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.. SPDX-License-Identifier: (GPL-2.0+ OR CC-BY-4.0)
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.. See the bottom of this file for additional redistribution information.
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Handling regressions
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++++++++++++++++++++
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*We don't cause regressions* -- this document describes what this "first rule of
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Linux kernel development" means in practice for developers. It complements
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Documentation/admin-guide/reporting-regressions.rst, which covers the topic from a
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user's point of view; if you never read that text, go and at least skim over it
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before continuing here.
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The important bits (aka "The TL;DR")
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====================================
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#. Ensure subscribers of the `regression mailing list <https://lore.kernel.org/regressions/>`_
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(regressions@lists.linux.dev) quickly become aware of any new regression
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report:
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* When receiving a mailed report that did not CC the list, bring it into the
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loop by immediately sending at least a brief "Reply-all" with the list
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CCed.
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* Forward or bounce any reports submitted in bug trackers to the list.
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#. Make the Linux kernel regression tracking bot "regzbot" track the issue (this
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is optional, but recommended):
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* For mailed reports, check if the reporter included a line like ``#regzbot
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introduced v5.13..v5.14-rc1``. If not, send a reply (with the regressions
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list in CC) containing a paragraph like the following, which tells regzbot
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when the issue started to happen::
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#regzbot ^introduced 1f2e3d4c5b6a
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* When forwarding reports from a bug tracker to the regressions list (see
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above), include a paragraph like the following::
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#regzbot introduced: v5.13..v5.14-rc1
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#regzbot from: Some N. Ice Human <some.human@example.com>
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#regzbot monitor: http://some.bugtracker.example.com/ticket?id=123456789
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#. When submitting fixes for regressions, add "Link:" tags to the patch
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description pointing to all places where the issue was reported, as
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mandated by Documentation/process/submitting-patches.rst and
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:ref:`Documentation/process/5.Posting.rst <development_posting>`.
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#. Try to fix regressions quickly once the culprit has been identified; fixes
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for most regressions should be merged within two weeks, but some need to be
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resolved within two or three days.
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All the details on Linux kernel regressions relevant for developers
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===================================================================
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The important basics in more detail
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-----------------------------------
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What to do when receiving regression reports
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Ensure the Linux kernel's regression tracker and others subscribers of the
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`regression mailing list <https://lore.kernel.org/regressions/>`_
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(regressions@lists.linux.dev) become aware of any newly reported regression:
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* When you receive a report by mail that did not CC the list, immediately bring
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it into the loop by sending at least a brief "Reply-all" with the list CCed;
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try to ensure it gets CCed again in case you reply to a reply that omitted
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the list.
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* If a report submitted in a bug tracker hits your Inbox, forward or bounce it
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to the list. Consider checking the list archives beforehand, if the reporter
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already forwarded the report as instructed by
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Documentation/admin-guide/reporting-issues.rst.
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When doing either, consider making the Linux kernel regression tracking bot
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"regzbot" immediately start tracking the issue:
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* For mailed reports, check if the reporter included a "regzbot command" like
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``#regzbot introduced 1f2e3d4c5b6a``. If not, send a reply (with the
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regressions list in CC) with a paragraph like the following:::
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#regzbot ^introduced: v5.13..v5.14-rc1
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This tells regzbot the version range in which the issue started to happen;
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you can specify a range using commit-ids as well or state a single commit-id
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in case the reporter bisected the culprit.
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Note the caret (^) before the "introduced": it tells regzbot to treat the
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parent mail (the one you reply to) as the initial report for the regression
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you want to see tracked; that's important, as regzbot will later look out
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for patches with "Link:" tags pointing to the report in the archives on
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lore.kernel.org.
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* When forwarding a regressions reported to a bug tracker, include a paragraph
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with these regzbot commands::
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#regzbot introduced: 1f2e3d4c5b6a
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#regzbot from: Some N. Ice Human <some.human@example.com>
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#regzbot monitor: http://some.bugtracker.example.com/ticket?id=123456789
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Regzbot will then automatically associate patches with the report that
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contain "Link:" tags pointing to your mail or the mentioned ticket.
