* [dpdk-dev] versioning and maintenance
@ 2014-11-19 11:22 Thomas Monjalon
2014-11-19 11:35 ` Bruce Richardson
0 siblings, 1 reply; 9+ messages in thread
From: Thomas Monjalon @ 2014-11-19 11:22 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: dev; +Cc: Neil Horman
Following the discussion we had with Neil during the conference call,
I suggest this plan, starting with the next release (2.0):
- add version numbers to libraries
- add version numbers to functions inside .map files
- create a git tree dedicated to maintenance and API compatibility
It means these version numbers must be incremented when breaking the API.
Though the old code paths will be maintained and tested separately by volunteers.
A mailing list for maintenance purpose could be created if needed.
--
Thomas
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: [dpdk-dev] versioning and maintenance
2014-11-19 11:22 [dpdk-dev] versioning and maintenance Thomas Monjalon
@ 2014-11-19 11:35 ` Bruce Richardson
2014-11-19 15:13 ` Neil Horman
0 siblings, 1 reply; 9+ messages in thread
From: Bruce Richardson @ 2014-11-19 11:35 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Thomas Monjalon; +Cc: dev, Neil Horman
On Wed, Nov 19, 2014 at 12:22:14PM +0100, Thomas Monjalon wrote:
> Following the discussion we had with Neil during the conference call,
> I suggest this plan, starting with the next release (2.0):
> - add version numbers to libraries
> - add version numbers to functions inside .map files
> - create a git tree dedicated to maintenance and API compatibility
>
> It means these version numbers must be incremented when breaking the API.
> Though the old code paths will be maintained and tested separately by volunteers.
> A mailing list for maintenance purpose could be created if needed.
>
Hi Thomas,
I really think that the versionning is best handled inside the main repository
itself. Given that the proposed deprecation policy is over two releases i.e. an
API is marked deprecated in release X and then removed in X+1, I don't see the
maintaining of old code paths to be particularly onerous.
/Bruce
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: [dpdk-dev] versioning and maintenance
2014-11-19 11:35 ` Bruce Richardson
@ 2014-11-19 15:13 ` Neil Horman
2014-11-20 17:09 ` Thomas Monjalon
0 siblings, 1 reply; 9+ messages in thread
From: Neil Horman @ 2014-11-19 15:13 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Bruce Richardson; +Cc: dev, Neil Horman
On Wed, Nov 19, 2014 at 11:35:08AM +0000, Bruce Richardson wrote:
> On Wed, Nov 19, 2014 at 12:22:14PM +0100, Thomas Monjalon wrote:
> > Following the discussion we had with Neil during the conference call,
> > I suggest this plan, starting with the next release (2.0):
> > - add version numbers to libraries
> > - add version numbers to functions inside .map files
> > - create a git tree dedicated to maintenance and API compatibility
> >
> > It means these version numbers must be incremented when breaking the API.
> > Though the old code paths will be maintained and tested separately by volunteers.
> > A mailing list for maintenance purpose could be created if needed.
> >
> Hi Thomas,
>
> I really think that the versionning is best handled inside the main repository
> itself. Given that the proposed deprecation policy is over two releases i.e. an
> API is marked deprecated in release X and then removed in X+1, I don't see the
> maintaining of old code paths to be particularly onerous.
>
> /Bruce
>
I agree with Bruce, even if it is on occasion an added workload, its not the
sort of thing that can or should be placed on an alternate developer. Backwards
compatibility is the sort of thing that has to be on the mind of the developer
when modifying an API, and on the mind of the reviewer when reviewing code. To
shunt that responsibility elsewhere invites the opportunity for backwards
compatibilty to be a second class citizen who's goal will never be reached,
because developers instituting ABI changes will never care about the
consequences, and anyone worrying about backwards compatibility will always be
playing catch up, possibly allowing ABI breaks to slip through.
Neil
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: [dpdk-dev] versioning and maintenance
2014-11-19 15:13 ` Neil Horman
@ 2014-11-20 17:09 ` Thomas Monjalon
2014-11-20 18:25 ` Neil Horman
0 siblings, 1 reply; 9+ messages in thread
From: Thomas Monjalon @ 2014-11-20 17:09 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Neil Horman; +Cc: dev
Hi,
2014-11-19 10:13, Neil Horman:
> On Wed, Nov 19, 2014 at 11:35:08AM +0000, Bruce Richardson wrote:
> > On Wed, Nov 19, 2014 at 12:22:14PM +0100, Thomas Monjalon wrote:
> > > Following the discussion we had with Neil during the conference call,
> > > I suggest this plan, starting with the next release (2.0):
> > > - add version numbers to libraries
> > > - add version numbers to functions inside .map files
> > > - create a git tree dedicated to maintenance and API compatibility
> > >
> > > It means these version numbers must be incremented when breaking the API.
> > > Though the old code paths will be maintained and tested separately by volunteers.
> > > A mailing list for maintenance purpose could be created if needed.
> > >
> > Hi Thomas,
> >
> > I really think that the versionning is best handled inside the main repository
> > itself. Given that the proposed deprecation policy is over two releases i.e. an
> > API is marked deprecated in release X and then removed in X+1, I don't see the
> > maintaining of old code paths to be particularly onerous.
> >
> > /Bruce
>
> I agree with Bruce, even if it is on occasion an added workload, its not the
> sort of thing that can or should be placed on an alternate developer. Backwards
> compatibility is the sort of thing that has to be on the mind of the developer
> when modifying an API, and on the mind of the reviewer when reviewing code. To
> shunt that responsibility elsewhere invites the opportunity for backwards
> compatibilty to be a second class citizen who's goal will never be reached,
> because developers instituting ABI changes will never care about the
> consequences, and anyone worrying about backwards compatibility will always be
> playing catch up, possibly allowing ABI breaks to slip through.
>
> Neil
Before taking a decision, we should detail every concern.
1/
Currently there are not a lot of API refactoring because DPDK is well tailored
for x86 and Intel NICs. But we are seeing that new CPU and new NICs to support
would require some adaptations.
2/
I'm curious to know how you would handle a big change like the recent mbuf rework.
Should we duplicate the structure and all the functions using mbuf?
