[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] [Qemu-devel] [PATCH v5 00/24] ACPI reorganization for hardware-reduced API addition
On Wed, 21 Nov 2018 07:35:47 -0500 "Michael S. Tsirkin" <mst@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Mon, Nov 19, 2018 at 04:31:10PM +0100, Igor Mammedov wrote: > > On Fri, 16 Nov 2018 17:37:54 +0100 > > Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > On 16/11/18 17:29, Igor Mammedov wrote: > > > > General suggestions for this series: > > > > 1. Preferably don't do multiple changes within a patch > > > > neither post huge patches (unless it's pure code movement). > > > > (it's easy to squash patches later it necessary) > > > > 2. Start small, pick a table generalize it and send as > > > > one small patchset. Tables are often independent > > > > and it's much easier on both author/reviewer to agree upon > > > > changes and rewrite it if necessary. > > > > > > How would that be done? This series is on the bigger side, agreed, but > > > most of it is really just code movement. It's a starting point, having > > > a generic ACPI library is way beyond what this is trying to do. > > I've tried to give suggestions how to restructure series > > on per patch basis. In my opinion it quite possible to split > > series in several smaller ones and it should really help with > > making series cleaner and easier/faster to review/amend/merge > > vs what we have in v5. > > (it's more frustrating to rework large series vs smaller one) > > > > If something isn't clear, it's easy to reach out to me here > > or directly (email/irc/github) for clarification/feed back. > > I assume the #1 goal is to add reduced HW support. So another > option to speed up merging is to just go ahead and duplicate a > bunch of code e.g. in pc_virt.c acpi/reduced.c or in any other > file. > This way it might be easier to see what's common code and what isn't. > And I think offline Igor said he might prefer that way. Right Igor? You mean probably 'x86 reduced hw' support. That's was what I've already suggested for PCI AML code during patch review. Just don't call it generic when it's not and place code in hw/i386/ directory beside acpi-build.c. It might apply to some other tables (i.e. complex cases). On per patch review I gave suggestions how to amend series to make it acceptable without doing complex refactoring and pointed out places we probably shouldn't refactor now and just duplicate as it's too complex or not clear how to generalize it yet. Problem with duplication is that a random contributor is not around to clean code up after a feature is merged and we end up with a bunch of messy code. A word to the contributors, Don't do refactoring in silence, keep discussing approaches here, suggest alternatives. That way it's easier to reach a compromise and merge it with less iterations. And if you do split it in smaller parts, the process should go even faster. I'll sent a small RSDP refactoring series for reference. > > > Paolo > > > > > > > 3. when you think about refactoring acpi into a generic API > > > > think about it as routines that go into a separate library > > > > (pure acpi spec code) and qemu/acpi glue routines and > > > > divide them correspondingly. > > > _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.xenproject.org/mailman/listinfo/xen-devel
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