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What's important when fixing regressions
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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You don't need to do anything special when submitting fixes for regression, just
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remember to do what Documentation/process/submitting-patches.rst,
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:ref:`Documentation/process/5.Posting.rst <development_posting>`, and
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Documentation/process/stable-kernel-rules.rst already explain in more detail:
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* Point to all places where the issue was reported using "Link:" tags::
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Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/30th.anniversary.repost@klaava.Helsinki.FI/
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Link: https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1234567890
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* Add a "Fixes:" tag to specify the commit causing the regression.
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* If the culprit was merged in an earlier development cycle, explicitly mark
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the fix for backporting using the ``Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org`` tag.
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All this is expected from you and important when it comes to regression, as
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these tags are of great value for everyone (you included) that might be looking
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into the issue weeks, months, or years later. These tags are also crucial for
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tools and scripts used by other kernel developers or Linux distributions; one of
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these tools is regzbot, which heavily relies on the "Link:" tags to associate
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reports for regression with changes resolving them.
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Prioritize work on fixing regressions
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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You should fix any reported regression as quickly as possible, to provide
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affected users with a solution in a timely manner and prevent more users from
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running into the issue; nevertheless developers need to take enough time and
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care to ensure regression fixes do not cause additional damage.
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In the end though, developers should give their best to prevent users from
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running into situations where a regression leaves them only three options: "run
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a kernel with a regression that seriously impacts usage", "continue running an
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outdated and thus potentially insecure kernel version for more than two weeks
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after a regression's culprit was identified", and "downgrade to a still
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supported kernel series that lack required features".
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How to realize this depends a lot on the situation. Here are a few rules of
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thumb for you, in order or importance:
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* Prioritize work on handling regression reports and fixing regression over all
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other Linux kernel work, unless the latter concerns acute security issues or
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bugs causing data loss or damage.
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* Always consider reverting the culprit commits and reapplying them later
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together with necessary fixes, as this might be the least dangerous and
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quickest way to fix a regression.
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* Developers should handle regressions in all supported kernel series, but are
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free to delegate the work to the stable team, if the issue probably at no
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point in time occurred with mainline.
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* Try to resolve any regressions introduced in the current development before
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its end. If you fear a fix might be too risky to apply only days before a new
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mainline release, let Linus decide: submit the fix separately to him as soon
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as possible with the explanation of the situation. He then can make a call
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and postpone the release if necessary, for example if multiple such changes
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show up in his inbox.
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* Address regressions in stable, longterm, or proper mainline releases with
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more urgency than regressions in mainline pre-releases. That changes after
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the release of the fifth pre-release, aka "-rc5": mainline then becomes as
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important, to ensure all the improvements and fixes are ideally tested
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together for at least one week before Linus releases a new mainline version.
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* Fix regressions within two or three days, if they are critical for some
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reason -- for example, if the issue is likely to affect many users of the
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kernel series in question on all or certain architectures. Note, this
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includes mainline, as issues like compile errors otherwise might prevent many
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testers or continuous integration systems from testing the series.
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* Aim to fix regressions within one week after the culprit was identified, if
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the issue was introduced in either:
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* a recent stable/longterm release
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* the development cycle of the latest proper mainline release
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In the latter case (say Linux v5.14), try to address regressions even
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quicker, if the stable series for the predecessor (v5.13) will be abandoned
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soon or already was stamped "End-of-Life" (EOL) -- this usually happens about
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three to four weeks after a new mainline release.
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* Try to fix all other regressions within two weeks after the culprit was
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found. Two or three additional weeks are acceptable for performance
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regressions and other issues which are annoying, but don't prevent anyone
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from running Linux (unless it's an issue in the current development cycle,
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as those should ideally be addressed before the release). A few weeks in
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total are acceptable if a regression can only be fixed with a risky change
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and at the same time is affecting only a few users; as much time is
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also okay if the regression is already present in the second newest longterm
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kernel series.
