In short, you need to test every single proposed patch to the system fully
and consistently, otherwise there's simply no point in running any tests at
all, as you will spend an inordinate amount of time tracking down what
broke what.
I agree that every patch should be tested. However, since third
On 07/03/2014 08:42 AM, Luke Gorrie wrote:
On 3 July 2014 02:44, Michael Still mailto:mi...@stillhq.com>> wrote:
The main purpose is to let change reviewers know that a change might
be problematic for a piece of code not well tested by the gate
Just a thought:
A "sampling" approach co
On 07/03/2014 03:49 AM, Luke Gorrie wrote:
On 3 July 2014 02:44, Michael Still mailto:mi...@stillhq.com>> wrote:
I have seen both. Normally there's a failure, reviewers notice, and
then the developer spins trying out fixes by uploading new patch sets.
Interesting. Yes, I can see that y
On 3 July 2014 02:44, Michael Still wrote:
> The main purpose is to let change reviewers know that a change might
> be problematic for a piece of code not well tested by the gate
Just a thought:
A "sampling" approach could be a reasonable way to stay responsive under
heavy load and still give
On 3 July 2014 02:44, Michael Still wrote:
> I have seen both. Normally there's a failure, reviewers notice, and
> then the developer spins trying out fixes by uploading new patch sets.
>
Interesting. Yes, I can see that you need fast response from CIs to support
that scenario. 12-hour edit-comp
On Thu, Jul 3, 2014 at 4:33 AM, Luke Gorrie wrote:
>
> On 30 June 2014 21:04, Kevin Benton wrote:
>>
>> As a maintainer of a small CI system that tends to get backed up during
>> milestone rush hours, it would be nice if we were allowed up to 12 hours.
>> However, as a developer this seems like t
On 2 July 2014 20:33, Luke Gorrie wrote:
> I'd love to see links to such reviews, if anybody has some? (I've only
> seen positive reviews and false-negative reviews from 3rd party CIs so far
> in my limited experience.)
>
I didn't say what I meant: reviews where a 3rd party CI has genuinely
obje
On 30 June 2014 21:04, Kevin Benton wrote:
> As a maintainer of a small CI system that tends to get backed up during
> milestone rush hours, it would be nice if we were allowed up to 12 hours.
> However, as a developer this seems like too long to have to wait for the
> results of a patch.
>
Inter
On 06/30/2014 03:04 PM, Kevin Benton wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> The subject of 3rd party CI voting responses came up in the 3rd-party IRC
> meeting today.[1] We would like to get feedback from the larger dev
> community on what acceptable response times are for third party CI systems.
>
> As a maint
Hello all,
The subject of 3rd party CI voting responses came up in the 3rd-party IRC
meeting today.[1] We would like to get feedback from the larger dev
community on what acceptable response times are for third party CI systems.
As a maintainer of a small CI system that tends to get backed up dur
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