3/
Should we add new fields at the end of its structure to avoid ABI breaking?
4/
Developers contribute because they need some changes. So when breaking
an API, their application is already ready for the new version.
I mean the author of such patch is probably not really motivated to keep ABI
compability and duplicate the code path.
5/
Intead of simply modifying an API function, it would appear as a whole new
function with some differences compared to the old one. Such change is really
not convenient to review.
6/
Testing ABI compatibility could be tricky. We would need a tool to check it's
mostly OK. The good place for such a tool is in app/test. It was designed to be
the unit tests of the API.
7/
This system would allow application developpers to upgrade DPDK to n+1 without
rebuilding. But when upgrading to n+2, they should have adapted their
application to comply with n+1 API (because n will be removed).
So this solution offers a delay between the upgrade decision and the
app work. Note that they could prepare their application before upgrading.
Anyway, an upgrade should be tested before doing it effectively. The behaviour
of the application could change and require some adaptations.
8/
How to handle a change in the implementation of a PMD which severely impact
the application? Example: an ol_flag was mis-used and the application has
a workaround to interpret this flag but it's now incompatible with the fix.
9/
When we don't want to adapt an application, it means the development is
finished and we don't care about the new features of the library.
So I wonder if it wouldn't be more appropriate to provide stable releases
with true maintenance to such users. I understood that is what Redhat provides
to their customers.
Hope this discussion will bring a clear idea of what should be done with
which implications.
Thanks
--
Thomas
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: [dpdk-dev] versioning and maintenance
2014-11-20 17:09 ` Thomas Monjalon
@ 2014-11-20 18:25 ` Neil Horman
2014-11-20 21:08 ` Thomas Monjalon
0 siblings, 1 reply; 9+ messages in thread
From: Neil Horman @ 2014-11-20 18:25 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Thomas Monjalon; +Cc: dev
On Thu, Nov 20, 2014 at 06:09:10PM +0100, Thomas Monjalon wrote:
> Hi,
>
> 2014-11-19 10:13, Neil Horman:
> > On Wed, Nov 19, 2014 at 11:35:08AM +0000, Bruce Richardson wrote:
> > > On Wed, Nov 19, 2014 at 12:22:14PM +0100, Thomas Monjalon wrote:
> > > > Following the discussion we had with Neil during the conference call,
> > > > I suggest this plan, starting with the next release (2.0):
> > > > - add version numbers to libraries
> > > > - add version numbers to functions inside .map files
> > > > - create a git tree dedicated to maintenance and API compatibility
> > > >
> > > > It means these version numbers must be incremented when breaking the API.
> > > > Though the old code paths will be maintained and tested separately by volunteers.
> > > > A mailing list for maintenance purpose could be created if needed.
> > > >
> > > Hi Thomas,
> > >
> > > I really think that the versionning is best handled inside the main repository
> > > itself. Given that the proposed deprecation policy is over two releases i.e. an
> > > API is marked deprecated in release X and then removed in X+1, I don't see the
> > > maintaining of old code paths to be particularly onerous.
> > >
> > > /Bruce
> >
> > I agree with Bruce, even if it is on occasion an added workload, its not the
> > sort of thing that can or should be placed on an alternate developer. Backwards
> > compatibility is the sort of thing that has to be on the mind of the developer
> > when modifying an API, and on the mind of the reviewer when reviewing code. To
> > shunt that responsibility elsewhere invites the opportunity for backwards
> > compatibilty to be a second class citizen who's goal will never be reached,
> > because developers instituting ABI changes will never care about the
> > consequences, and anyone worrying about backwards compatibility will always be
> > playing catch up, possibly allowing ABI breaks to slip through.
> >
> > Neil
>
> Before taking a decision, we should detail every concern.
>
> 1/
> Currently there are not a lot of API refactoring because DPDK is well tailored
> for x86 and Intel NICs. But we are seeing that new CPU and new NICs to support
> would require some adaptations.
>
Yes, you're absolutely right here. I had hoped that, during my presentation
that this would happen occasionaly, and that we would need to deal with it.
What I think you are implying here (correct me if I'm wrong), is that you would
advocate that we wait to introduce ABI versioning until after such refactoring
is, for lack of a better term "complete". The problem here is that, software
that is growing in user base is never "complete". What you are effectively
saying is that you want to wait until the API is in a state in which no (or
almost no) more changes are required, then fixate it. Thats quite simply never
going to happen. And if it does, it obviates the need for versioning at all.
> 2/
> I'm curious to know how you would handle a big change like the recent mbuf rework.
> Should we duplicate the structure and all the functions using mbuf?
>
Several ways, what you suggest above is one way, although thats what I would
consider to be a pessimal case. Ideally such large changes are extreemely rare
(a search of the git history I think confirms this). Much more common are
small, limited changes to various API's for which providing multiple versions of
a function is a much more reasonable approach.
In the event that we do decide to do a refactor that is so far reaching that we
simply don't feel like multi-versioning is feasible, the recourse is then to
deprecate the old API, publish that information on the deprecation schedule,
wait for a release, then replace it wholesale. When the API is released, we
bump the DSO version number. Note the versioning policy never guarantees that
backwards compatibility will always be available, nor does it stipulate that a
newer version of the API is available prior to removing the old one. The goal
here is to give distributors and application vendors advanced notice of ABI
breaking changes so that they can adapt appropriately before they are caught off
guard. If the new ABI can't be packaged alongside the old, then so be it,
downstream vendors will have to use the upstream git head to test and validate,
rather than a newer distribution release
Ideally though, that shouldn't happen, because it causes downstream headaches,
and we would really like to avoid that. Thats why I feel its so important to
keep this work in the main tree. If we segregate it to a separate location it
will make it all to easy for developers to ignore these needs and just assume we
constantly drop old ABI versions without providing backwards compatibility.
> 3/
> Should we add new fields at the end of its structure to avoid ABI breaking?
>
In the common case yes, this usually avoids ABI breakage, though it can't always
be relied upon (e.g. cases where structures are statically allocated by an
application). And then there are patches that attempt to reduce memory usage
and increase performance by re-arranging structures. In those cases we need to
do ABI versioning or announce/delay/release as noted above, though again, that
should really be avoided if possible.