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Note: The aforementioned time frames for resolving regressions are meant to
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include getting the fix tested, reviewed, and merged into mainline, ideally with
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the fix being in linux-next at least briefly. This leads to delays you need to
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account for.
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Subsystem maintainers are expected to assist in reaching those periods by doing
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timely reviews and quick handling of accepted patches. They thus might have to
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send git-pull requests earlier or more often than usual; depending on the fix,
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it might even be acceptable to skip testing in linux-next. Especially fixes for
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regressions in stable and longterm kernels need to be handled quickly, as fixes
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need to be merged in mainline before they can be backported to older series.
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More aspects regarding regressions developers should be aware of
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----------------------------------------------------------------
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How to deal with changes where a risk of regression is known
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Evaluate how big the risk of regressions is, for example by performing a code
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search in Linux distributions and Git forges. Also consider asking other
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developers or projects likely to be affected to evaluate or even test the
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proposed change; if problems surface, maybe some solution acceptable for all
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can be found.
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If the risk of regressions in the end seems to be relatively small, go ahead
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with the change, but let all involved parties know about the risk. Hence, make
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sure your patch description makes this aspect obvious. Once the change is
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merged, tell the Linux kernel's regression tracker and the regressions mailing
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list about the risk, so everyone has the change on the radar in case reports
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trickle in. Depending on the risk, you also might want to ask the subsystem
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maintainer to mention the issue in his mainline pull request.
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What else is there to known about regressions?
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Check out Documentation/admin-guide/reporting-regressions.rst, it covers a lot
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of other aspects you want might want to be aware of:
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* the purpose of the "no regressions rule"
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* what issues actually qualify as regression
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* who's in charge for finding the root cause of a regression
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* how to handle tricky situations, e.g. when a regression is caused by a
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security fix or when fixing a regression might cause another one
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Whom to ask for advice when it comes to regressions
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Send a mail to the regressions mailing list (regressions@lists.linux.dev) while
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CCing the Linux kernel's regression tracker (regressions@leemhuis.info); if the
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issue might better be dealt with in private, feel free to omit the list.
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More about regression tracking and regzbot
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------------------------------------------
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Why the Linux kernel has a regression tracker, and why is regzbot used?
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Rules like "no regressions" need someone to ensure they are followed, otherwise
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they are broken either accidentally or on purpose. History has shown this to be
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true for the Linux kernel as well. That's why Thorsten Leemhuis volunteered to
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keep an eye on things as the Linux kernel's regression tracker, who's
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occasionally helped by other people. Neither of them are paid to do this,
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that's why regression tracking is done on a best effort basis.
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Earlier attempts to manually track regressions have shown it's an exhausting and
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frustrating work, which is why they were abandoned after a while. To prevent
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this from happening again, Thorsten developed regzbot to facilitate the work,
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with the long term goal to automate regression tracking as much as possible for
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everyone involved.
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How does regression tracking work with regzbot?
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The bot watches for replies to reports of tracked regressions. Additionally,
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it's looking out for posted or committed patches referencing such reports
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with "Link:" tags; replies to such patch postings are tracked as well.
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Combined this data provides good insights into the current state of the fixing
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process.
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Regzbot tries to do its job with as little overhead as possible for both
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reporters and developers. In fact, only reporters are burdened with an extra
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duty: they need to tell regzbot about the regression report using the ``#regzbot
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introduced`` command outlined above; if they don't do that, someone else can
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take care of that using ``#regzbot ^introduced``.
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For developers there normally is no extra work involved, they just need to make
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sure to do something that was expected long before regzbot came to light: add
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"Link:" tags to the patch description pointing to all reports about the issue
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fixed.
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Do I have to use regzbot?
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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It's in the interest of everyone if you do, as kernel maintainers like Linus
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Torvalds partly rely on regzbot's tracking in their work -- for example when
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deciding to release a new version or extend the development phase. For this they
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need to be aware of all unfixed regression; to do that, Linus is known to look
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into the weekly reports sent by regzbot.
