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Re: [Xen-devel] [RFC PATCH 0/4] Add missing default labels to switch statements




> On 27 Feb 2019, at 10:16, Jan Beulich <jbeulich@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
> 
>>>> On 27.02.19 at 10:23, <lars.kurth.xen@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> 
>> I recall that I read in an earlier thread that Julien and Stefano have 
>> access to the document, which would leave Jan and a few members of Citrix 
>> staff. Can those committers who need access raise their hands? I can then go 
>> ahead and order these.
> 
> Well, you've effectively raised my hand already. To be honest I'm not
> sure I want it raised: I fear to break in tears when I would get to read
> that book. In any event, I'd say ...

It's a reference document to look up stuff. Not something you would 
necessarily read upfront.

>> Having followed this thread (and the other MISRA related one from Stefano), 
>> it seems to me that potentially each of these discussions is quite divisive 
>> and take up a lot of discussion and emotional energy. With 143 rules and 16 
>> "directives" (more like guidance) and some of the rules being mandatory 
>> (73%) 
>> and some advisory (27%), but the possibility to justify deviating from the 
>> rule, maybe we are approaching this wrongly. 
>> 
>> I have some thoughts about the approach and will follow up on this thread 
>> later today or tomorrow when I had some more time to clarify my thoughts.
> 
> ... don't order anything before we aren't clear whether we really want
> to do this (or even any part thereof) to the code base.

Alright: firstly I need to explain that I asked EPAM to start looking a half 
dozen or so "interesting" Misra compliance issues and post RFC patches. The 
idea behind this was to gather data about how as a community we would handle 
these  kind of issues. There was a discussion about Misra (or safety related 
coding standards in general) at last years developer summit, which went nowhere 
due to lack of data. 

It is clear to me that as a community we have to deal with Misra C compliance 
and other efforts to make Xen more easily safety certifiable seriously and 
can't just wish it to go away. I think it is fair to say that the project is 
facing increased competition from KVM and containers, while at the same time 
Xen has unique advantages that lead vendors to go down the embedded/safety 
route. If, as a community we just dismiss these efforts, we risk a fork or 
those vendors going elsewhere. Neither would be good for the community.

Having seen the two discussions so far, it appears that even when we agree 
that there is an issue, we seem to have real issues agreeing on workable 
solutions. I also already had complaints that these threads generate to much 
discussion (aka "noise").

What I don't know, is whether the two issues posted (this one and 
https://markmail.org/message/ni3yziazuwb2aolx) are representative for the kind 
of issue we need to fix to achieve on Misra compliance, or whether they are 
difficult outliers.

@Oleksandr: maybe you have some insights 

So the question is how we should approach this:

1: One is to follow what we do now - post patches per issue and work through 
   them. This only really scales if the majority of patches are in essence
   uncontroversial.

2: A slightly different approach would be for EPAM to post a few more examples 
   of the type of issues that we would have to deal with if we want to be MISRA
   compliant. But that we exercise restraint in the discussion knowing that 
these
   are examples to inform a discussion at https://wiki.xenproject.org/wiki/
   Developer_Meeting/March2019_-_Safety_Certification and possible follow-up.

   What I was after when I asked EPAM to post Misra related patches was to
   get a sense of the impact and a sense of how easily resolvable issues are.
   But I wouldn't expect a full resolution at this stage, if there
   is controversy. 

   So maybe we can handle these in a different way. From my PoV, it would be 
good 
   enough if key reviewers communicated per example whether
   - They accept that fixing the issue would be beneficial
   - What concerns they have
   - And how much they would fight for or against such a patch
     (using the -2 ... +2 scale as outlined in "EXPRESSING AGREEMENT AND 
     DISAGREEMENT" in https://xenproject.org/developers/governance/#decisions
   
   Clearly there can be some discussion, but we don't really need to "fight
   to the end" over these. 

3: Or we could change approach completely and go for a more high-level
   design and/or analysis based approach before we do anything else. I will 
expand 
   further down.

My personal preference would be to use 2 for a few patches, followed by 
3 as it gives us a different perspective.

Let me outline my thinking on 3:

There are a few things about Misra that we do not yet fully understand on a
number of different dimensions:
a) Issues are either mandatory or advisory. The scale changes depending on 
   the required level of safety (expressed in ASIL A-D).
b) There will likely be clusters of Misra rules we likely violate frequently
   and others we are hardly or not affected by   

We should be able to pull an overview together using the QA Verify tool
maybe initially filtering out rule violations which are advisory in the context 
of the goal of achieving ASIL A/B.

We could have a discussion about these in some sort of design document which
covers the rule violations and proposes ways on how these would be addressed
maybe with some examples. This would be less labour intensive than preparing
actual patches and would keep things in one place. We can even break this into
small chunks (maybe sorted by the frequency it affects the code)

IMPORTANT:
c) There is also a provision to justify that certain Misra rules should not 
   apply for a specific code base. This is called a DEVIATION. It appears to be 
   that frequently 20-30% of rule breakages are justified away.

   However, the DEVIATIONS are typically approved by a certification body
   which decides that some justifications have merit, while others don't. The
   problem we have is that we have no idea what kind DEVIATIONS and 
   justifications we can get away with.

Again: I hope that some of this will become clearer at the safety meeting in 
March, where we will have safety certification experts and community members
working together. Maybe we can even convince one of those experts to act as
an advisor/reviewer for the project.

To do ANY of this, does however require access to the Misra rules. 

Does this make sense? 

Would you be able to follow my suggested approach?

Best Regards
Lars



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