[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] [Xen-users] xen forum
Hello Konrad, and others at Oracle, On Fri, May 24, 2013 at 10:04 AM, Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk <konrad.wilk@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
You bring up what seems to me is an obvious point: If developers are busy... developing... Why should they sacrifice time spent focusing on any given issue to 1) prioritize which issues should be the responsibility of an individual developer, and 2) assigning weight to these issues based on each of your own arbitrary sets of skills, requirements, etc? If I understand the principles of open source projects (and I admit: I may not!), such responsibility usually falls on the project leader[s]. Xen, however, is just seemingly so damn big that it's nearly impossible to consolidate everything to the point where these decisions can be made, especially with regard to bug tracking and fixing. At least that's the sense I'm getting as I've followed this thread for the last week or so ;-)
Your suggestion, Konrad, of something that will bridge the gap---regardless of whether that gap really stems from an issue of size and scope as I suggest, or even if I'm off base, just so long as the real issue is similar enough---is definitely what I, too, suspect is needed.
Out of all the solutions that exist---and I lost count of the number of pieces of software that have been mentioned in this thread---it's painfully obvious that the search for the "Silver Bullet" has been an unfortunate failure up to this point. While I'm loathe to say it, especially since solving problems with software is a solution we all love and respect, the only thing I've been able to think of that will fill the void and bridge that gap is relatively simple, but far from easy: a human touch.
Pick the bug tracking system that the developers want to work with, and then have someone whose sole responsibility is to keep it neat, organized, and summarized. As bugs reach certain threshholds, the bug list curator can nudge a developer for an update, and even if the curator doesn't get one, at least information can be compiled and "attacked" from the other direction. In this fashion, at least if a developer goes AWOL on a bug because it's low priority or deprecated code or whatnot, all he has to do is answer an email and the rest of the filing and tracking duties are taken care of by someone else. And if there's anything that I'm getting from this thread, it's a sense that keeping things as simple as email without having to wade through the sometimes mind-boggling volume of email on the Xen-Devel list is the only thing on which a large number of people seem to agree.... myself included ;-)
--- I've come back to the Xen project over and over again because it really is some terrific software. The more I think about it, the more I see a world in which the future of all computing takes place on top of Xen and Linux, as the combination of the two come ever closer to blurring the lines between firmware and OS. One day I expect that I'll stop syncing data from one place to the next and it'll all just live on Amazon or at my house, and I'll use the same operating system---the exact same instance---on every device. It's an exciting time to be a nerd ;-)
BTW, did I mention that Oracle is looking to hire Xen and Linux developers :-) Any chance that the full-time position I mention above is one of them? :-D Best Regards,
Andrew Bobulsky
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