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Do I have to tell regzbot about every regression I stumble upon?
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Ideally yes: we are all humans and easily forget problems when something more
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important unexpectedly comes up -- for example a bigger problem in the Linux
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kernel or something in real life that's keeping us away from keyboards for a
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while. Hence, it's best to tell regzbot about every regression, except when you
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immediately write a fix and commit it to a tree regularly merged to the affected
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kernel series.
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How to see which regressions regzbot tracks currently?
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Check `regzbot's web-interface <https://linux-regtracking.leemhuis.info/regzbot/>`_
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for the latest info; alternatively, `search for the latest regression report
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<https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/?q=%22Linux+regressions+report%22+f%3Aregzbot>`_,
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which regzbot normally sends out once a week on Sunday evening (UTC), which is a
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few hours before Linus usually publishes new (pre-)releases.
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What places is regzbot monitoring?
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Regzbot is watching the most important Linux mailing lists as well as the git
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repositories of linux-next, mainline, and stable/longterm.
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What kind of issues are supposed to be tracked by regzbot?
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The bot is meant to track regressions, hence please don't involve regzbot for
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regular issues. But it's okay for the Linux kernel's regression tracker if you
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use regzbot to track severe issues, like reports about hangs, corrupted data,
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or internal errors (Panic, Oops, BUG(), warning, ...).
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Can I add regressions found by CI systems to regzbot's tracking?
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Feel free to do so, if the particular regression likely has impact on practical
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use cases and thus might be noticed by users; hence, please don't involve
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regzbot for theoretical regressions unlikely to show themselves in real world
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usage.
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How to interact with regzbot?
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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By using a 'regzbot command' in a direct or indirect reply to the mail with the
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regression report. These commands need to be in their own paragraph (IOW: they
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need to be separated from the rest of the mail using blank lines).
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One such command is ``#regzbot introduced <version or commit>``, which makes
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regzbot consider your mail as a regressions report added to the tracking, as
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already described above; ``#regzbot ^introduced <version or commit>`` is another
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such command, which makes regzbot consider the parent mail as a report for a
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regression which it starts to track.
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Once one of those two commands has been utilized, other regzbot commands can be
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used in direct or indirect replies to the report. You can write them below one
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of the `introduced` commands or in replies to the mail that used one of them
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or itself is a reply to that mail:
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* Set or update the title::
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#regzbot title: foo
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* Monitor a discussion or bugzilla.kernel.org ticket where additions aspects of
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the issue or a fix are discussed -- for example the posting of a patch fixing
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the regression::
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#regzbot monitor: https://lore.kernel.org/all/30th.anniversary.repost@klaava.Helsinki.FI/
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Monitoring only works for lore.kernel.org and bugzilla.kernel.org; regzbot
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will consider all messages in that thread or ticket as related to the fixing
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process.
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* Point to a place with further details of interest, like a mailing list post
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or a ticket in a bug tracker that are slightly related, but about a different
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topic::
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#regzbot link: https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=123456789
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* Mark a regression as fixed by a commit that is heading upstream or already
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landed::
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#regzbot fixed-by: 1f2e3d4c5d
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* Mark a regression as a duplicate of another one already tracked by regzbot::
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#regzbot dup-of: https://lore.kernel.org/all/30th.anniversary.repost@klaava.Helsinki.FI/
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* Mark a regression as invalid::
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#regzbot invalid: wasn't a regression, problem has always existed
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Is there more to tell about regzbot and its commands?
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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More detailed and up-to-date information about the Linux
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kernel's regression tracking bot can be found on its
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`project page <https://gitlab.com/knurd42/regzbot>`_, which among others
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contains a `getting started guide <https://gitlab.com/knurd42/regzbot/-/blob/main/docs/getting_started.md>`_
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and `reference documentation <https://gitlab.com/knurd42/regzbot/-/blob/main/docs/reference.md>`_
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which both cover more details than the above section.