> 4/
> Developers contribute because they need some changes. So when breaking
> an API, their application is already ready for the new version.
> I mean the author of such patch is probably not really motivated to keep ABI
> compability and duplicate the code path.
>
What? That doesn't make any sense. Its our job to enforce this requirement on
developers during the review cycle. If you don't feel like we can enforce
coding requirements on the project, we've already lost. I agree that an
application developer submitting a patch for DPDK might not care about ABI
compatibility because they've already modified their application, but they (and
we) need to recognize that there are more than just a handful of users of the
DPDK, some of whom don't participate in this community (i.e. are simply end
users). We need to make sure all users needs are met. Thats the entire point
of this patch series, to make DPDK available to a wider range of users.
> 5/
> Intead of simply modifying an API function, it would appear as a whole new
> function with some differences compared to the old one. Such change is really
> not convenient to review.
>
Um, yes, versioning is the process of creating an additional
function that closely resembles an older version of the same function, but with
different arguments and a newer version number. Thats what it is by defintion,
and yes, its additional work. All you're saying here is that, its extra work
and we shouldn't do it. I thought I made this clear on the call, its been done
in thousands of other libraries, but if you just don't want to do it, then you
should abandon distributions as a way to reach a larger community, but if you
want to see the DPDK reach a larger community, then this is something that has
to happen, hard or not.
> 6/
> Testing ABI compatibility could be tricky. We would need a tool to check it's
> mostly OK. The good place for such a tool is in app/test. It was designed to be
> the unit tests of the API.
>
That seems like a reasonable idea, but I'm not sure what the concern is. Are
you saying that you need to test every old version of the ABI? Thats fine. I
really don't think it has to be as stringent as the latest version testing, but
if you want to, it should be as easy as building the latest release of
the DPDK libraries, and the previous version of the test application. That will
force the previous version code paths to be used by the test app in the new
library and, if the test fully exercize the api, then you should get pretty good
coverage.
> 7/
> This system would allow application developpers to upgrade DPDK to n+1 without
> rebuilding. But when upgrading to n+2, they should have adapted their
> application to comply with n+1 API (because n will be removed).
Only assuming that the old ABI facet was deprecated at the same time the new ABI
was introduced. Theres nothing that says we have to do that, but I digress.
> So this solution offers a delay between the upgrade decision and the
> app work. Note that they could prepare their application before upgrading.
> Anyway, an upgrade should be tested before doing it effectively. The behaviour
> of the application could change and require some adaptations.
>
Um, yes. Whats the concern here? Downstream application developers need 2
things:
A) The ability to note that ABI changes are comming so that they can adapt to
the new version
B) Time to do so
The deprecation policy, if properly distributed by Distributions provide (A),
and the ABI versioning provides (B). I.e. they can get all the latest bug fixes
and enhancements while in parallel adapting to the comming new version. Note
ideally this will happen rarely, as having to constantly rebuild/adapt does not
sit will with application vendors who choose to go through distributions, but
we'll do the best we can.
> 8/
> How to handle a change in the implementation of a PMD which severely impact
> the application? Example: an ol_flag was mis-used and the application has
> a workaround to interpret this flag but it's now incompatible with the fix.
>
We run into this sometimes in Fedora and RHEL, and doesn't require versioning.
The problem you describe is one in which something internal to the library that
an application has come to rely on. Fixing the bug isn't typically considered
within the purview of versioning, because you're not changing the ABI, you're
just correcting a bug in the PMD's behavior. Customers who ask for the behavior
to remain unchanged are asking for what's commonly referred to as "Bug for Bug
compatibility" and in those cases the application vendor needs to release a
corresponding fix. Developers can't be required to preserve buggy behavior.
It should also be noted that in this case, ABI never changed. All the data
types/sizes/locations/etc have remained unchanged. Its just a bug in
interpretation of data passed accross the ABI. As such, theres nothing for ABI
versioning to do here.
> 9/
> When we don't want to adapt an application, it means the development is
> finished and we don't care about the new features of the library.
> So I wonder if it wouldn't be more appropriate to provide stable releases
> with true maintenance to such users. I understood that is what Redhat provides
> to their customers.
>
No, thats incorrect, we frequently update packages to the latest upstream
version when at all possible. We are able to do this sepcifically because
upstream library releases provide ABI versioning, so that we can update with
confidence. If they don't do that, then yes, we are often restricted to
selecting a release and maintaining it for the duration of a major RHEL release,
which implies that security and feature updates are extreemely limited
That said, if you wanted to do ongoing maintenence on each release, I suppsose
you could, in fact its somewhat simmilar to the -stable series that the kernel
uses, exept that the kernel enoys an extreemly stable user space ABI, and even
then the kernel -stable series doesn't take internal ABI changing patches, so
theres alot of divergence. You don't currently have that stable ABI interface,
and so I think you'll find that that doing this is way more work than just
supporting versioning.
To illustrate, lets say you want to support maintenence releases the latest 3
releases of the DPDK with patches. To do this, for every patch that is posted
to the dpdk that is a bug fix, you will have to apply it four times, one for
the git head, and again for each of the three releases that you are doing
maintenence on. the patch will of course apply cleanly to the git head, as
thats what the developer wrote it against, but the other three releases have
every opportunity to conflict with code introduced in the git head but that
couldn't be taken into the maintenece releases. Fixing those up is work that
you will either have to do, or request that the patch author do. And for this
work you will provide distibutions with about 2 years of ABI stability
(presuming an ~8 month release cycle), after which they are back to just living
with whatever they stabilized on until the next major relase (note a single RHEL
major release has a 10+ year life cycle). I would personally rather avoid that
work, and just do the ABI compatibility, as those patches are far fewer in
number, and it buys for the effort.
> Hope this discussion will bring a clear idea of what should be done with
> which implications.
