|
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH v2 4/6] Add Code Review Guide
On 06/12/2019, 09:51, "Jan Beulich" <jbeulich@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 06.12.2019 00:41, Lars Kurth wrote:
> I propose to add the following section to code-review-guide.md
>
> ----
> ## <a name="problems"></a>Problematic Patch Reviews
>
> A typical waterfall software development process is sequential with the
following
> steps: define requirements, analyse, design, code, test and deploy.
Problems
> uncovered by code review or testing at such a late stage can cause costly
redesign
> and delays. The principle of **[Shift
Left](https://devopedia.org/shift-left)** is to take a
> task that is traditionally performed at a late stage in the process and
perform that task
> at earlier stages. The goal is to save time by avoiding refactoring.
>
> Typically, problematic patch reviews uncover issues such as wrong or
missed
> assumptions, a problematic architecture or design, or other bugs that
require
> significant re-implementation of a patch series to fix the issue.
>
> The principle of **Shift Left** also applies in code reviews. Let's
assume a series has
> a major flaw: ideally, this flaw would be picked up in the **first or
second iteration** of
> the code review. As significant parts of the code may have to be
re-written, it does not
> make sense for reviewers to highlight minor issues (such as style issues)
until major
> flaws have been addressed. By providing feedback on minor issues
reviewers cause
> the code author and themselves extra work by asking for changes to code,
which
> ultimately may be changed later.
>
> The question then becomes, how do code reviewers identify major issues
early?
> ----
> This is where I really need help. Are there any tips and recommendations
that we could give?
> I can clearly highlight that we have RFC series, but in practice that
does not solve the problem as RFCs don’t get prioritized
> How do reviewers normally approach a series: do you a) take a big picture
view first, or b) do most of you work through a series sequentially
Afaic - depends heavily on the patch / series. I wouldn't typically
peek ahead in a series, but it has happened. But as you say
(elsewhere) the cover letter should put in place the "big picture".
A series should generally be reviewable going from patch to patch,
having the cover letter in mind.
I am wondering what others do.
I think explaining the basic work-flow from the viewpoint of a reviewer and
code author maybe in a separate section, which is not tied to the problem case
would make sense. More input from other maintainers would be valuable. My
gut-feel is that most reviewers "read and review" series sequentially, which
has implications for the author. E.g.
- docs/design docs should be at the beginning of a series
- key header files or changes to them should be at the beginning of a series
- Etc
> I then propose to change the following section in
communication-practice.md
> ----
> ### Prioritize significant flaws
> If a patch or patch series has significant flaws, such as
> * It is built on wrong assumptions
> * There are issues with the architecture or the design
In such a case a full review of course doesn't make much sense. But
this is far from the typical situation. Way more often you have some
_part_ of a patch or series which has a bigger issue, but other
parts are in need of no or just minor changes.
I know that this is an unusual situation. But it has happened in clusters
frequently in the past.
I am wondering whether we should introduce some informal convention to mark
_part_ of a series as problematic. A simple example of how to do this in the
cover letter would do
> it does not make sense to do a detailed code review. In such cases, it is
best to
> focus on the major issues first and deal with style and minor issues in a
subsequent
> review. Not all series have significant flaws, but most series have
different classes of
> changes that are required for acceptance: covering a range of major code
> modifications to minor code style fixes. To avoid misunderstandings
between
> reviewers and contributors, it is important to establish and agree
whether a series or
> part of a series has a significant flaw and agree a course of action.
>
> A pragmatic approach would be to
> * Highlight problematic portions of a series in the cover letter
> * For the patch author and reviewer(s) to agree that for problematic to
omit style and
> minor issues in the review, until the significant flaw is addressed
>
> This saves both the patch author and reviewer(s) time. Note that some
background
> is covered in detail in [Problematic Patch
Reviews](resolving-disagreement.md#problems).
I have no issues with the suggested text in general, but I also don't
think it makes much of a difference wrt what I had mentioned before.
I guess part of the problem here is that there are things which imo
you can't really give recipes for how to approach, if the expectation
is that it would fit at least the vast majority of cases.
I think the document covers most of the common cases, plus some areas which are
problematic
* From a people-interaction point-of-view - in other words there could be
unnecessary conflict, which is bad for the community but also wastes time
* From an efficient usage of time point-of-view
For example: the whole thing about thanking, appreciation, ... is something
targeted at newcomers and a desire to treat them with more thought and
awareness.
Granted it takes more time to do a review with a newcomer, but it should make
subsequent reviews easier
It happens regularly, but not that frequently
For code
reviews this means that I don't think there should be any wording
suggesting they should be done in a certain form; there may be wording
suggesting they _could_ be done in a certain form (e.g. to help
people not knowing at all how to get started).
That was definitely my intention. Maybe I have not succeeded in making this
clear enough
Regards
Lars
_______________________________________________
Xen-devel mailing list
Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
https://lists.xenproject.org/mailman/listinfo/xen-devel
|
![]() |
Lists.xenproject.org is hosted with RackSpace, monitoring our |