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Quotes from Linus about regression
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----------------------------------
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Find below a few real life examples of how Linus Torvalds expects regressions to
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be handled:
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* From `2017-10-26 (1/2)
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<https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/CA+55aFwiiQYJ+YoLKCXjN_beDVfu38mg=Ggg5LFOcqHE8Qi7Zw@mail.gmail.com/>`_::
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If you break existing user space setups THAT IS A REGRESSION.
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It's not ok to say "but we'll fix the user space setup".
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Really. NOT OK.
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[...]
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The first rule is:
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- we don't cause regressions
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and the corollary is that when regressions *do* occur, we admit to
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them and fix them, instead of blaming user space.
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The fact that you have apparently been denying the regression now for
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three weeks means that I will revert, and I will stop pulling apparmor
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requests until the people involved understand how kernel development
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is done.
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* From `2017-10-26 (2/2)
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<https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/CA+55aFxW7NMAMvYhkvz1UPbUTUJewRt6Yb51QAx5RtrWOwjebg@mail.gmail.com/>`_::
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People should basically always feel like they can update their kernel
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and simply not have to worry about it.
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I refuse to introduce "you can only update the kernel if you also
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update that other program" kind of limitations. If the kernel used to
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work for you, the rule is that it continues to work for you.
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There have been exceptions, but they are few and far between, and they
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generally have some major and fundamental reasons for having happened,
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that were basically entirely unavoidable, and people _tried_hard_ to
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avoid them. Maybe we can't practically support the hardware any more
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after it is decades old and nobody uses it with modern kernels any
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more. Maybe there's a serious security issue with how we did things,
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and people actually depended on that fundamentally broken model. Maybe
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there was some fundamental other breakage that just _had_ to have a
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flag day for very core and fundamental reasons.
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And notice that this is very much about *breaking* peoples environments.
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Behavioral changes happen, and maybe we don't even support some
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feature any more. There's a number of fields in /proc/<pid>/stat that
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are printed out as zeroes, simply because they don't even *exist* in
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the kernel any more, or because showing them was a mistake (typically
|
|
an information leak). But the numbers got replaced by zeroes, so that
|
|
the code that used to parse the fields still works. The user might not
|
|
see everything they used to see, and so behavior is clearly different,
|
|
but things still _work_, even if they might no longer show sensitive
|
|
(or no longer relevant) information.
|
|
|
|
But if something actually breaks, then the change must get fixed or
|
|
reverted. And it gets fixed in the *kernel*. Not by saying "well, fix
|
|
your user space then". It was a kernel change that exposed the
|
|
problem, it needs to be the kernel that corrects for it, because we
|
|
have a "upgrade in place" model. We don't have a "upgrade with new
|
|
user space".
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|
|
|
And I seriously will refuse to take code from people who do not
|
|
understand and honor this very simple rule.
|
|
|
|
This rule is also not going to change.
|
|
|
|
And yes, I realize that the kernel is "special" in this respect. I'm
|
|
proud of it.
|
|
|
|
I have seen, and can point to, lots of projects that go "We need to
|
|
break that use case in order to make progress" or "you relied on
|
|
undocumented behavior, it sucks to be you" or "there's a better way to
|
|
do what you want to do, and you have to change to that new better
|
|
way", and I simply don't think that's acceptable outside of very early
|
|
alpha releases that have experimental users that know what they signed
|
|
up for. The kernel hasn't been in that situation for the last two
|
|
decades.
|
|
|
|
We do API breakage _inside_ the kernel all the time. We will fix
|
|
internal problems by saying "you now need to do XYZ", but then it's
|
|
about internal kernel API's, and the people who do that then also
|
|
obviously have to fix up all the in-kernel users of that API. Nobody
|
|
can say "I now broke the API you used, and now _you_ need to fix it
|
|
up". Whoever broke something gets to fix it too.
|
|
|
|
And we simply do not break user space.