> Thanks
> --
> Thomas
>
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: [dpdk-dev] versioning and maintenance
2014-11-20 18:25 ` Neil Horman
@ 2014-11-20 21:08 ` Thomas Monjalon
2014-11-21 1:05 ` Neil Horman
0 siblings, 1 reply; 9+ messages in thread
From: Thomas Monjalon @ 2014-11-20 21:08 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Neil Horman; +Cc: dev
2014-11-20 13:25, Neil Horman:
> On Thu, Nov 20, 2014 at 06:09:10PM +0100, Thomas Monjalon wrote:
> > 2014-11-19 10:13, Neil Horman:
> > > On Wed, Nov 19, 2014 at 11:35:08AM +0000, Bruce Richardson wrote:
> > > > On Wed, Nov 19, 2014 at 12:22:14PM +0100, Thomas Monjalon wrote:
> > > > > Following the discussion we had with Neil during the conference call,
> > > > > I suggest this plan, starting with the next release (2.0):
> > > > > - add version numbers to libraries
> > > > > - add version numbers to functions inside .map files
> > > > > - create a git tree dedicated to maintenance and API compatibility
> > > > >
> > > > > It means these version numbers must be incremented when breaking the API.
> > > > > Though the old code paths will be maintained and tested separately by volunteers.
> > > > > A mailing list for maintenance purpose could be created if needed.
> > > > >
> > > > Hi Thomas,
> > > >
> > > > I really think that the versionning is best handled inside the main repository
> > > > itself. Given that the proposed deprecation policy is over two releases i.e. an
> > > > API is marked deprecated in release X and then removed in X+1, I don't see the
> > > > maintaining of old code paths to be particularly onerous.
> > > >
> > > > /Bruce
> > >
> > > I agree with Bruce, even if it is on occasion an added workload, its not the
> > > sort of thing that can or should be placed on an alternate developer. Backwards
> > > compatibility is the sort of thing that has to be on the mind of the developer
> > > when modifying an API, and on the mind of the reviewer when reviewing code. To
> > > shunt that responsibility elsewhere invites the opportunity for backwards
> > > compatibilty to be a second class citizen who's goal will never be reached,
> > > because developers instituting ABI changes will never care about the
> > > consequences, and anyone worrying about backwards compatibility will always be
> > > playing catch up, possibly allowing ABI breaks to slip through.
> > >
> > > Neil
> >
> > Before taking a decision, we should detail every concern.
> >
> > 1/
> > Currently there are not a lot of API refactoring because DPDK is well tailored
> > for x86 and Intel NICs. But we are seeing that new CPU and new NICs to support
> > would require some adaptations.
> >
> Yes, you're absolutely right here. I had hoped that, during my presentation
> that this would happen occasionaly, and that we would need to deal with it.
> What I think you are implying here (correct me if I'm wrong), is that you would
> advocate that we wait to introduce ABI versioning until after such refactoring
> is, for lack of a better term "complete". The problem here is that, software
> that is growing in user base is never "complete". What you are effectively
> saying is that you want to wait until the API is in a state in which no (or
> almost no) more changes are required, then fixate it. Thats quite simply never
> going to happen. And if it does, it obviates the need for versioning at all.
I agree Neil. This point is not about how long we should wait but how the
overhead could be estimate for coming releases.
> > 2/
> > I'm curious to know how you would handle a big change like the recent mbuf rework.
> > Should we duplicate the structure and all the functions using mbuf?
>
> Several ways, what you suggest above is one way, although thats what I would
> consider to be a pessimal case. Ideally such large changes are extreemely rare
> (a search of the git history I think confirms this). Much more common are
> small, limited changes to various API's for which providing multiple versions of
> a function is a much more reasonable approach.
>
> In the event that we do decide to do a refactor that is so far reaching that we
> simply don't feel like multi-versioning is feasible, the recourse is then to
> deprecate the old API, publish that information on the deprecation schedule,
> wait for a release, then replace it wholesale. When the API is released, we
> bump the DSO version number. Note the versioning policy never guarantees that
> backwards compatibility will always be available, nor does it stipulate that a
> newer version of the API is available prior to removing the old one. The goal
> here is to give distributors and application vendors advanced notice of ABI
> breaking changes so that they can adapt appropriately before they are caught off
> guard. If the new ABI can't be packaged alongside the old, then so be it,
> downstream vendors will have to use the upstream git head to test and validate,
> rather than a newer distribution release
Seems reasonable.
> Ideally though, that shouldn't happen, because it causes downstream headaches,
> and we would really like to avoid that. Thats why I feel its so important to
> keep this work in the main tree. If we segregate it to a separate location it
> will make it all to easy for developers to ignore these needs and just assume we
> constantly drop old ABI versions without providing backwards compatibility.
>
> > 3/
> > Should we add new fields at the end of its structure to avoid ABI breaking?
> >
> In the common case yes, this usually avoids ABI breakage, though it can't always
> be relied upon (e.g. cases where structures are statically allocated by an
> application). And then there are patches that attempt to reduce memory usage
> and increase performance by re-arranging structures. In those cases we need to
> do ABI versioning or announce/delay/release as noted above, though again, that
> should really be avoided if possible.
So there is no hope of having fields logically sorted.
Not a major problem but we have to know it. And it should probably be
documented if we choose this way.
> > 4/
> > Developers contribute because they need some changes. So when breaking
> > an API, their application is already ready for the new version.
> > I mean the author of such patch is probably not really motivated to keep ABI
> > compability and duplicate the code path.
> >
> What? That doesn't make any sense. Its our job to enforce this requirement on
> developers during the review cycle. If you don't feel like we can enforce
> coding requirements on the project, we've already lost. I agree that an
> application developer submitting a patch for DPDK might not care about ABI
> compatibility because they've already modified their application, but they (and
> we) need to recognize that there are more than just a handful of users of the
> DPDK, some of whom don't participate in this community (i.e. are simply end
> users). We need to make sure all users needs are met. Thats the entire point
> of this patch series, to make DPDK available to a wider range of users.
Exact. To make it simple, you care about end users and I have to care about
developers motivation. But I perfectly understand the end users needs.
I don't say we cannot enforce coding requirements. I just think it will be
less pleasant.
> > 5/
> > Intead of simply modifying an API function, it would appear as a whole new
> > function with some differences compared to the old one. Such change is really
> > not convenient to review.