|
|
|
|
* From `2020-05-21
|
|
<https://lore.kernel.org/all/CAHk-=wiVi7mSrsMP=fLXQrXK_UimybW=ziLOwSzFTtoXUacWVQ@mail.gmail.com/>`_::
|
|
|
|
The rules about regressions have never been about any kind of
|
|
documented behavior, or where the code lives.
|
|
|
|
The rules about regressions are always about "breaks user workflow".
|
|
|
|
Users are literally the _only_ thing that matters.
|
|
|
|
No amount of "you shouldn't have used this" or "that behavior was
|
|
undefined, it's your own fault your app broke" or "that used to work
|
|
simply because of a kernel bug" is at all relevant.
|
|
|
|
Now, reality is never entirely black-and-white. So we've had things
|
|
like "serious security issue" etc that just forces us to make changes
|
|
that may break user space. But even then the rule is that we don't
|
|
really have other options that would allow things to continue.
|
|
|
|
And obviously, if users take years to even notice that something
|
|
broke, or if we have sane ways to work around the breakage that
|
|
doesn't make for too much trouble for users (ie "ok, there are a
|
|
handful of users, and they can use a kernel command line to work
|
|
around it" kind of things) we've also been a bit less strict.
|
|
|
|
But no, "that was documented to be broken" (whether it's because the
|
|
code was in staging or because the man-page said something else) is
|
|
irrelevant. If staging code is so useful that people end up using it,
|
|
that means that it's basically regular kernel code with a flag saying
|
|
"please clean this up".
|
|
|
|
The other side of the coin is that people who talk about "API
|
|
stability" are entirely wrong. API's don't matter either. You can make
|
|
any changes to an API you like - as long as nobody notices.
|
|
|
|
Again, the regression rule is not about documentation, not about
|
|
API's, and not about the phase of the moon.
|
|
|
|
It's entirely about "we caused problems for user space that used to work".
|
|
|
|
* From `2017-11-05
|
|
<https://lore.kernel.org/all/CA+55aFzUvbGjD8nQ-+3oiMBx14c_6zOj2n7KLN3UsJ-qsd4Dcw@mail.gmail.com/>`_::
|
|
|
|
And our regression rule has never been "behavior doesn't change".
|
|
That would mean that we could never make any changes at all.
|
|
|
|
For example, we do things like add new error handling etc all the
|
|
time, which we then sometimes even add tests for in our kselftest
|
|
directory.
|
|
|
|
So clearly behavior changes all the time and we don't consider that a
|
|
regression per se.
|
|
|
|
The rule for a regression for the kernel is that some real user
|
|
workflow breaks. Not some test. Not a "look, I used to be able to do
|
|
X, now I can't".
|
|
|
|
* From `2018-08-03
|
|
<https://lore.kernel.org/all/CA+55aFwWZX=CXmWDTkDGb36kf12XmTehmQjbiMPCqCRG2hi9kw@mail.gmail.com/>`_::
|
|
|
|
YOU ARE MISSING THE #1 KERNEL RULE.
|
|
|
|
We do not regress, and we do not regress exactly because your are 100% wrong.
|
|
|
|
And the reason you state for your opinion is in fact exactly *WHY* you
|
|
are wrong.
|
|
|
|
Your "good reasons" are pure and utter garbage.
|
|
|
|
The whole point of "we do not regress" is so that people can upgrade
|
|
the kernel and never have to worry about it.
|
|
|
|
> Kernel had a bug which has been fixed
|
|
|
|
That is *ENTIRELY* immaterial.
|
|
|
|
Guys, whether something was buggy or not DOES NOT MATTER.
|
|
|
|
Why?
|
|
|
|
Bugs happen. That's a fact of life. Arguing that "we had to break
|
|
something because we were fixing a bug" is completely insane. We fix
|
|
tens of bugs every single day, thinking that "fixing a bug" means that
|
|
we can break something is simply NOT TRUE.
|
|
|
|
So bugs simply aren't even relevant to the discussion. They happen,
|
|
they get found, they get fixed, and it has nothing to do with "we
|
|
break users".
|
|
|
|
Because the only thing that matters IS THE USER.
|
|
|
|
How hard is that to understand?
|
|
|
|
Anybody who uses "but it was buggy" as an argument is entirely missing
|
|
the point. As far as the USER was concerned, it wasn't buggy - it
|
|
worked for him/her.
|
|
|
|
Maybe it worked *because* the user had taken the bug into account,
|
|
maybe it worked because the user didn't notice - again, it doesn't
|
|
matter. It worked for the user.
|
|
|
|
Breaking a user workflow for a "bug" is absolutely the WORST reason
|
|
for breakage you can imagine.
|
|
|
|
It's basically saying "I took something that worked, and I broke it,
|
|
but now it's better". Do you not see how f*cking insane that statement
|
|
is?
|
|
|
|
And without users, your program is not a program, it's a pointless
|
|
piece of code that you might as well throw away.
|
|
|
|
Seriously. This is *why* the #1 rule for kernel development is "we
|
|
don't break users". Because "I fixed a bug" is absolutely NOT AN
|
|
ARGUMENT if that bug fix broke a user setup. You actually introduced a
|
|
MUCH BIGGER bug by "fixing" something that the user clearly didn't
|
|
even care about.
|
|
|
|
And dammit, we upgrade the kernel ALL THE TIME without upgrading any
|
|
other programs at all. It is absolutely required, because flag-days
|
|
and dependencies are horribly bad.
|
|
|
|
And it is also required simply because I as a kernel developer do not
|
|
upgrade random other tools that I don't even care about as I develop
|
|
the kernel, and I want any of my users to feel safe doing the same
|
|
time.
|
|
|
|
So no. Your rule is COMPLETELY wrong. If you cannot upgrade a kernel
|
|
without upgrading some other random binary, then we have a problem.
|
|
|
|
* From `2021-06-05
|
|
<https://lore.kernel.org/all/CAHk-=wiUVqHN76YUwhkjZzwTdjMMJf_zN4+u7vEJjmEGh3recw@mail.gmail.com/>`_::
|
|
|
|
THERE ARE NO VALID ARGUMENTS FOR REGRESSIONS.
|
|
|
|
Honestly, security people need to understand that "not working" is not
|
|
a success case of security. It's a failure case.
|
|
|
|
Yes, "not working" may be secure. But security in that case is *pointless*.
|
|
|
|
* From `2011-05-06 (1/3)
|
|
<https://lore.kernel.org/all/BANLkTim9YvResB+PwRp7QTK-a5VNg2PvmQ@mail.gmail.com/>`_::
|
|
|
|
Binary compatibility is more important.
|
|
|
|
And if binaries don't use the interface to parse the format (or just
|
|
parse it wrongly - see the fairly recent example of adding uuid's to
|
|
/proc/self/mountinfo), then it's a regression.
|
|
|
|
And regressions get reverted, unless there are security issues or
|
|
similar that makes us go "Oh Gods, we really have to break things".
|
|
|
|
I don't understand why this simple logic is so hard for some kernel
|
|
developers to understand. Reality matters. Your personal wishes matter
|
|
NOT AT ALL.
|
|
|
|
If you made an interface that can be used without parsing the
|
|
interface description, then we're stuck with the interface. Theory
|
|
simply doesn't matter.
|
|
|
|
You could help fix the tools, and try to avoid the compatibility
|
|
issues that way. There aren't that many of them.
|
|
|
|
From `2011-05-06 (2/3)
|
|
<https://lore.kernel.org/all/BANLkTi=KVXjKR82sqsz4gwjr+E0vtqCmvA@mail.gmail.com/>`_::
|
|
|
|
it's clearly NOT an internal tracepoint. By definition. It's being
|
|
used by powertop.