>
> Um, yes, versioning is the process of creating an additional
> function that closely resembles an older version of the same function, but with
> different arguments and a newer version number. Thats what it is by defintion,
> and yes, its additional work. All you're saying here is that, its extra work
> and we shouldn't do it. I thought I made this clear on the call, its been done
> in thousands of other libraries, but if you just don't want to do it, then you
> should abandon distributions as a way to reach a larger community, but if you
> want to see the DPDK reach a larger community, then this is something that has
> to happen, hard or not.
The goal of this discussion is to establish all the implications of this
decision. We expose the facts. No conclusion.
> > 6/
> > Testing ABI compatibility could be tricky. We would need a tool to check it's
> > mostly OK. The good place for such a tool is in app/test. It was designed to be
> > the unit tests of the API.
>
> That seems like a reasonable idea, but I'm not sure what the concern is. Are
> you saying that you need to test every old version of the ABI? Thats fine. I
> really don't think it has to be as stringent as the latest version testing, but
> if you want to, it should be as easy as building the latest release of
> the DPDK libraries, and the previous version of the test application. That will
> force the previous version code paths to be used by the test app in the new
> library and, if the test fully exercize the api, then you should get pretty good
> coverage.
Yes it will provide an unit test to developpers.
> > 7/
> > This system would allow application developpers to upgrade DPDK to n+1 without
> > rebuilding. But when upgrading to n+2, they should have adapted their
> > application to comply with n+1 API (because n will be removed).
>
> Only assuming that the old ABI facet was deprecated at the same time the new ABI
> was introduced. Theres nothing that says we have to do that, but I digress.
>
> > So this solution offers a delay between the upgrade decision and the
> > app work. Note that they could prepare their application before upgrading.
> > Anyway, an upgrade should be tested before doing it effectively. The behaviour
> > of the application could change and require some adaptations.
> >
> Um, yes. Whats the concern here?
I'm just trying to figure which workflows are eased by progressive ABI deprecation.
> Downstream application developers need 2
> things:
>
> A) The ability to note that ABI changes are comming so that they can adapt to
> the new version
>
> B) Time to do so
>
> The deprecation policy, if properly distributed by Distributions provide (A),
> and the ABI versioning provides (B). I.e. they can get all the latest bug fixes
> and enhancements while in parallel adapting to the comming new version. Note
> ideally this will happen rarely, as having to constantly rebuild/adapt does not
> sit will with application vendors who choose to go through distributions, but
> we'll do the best we can.
It's an interesting point. In a long-term distribution model like RHEL, do you
plan to upgrade DPDK at each new release?
> > 8/
> > How to handle a change in the implementation of a PMD which severely impact
> > the application? Example: an ol_flag was mis-used and the application has
> > a workaround to interpret this flag but it's now incompatible with the fix.
> >
> We run into this sometimes in Fedora and RHEL, and doesn't require versioning.
> The problem you describe is one in which something internal to the library that
> an application has come to rely on. Fixing the bug isn't typically considered
> within the purview of versioning, because you're not changing the ABI, you're
> just correcting a bug in the PMD's behavior. Customers who ask for the behavior
> to remain unchanged are asking for what's commonly referred to as "Bug for Bug
> compatibility" and in those cases the application vendor needs to release a
> corresponding fix. Developers can't be required to preserve buggy behavior.
>
> It should also be noted that in this case, ABI never changed. All the data
> types/sizes/locations/etc have remained unchanged. Its just a bug in
> interpretation of data passed accross the ABI. As such, theres nothing for ABI
> versioning to do here.
OK, that's what I thought.
> > 9/
> > When we don't want to adapt an application, it means the development is
> > finished and we don't care about the new features of the library.
> > So I wonder if it wouldn't be more appropriate to provide stable releases
> > with true maintenance to such users. I understood that is what Redhat provides
> > to their customers.
> >
> No, thats incorrect, we frequently update packages to the latest upstream
> version when at all possible. We are able to do this sepcifically because
> upstream library releases provide ABI versioning, so that we can update with
> confidence. If they don't do that, then yes, we are often restricted to
> selecting a release and maintaining it for the duration of a major RHEL release,
> which implies that security and feature updates are extreemely limited
>
> That said, if you wanted to do ongoing maintenence on each release, I suppsose
> you could, in fact its somewhat simmilar to the -stable series that the kernel
> uses, exept that the kernel enoys an extreemly stable user space ABI, and even
> then the kernel -stable series doesn't take internal ABI changing patches, so
> theres alot of divergence. You don't currently have that stable ABI interface,
> and so I think you'll find that that doing this is way more work than just
> supporting versioning.
>
> To illustrate, lets say you want to support maintenence releases the latest 3
> releases of the DPDK with patches. To do this, for every patch that is posted
> to the dpdk that is a bug fix, you will have to apply it four times, one for
> the git head, and again for each of the three releases that you are doing
> maintenence on. the patch will of course apply cleanly to the git head, as
> thats what the developer wrote it against, but the other three releases have
> every opportunity to conflict with code introduced in the git head but that
> couldn't be taken into the maintenece releases. Fixing those up is work that
> you will either have to do, or request that the patch author do. And for this
> work you will provide distibutions with about 2 years of ABI stability
> (presuming an ~8 month release cycle), after which they are back to just living
> with whatever they stabilized on until the next major relase (note a single RHEL
> major release has a 10+ year life cycle). I would personally rather avoid that
> work, and just do the ABI compatibility, as those patches are far fewer in
> number, and it buys for the effort.
Interesting point of view.
Note that there is no plan to maintain stable version on dpdk.org.
But if some volunteers want absolutely to do it (even after reading your comment),
we cannot forbid it.
> > Hope this discussion will bring a clear idea of what should be done with
> > which implications.