|
|
|
|
From `2011-05-06 (3/3)
|
|
<https://lore.kernel.org/all/BANLkTinazaXRdGovYL7rRVp+j6HbJ7pzhg@mail.gmail.com/>`_::
|
|
|
|
We have programs that use that ABI and thus it's a regression if they break.
|
|
|
|
* From `2012-07-06 <https://lore.kernel.org/all/CA+55aFwnLJ+0sjx92EGREGTWOx84wwKaraSzpTNJwPVV8edw8g@mail.gmail.com/>`_::
|
|
|
|
> Now this got me wondering if Debian _unstable_ actually qualifies as a
|
|
> standard distro userspace.
|
|
|
|
Oh, if the kernel breaks some standard user space, that counts. Tons
|
|
of people run Debian unstable
|
|
|
|
* From `2019-09-15
|
|
<https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/CAHk-=wiP4K8DRJWsCo=20hn_6054xBamGKF2kPgUzpB5aMaofA@mail.gmail.com/>`_::
|
|
|
|
One _particularly_ last-minute revert is the top-most commit (ignoring
|
|
the version change itself) done just before the release, and while
|
|
it's very annoying, it's perhaps also instructive.
|
|
|
|
What's instructive about it is that I reverted a commit that wasn't
|
|
actually buggy. In fact, it was doing exactly what it set out to do,
|
|
and did it very well. In fact it did it _so_ well that the much
|
|
improved IO patterns it caused then ended up revealing a user-visible
|
|
regression due to a real bug in a completely unrelated area.
|
|
|
|
The actual details of that regression are not the reason I point that
|
|
revert out as instructive, though. It's more that it's an instructive
|
|
example of what counts as a regression, and what the whole "no
|
|
regressions" kernel rule means. The reverted commit didn't change any
|
|
API's, and it didn't introduce any new bugs. But it ended up exposing
|
|
another problem, and as such caused a kernel upgrade to fail for a
|
|
user. So it got reverted.
|
|
|
|
The point here being that we revert based on user-reported _behavior_,
|
|
not based on some "it changes the ABI" or "it caused a bug" concept.
|
|
The problem was really pre-existing, and it just didn't happen to
|
|
trigger before. The better IO patterns introduced by the change just
|
|
happened to expose an old bug, and people had grown to depend on the
|
|
previously benign behavior of that old issue.
|
|
|
|
And never fear, we'll re-introduce the fix that improved on the IO
|
|
patterns once we've decided just how to handle the fact that we had a
|
|
bad interaction with an interface that people had then just happened
|
|
to rely on incidental behavior for before. It's just that we'll have
|
|
to hash through how to do that (there are no less than three different
|
|
patches by three different developers being discussed, and there might
|
|
be more coming...). In the meantime, I reverted the thing that exposed
|
|
the problem to users for this release, even if I hope it will be
|
|
re-introduced (perhaps even backported as a stable patch) once we have
|
|
consensus about the issue it exposed.
|
|
|
|
Take-away from the whole thing: it's not about whether you change the
|
|
kernel-userspace ABI, or fix a bug, or about whether the old code
|
|
"should never have worked in the first place". It's about whether
|
|
something breaks existing users' workflow.
|
|
|
|
Anyway, that was my little aside on the whole regression thing. Since
|
|
it's that "first rule of kernel programming", I felt it is perhaps
|
|
worth just bringing it up every once in a while
|
|
|
|
..
|
|
end-of-content
|
|
..
|
|
This text is available under GPL-2.0+ or CC-BY-4.0, as stated at the top
|
|
of the file. If you want to distribute this text under CC-BY-4.0 only,
|
|
please use "The Linux kernel developers" for author attribution and link
|
|
this as source:
|
|
https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/plain/Documentation/process/handling-regressions.rst
|
|
..
|
|
Note: Only the content of this RST file as found in the Linux kernel sources
|
|
is available under CC-BY-4.0, as versions of this text that were processed
|
|
(for example by the kernel's build system) might contain content taken from
|
|
files which use a more restrictive license.
|