> > Thanks
Thanks again
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: [dpdk-dev] versioning and maintenance
2014-11-20 21:08 ` Thomas Monjalon
@ 2014-11-21 1:05 ` Neil Horman
2014-11-21 13:23 ` Thomas Monjalon
0 siblings, 1 reply; 9+ messages in thread
From: Neil Horman @ 2014-11-21 1:05 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Thomas Monjalon; +Cc: dev
On Thu, Nov 20, 2014 at 10:08:25PM +0100, Thomas Monjalon wrote:
> 2014-11-20 13:25, Neil Horman:
> > On Thu, Nov 20, 2014 at 06:09:10PM +0100, Thomas Monjalon wrote:
> > > 2014-11-19 10:13, Neil Horman:
> > > > On Wed, Nov 19, 2014 at 11:35:08AM +0000, Bruce Richardson wrote:
> > > > > On Wed, Nov 19, 2014 at 12:22:14PM +0100, Thomas Monjalon wrote:
> > > > > > Following the discussion we had with Neil during the conference call,
> > > > > > I suggest this plan, starting with the next release (2.0):
> > > > > > - add version numbers to libraries
> > > > > > - add version numbers to functions inside .map files
> > > > > > - create a git tree dedicated to maintenance and API compatibility
> > > > > >
> > > > > > It means these version numbers must be incremented when breaking the API.
> > > > > > Though the old code paths will be maintained and tested separately by volunteers.
> > > > > > A mailing list for maintenance purpose could be created if needed.
> > > > > >
> > > > > Hi Thomas,
> > > > >
> > > > > I really think that the versionning is best handled inside the main repository
> > > > > itself. Given that the proposed deprecation policy is over two releases i.e. an
> > > > > API is marked deprecated in release X and then removed in X+1, I don't see the
> > > > > maintaining of old code paths to be particularly onerous.
> > > > >
> > > > > /Bruce
> > > >
> > > > I agree with Bruce, even if it is on occasion an added workload, its not the
> > > > sort of thing that can or should be placed on an alternate developer. Backwards
> > > > compatibility is the sort of thing that has to be on the mind of the developer
> > > > when modifying an API, and on the mind of the reviewer when reviewing code. To
> > > > shunt that responsibility elsewhere invites the opportunity for backwards
> > > > compatibilty to be a second class citizen who's goal will never be reached,
> > > > because developers instituting ABI changes will never care about the
> > > > consequences, and anyone worrying about backwards compatibility will always be
> > > > playing catch up, possibly allowing ABI breaks to slip through.
> > > >
> > > > Neil
> > >
> > > Before taking a decision, we should detail every concern.
> > >
> > > 1/
> > > Currently there are not a lot of API refactoring because DPDK is well tailored
> > > for x86 and Intel NICs. But we are seeing that new CPU and new NICs to support
> > > would require some adaptations.
> > >
> > Yes, you're absolutely right here. I had hoped that, during my presentation
> > that this would happen occasionaly, and that we would need to deal with it.
> > What I think you are implying here (correct me if I'm wrong), is that you would
> > advocate that we wait to introduce ABI versioning until after such refactoring
> > is, for lack of a better term "complete". The problem here is that, software
> > that is growing in user base is never "complete". What you are effectively
> > saying is that you want to wait until the API is in a state in which no (or
> > almost no) more changes are required, then fixate it. Thats quite simply never
> > going to happen. And if it does, it obviates the need for versioning at all.
>
> I agree Neil. This point is not about how long we should wait but how the
> overhead could be estimate for coming releases.
>
Well, I understand the desire, but I'm not sure how it can be accomplished. For
a given release, the overhead will be dependent on two factors:
1) The number off ABI changes in a given release
2) The extent of the ABI changes that were made.
If we have a way to predict those, then we can estimate the overhead, but
without that information, you're kinda stuck. That said, if we all concur that
this is a necessecary effort to undertake, then the overhead is, not overly
important. Whats more important is providing enough time to alot enough time to
do the work for a given project. That is to say, when undertaking a large
refactoring, or other project that promises to make significant ABI changes,
that the developer needs to factor in time to design an implement backwards
compatibility. Put another way, if the developer does their job right, and
takes backwards compatibility seriously, the overhead to you as a maintainer is
nil. The onus to handle this extra effort needs to be on the developer.
> > > 2/
> > > I'm curious to know how you would handle a big change like the recent mbuf rework.
> > > Should we duplicate the structure and all the functions using mbuf?
> >
> > Several ways, what you suggest above is one way, although thats what I would
> > consider to be a pessimal case. Ideally such large changes are extreemely rare
> > (a search of the git history I think confirms this). Much more common are
> > small, limited changes to various API's for which providing multiple versions of
> > a function is a much more reasonable approach.
> >
> > In the event that we do decide to do a refactor that is so far reaching that we
> > simply don't feel like multi-versioning is feasible, the recourse is then to
> > deprecate the old API, publish that information on the deprecation schedule,
> > wait for a release, then replace it wholesale. When the API is released, we
> > bump the DSO version number. Note the versioning policy never guarantees that
> > backwards compatibility will always be available, nor does it stipulate that a
> > newer version of the API is available prior to removing the old one. The goal
> > here is to give distributors and application vendors advanced notice of ABI
> > breaking changes so that they can adapt appropriately before they are caught off
> > guard. If the new ABI can't be packaged alongside the old, then so be it,
> > downstream vendors will have to use the upstream git head to test and validate,
> > rather than a newer distribution release
>
> Seems reasonable.
>
> > Ideally though, that shouldn't happen, because it causes downstream headaches,
> > and we would really like to avoid that. Thats why I feel its so important to
> > keep this work in the main tree. If we segregate it to a separate location it
> > will make it all to easy for developers to ignore these needs and just assume we
> > constantly drop old ABI versions without providing backwards compatibility.
> >
> > > 3/
> > > Should we add new fields at the end of its structure to avoid ABI breaking?
> > >
> > In the common case yes, this usually avoids ABI breakage, though it can't always
> > be relied upon (e.g. cases where structures are statically allocated by an
> > application). And then there are patches that attempt to reduce memory usage
> > and increase performance by re-arranging structures. In those cases we need to
> > do ABI versioning or announce/delay/release as noted above, though again, that
> > should really be avoided if possible.
>
> So there is no hope of having fields logically sorted.
> Not a major problem but we have to know it. And it should probably be
> documented if we choose this way.
>
Sure, though I'm not sure I agree with the statement above. Having fields
logically sorted seems like it should be a forgone conclusion in that the
developer should have laid those fields out in some semblance of order in the
first place. If a large data structure re-ordering is taking place such that
structure fields are getting rearranged, that in my mind is part of a large
refactoring for which the entire API that is affected by those data structures
must have a new version created to provide backward compatibility, or in the
extreeme case, we may need to preform a warn and deprecate/exchange operation as
noted previously, though again, that is a Nuclear option.
> > > 4/
> > > Developers contribute because they need some changes. So when breaking
> > > an API, their application is already ready for the new version.
> > > I mean the author of such patch is probably not really motivated to keep ABI
> > > compability and duplicate the code path.
> > >
> > What? That doesn't make any sense. Its our job to enforce this requirement on
> > developers during the review cycle. If you don't feel like we can enforce
> > coding requirements on the project, we've already lost. I agree that an
> > application developer submitting a patch for DPDK might not care about ABI
> > compatibility because they've already modified their application, but they (and
> > we) need to recognize that there are more than just a handful of users of the
> > DPDK, some of whom don't participate in this community (i.e. are simply end
> > users). We need to make sure all users needs are met. Thats the entire point
> > of this patch series, to make DPDK available to a wider range of users.
>
> Exact. To make it simple, you care about end users and I have to care about
> developers motivation. But I perfectly understand the end users needs.
> I don't say we cannot enforce coding requirements. I just think it will be
> less pleasant.
>
I disagree with the assertion that you will loose developers becausee they don't
care about compatibility. You're developer base may change. This is no
different than any other requirement that you place on a developer. You make
all sorts of mandates regarding development (they can't break other older
supported cpu architecture, their code has to compile on all configurations,
etc). This is no different.
> > > 5/
> > > Intead of simply modifying an API function, it would appear as a whole new
> > > function with some differences compared to the old one. Such change is really
> > > not convenient to review.
> >
> > Um, yes, versioning is the process of creating an additional
> > function that closely resembles an older version of the same function, but with
> > different arguments and a newer version number. Thats what it is by defintion,
> > and yes, its additional work. All you're saying here is that, its extra work
> > and we shouldn't do it. I thought I made this clear on the call, its been done
> > in thousands of other libraries, but if you just don't want to do it, then you
> > should abandon distributions as a way to reach a larger community, but if you
> > want to see the DPDK reach a larger community, then this is something that has
> > to happen, hard or not.
>
> The goal of this discussion is to establish all the implications of this
> decision. We expose the facts. No conclusion.
>
You haven't exposed a fact, you've asserted an opinion. Theres is no notion of
something being convienient or inconvienient to review in any quantitative way.
If facts are your goal, you missed the mark here.
> > > 6/
> > > Testing ABI compatibility could be tricky. We would need a tool to check it's
> > > mostly OK. The good place for such a tool is in app/test. It was designed to be
> > > the unit tests of the API.
> >
> > That seems like a reasonable idea, but I'm not sure what the concern is. Are
> > you saying that you need to test every old version of the ABI? Thats fine. I
> > really don't think it has to be as stringent as the latest version testing, but
> > if you want to, it should be as easy as building the latest release of
> > the DPDK libraries, and the previous version of the test application. That will
> > force the previous version code paths to be used by the test app in the new
> > library and, if the test fully exercize the api, then you should get pretty good
> > coverage.
>
> Yes it will provide an unit test to developpers.
>
> > > 7/
> > > This system would allow application developpers to upgrade DPDK to n+1 without
> > > rebuilding. But when upgrading to n+2, they should have adapted their
> > > application to comply with n+1 API (because n will be removed).
> >
> > Only assuming that the old ABI facet was deprecated at the same time the new ABI
> > was introduced. Theres nothing that says we have to do that, but I digress.
> >
> > > So this solution offers a delay between the upgrade decision and the
> > > app work. Note that they could prepare their application before upgrading.
> > > Anyway, an upgrade should be tested before doing it effectively. The behaviour
> > > of the application could change and require some adaptations.
> > >
> > Um, yes. Whats the concern here?
>
> I'm just trying to figure which workflows are eased by progressive ABI deprecation.
>
The workflow for end users, in that they are given an alert prior to a breaking
change, and the time to fix it, in a way that distributions can manage without
having to individually (as distributions) undertake that effort on their own, an
in a way that might one day provide for multi version compatibility.
> > Downstream application developers need 2
> > things:
> >
> > A) The ability to note that ABI changes are comming so that they can adapt to
> > the new version
> >
> > B) Time to do so
> >
> > The deprecation policy, if properly distributed by Distributions provide (A),
> > and the ABI versioning provides (B). I.e. they can get all the latest bug fixes
> > and enhancements while in parallel adapting to the comming new version. Note
> > ideally this will happen rarely, as having to constantly rebuild/adapt does not
> > sit will with application vendors who choose to go through distributions, but
> > we'll do the best we can.
>
> It's an interesting point. In a long-term distribution model like RHEL, do you
> plan to upgrade DPDK at each new release?
>
Given that you intermix hardware support with bug fixes and new features (which
granted is not uncommon), yes, I don't see any way to avoid doing so. We could
of course cherry pick bug fixes and non-ABI-breaking features, to preserve
compatibility, but doing so diverges from upstream quickly to the point that it
becomes extreemely difficult to maintain. As an example, the one project that
Red Hat does this on routinely is the kernel, and to do so employs a staff of
hundreds of engineers. No distribution wants to do that for every user space
library that they support. They/we are willing to do minor fixes in a given
release with the foreknoweldge that we can drop them when the next relase comes
out, but beyond that, the logistics just don't scale.
> > > 8/
> > > How to handle a change in the implementation of a PMD which severely impact
> > > the application? Example: an ol_flag was mis-used and the application has
> > > a workaround to interpret this flag but it's now incompatible with the fix.
> > >
> > We run into this sometimes in Fedora and RHEL, and doesn't require versioning.
> > The problem you describe is one in which something internal to the library that
> > an application has come to rely on. Fixing the bug isn't typically considered
> > within the purview of versioning, because you're not changing the ABI, you're
> > just correcting a bug in the PMD's behavior. Customers who ask for the behavior
> > to remain unchanged are asking for what's commonly referred to as "Bug for Bug
> > compatibility" and in those cases the application vendor needs to release a
> > corresponding fix. Developers can't be required to preserve buggy behavior.
> >
> > It should also be noted that in this case, ABI never changed. All the data
> > types/sizes/locations/etc have remained unchanged. Its just a bug in
> > interpretation of data passed accross the ABI. As such, theres nothing for ABI
> > versioning to do here.
>
> OK, that's what I thought.
>
> > > 9/
> > > When we don't want to adapt an application, it means the development is
> > > finished and we don't care about the new features of the library.
> > > So I wonder if it wouldn't be more appropriate to provide stable releases
> > > with true maintenance to such users. I understood that is what Redhat provides
> > > to their customers.
> > >
> > No, thats incorrect, we frequently update packages to the latest upstream
> > version when at all possible. We are able to do this sepcifically because
> > upstream library releases provide ABI versioning, so that we can update with
> > confidence. If they don't do that, then yes, we are often restricted to
> > selecting a release and maintaining it for the duration of a major RHEL release,
> > which implies that security and feature updates are extreemely limited
> >
> > That said, if you wanted to do ongoing maintenence on each release, I suppsose
> > you could, in fact its somewhat simmilar to the -stable series that the kernel
> > uses, exept that the kernel enoys an extreemly stable user space ABI, and even
> > then the kernel -stable series doesn't take internal ABI changing patches, so
> > theres alot of divergence. You don't currently have that stable ABI interface,
> > and so I think you'll find that that doing this is way more work than just
> > supporting versioning.
> >
> > To illustrate, lets say you want to support maintenence releases the latest 3
> > releases of the DPDK with patches. To do this, for every patch that is posted
> > to the dpdk that is a bug fix, you will have to apply it four times, one for
> > the git head, and again for each of the three releases that you are doing
> > maintenence on. the patch will of course apply cleanly to the git head, as
> > thats what the developer wrote it against, but the other three releases have
> > every opportunity to conflict with code introduced in the git head but that
> > couldn't be taken into the maintenece releases. Fixing those up is work that
> > you will either have to do, or request that the patch author do. And for this
> > work you will provide distibutions with about 2 years of ABI stability
> > (presuming an ~8 month release cycle), after which they are back to just living
> > with whatever they stabilized on until the next major relase (note a single RHEL
> > major release has a 10+ year life cycle). I would personally rather avoid that
> > work, and just do the ABI compatibility, as those patches are far fewer in
> > number, and it buys for the effort.
>
> Interesting point of view.
> Note that there is no plan to maintain stable version on dpdk.org.
> But if some volunteers want absolutely to do it (even after reading your comment),
> we cannot forbid it.
>
Certainly, and as I noted the kernel does that. But given the rate of change
that the DPDK undergoes, and the current size of the community, I don't think
anyone is going to step up to do that work. Thats really the underlying problem
here, you can solve this problem lots of ways if you have enough manpower, but
given the resources at hand, doing versioning in the master tree is really the
only viable solution.
> > > Hope this discussion will bring a clear idea of what should be done with
> > > which implications.
> > > Thanks
> Thanks again
>
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: [dpdk-dev] versioning and maintenance
2014-11-21 1:05 ` Neil Horman
@ 2014-11-21 13:23 ` Thomas Monjalon
2014-11-21 20:17 ` Neil Horman
0 siblings, 1 reply; 9+ messages in thread
From: Thomas Monjalon @ 2014-11-21 13:23 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Neil Horman; +Cc: dev
2014-11-20 20:05, Neil Horman:
> On Thu, Nov 20, 2014 at 10:08:25PM +0100, Thomas Monjalon wrote:
> > 2014-11-20 13:25, Neil Horman:
> > > On Thu, Nov 20, 2014 at 06:09:10PM +0100, Thomas Monjalon wrote:
> > > > 2014-11-19 10:13, Neil Horman:
> > > > > On Wed, Nov 19, 2014 at 11:35:08AM +0000, Bruce Richardson wrote:
> > > > > > On Wed, Nov 19, 2014 at 12:22:14PM +0100, Thomas Monjalon wrote:
> > > > > > > Following the discussion we had with Neil during the conference call,
> > > > > > > I suggest this plan, starting with the next release (2.0):
> > > > > > > - add version numbers to libraries
> > > > > > > - add version numbers to functions inside .map files
> > > > > > > - create a git tree dedicated to maintenance and API compatibility
> > > > > > >
> > > > > > > It means these version numbers must be incremented when breaking the API.
> > > > > > > Though the old code paths will be maintained and tested separately by volunteers.
> > > > > > > A mailing list for maintenance purpose could be created if needed.
> > > > > > >
> > > > > > Hi Thomas,
> > > > > >
> > > > > > I really think that the versionning is best handled inside the main repository
> > > > > > itself. Given that the proposed deprecation policy is over two releases i.e. an
> > > > > > API is marked deprecated in release X and then removed in X+1, I don't see the
> > > > > > maintaining of old code paths to be particularly onerous.
> > > > > >
> > > > > > /Bruce
> > > > >
> > > > > I agree with Bruce, even if it is on occasion an added workload, its not the
> > > > > sort of thing that can or should be placed on an alternate developer. Backwards
> > > > > compatibility is the sort of thing that has to be on the mind of the developer
> > > > > when modifying an API, and on the mind of the reviewer when reviewing code. To
> > > > > shunt that responsibility elsewhere invites the opportunity for backwards
> > > > > compatibilty to be a second class citizen who's goal will never be reached,
> > > > > because developers instituting ABI changes will never care about the
> > > > > consequences, and anyone worrying about backwards compatibility will always be
> > > > > playing catch up, possibly allowing ABI breaks to slip through.
> > > > >
> > > > > Neil
> > > >
> > > > Before taking a decision, we should detail every concern.
> > > >
> > > > 1/
> > > > Currently there are not a lot of API refactoring because DPDK is well tailored
> > > > for x86 and Intel NICs. But we are seeing that new CPU and new NICs to support
> > > > would require some adaptations.
> > > >
> > > Yes, you're absolutely right here. I had hoped that, during my presentation
> > > that this would happen occasionaly, and that we would need to deal with it.
> > > What I think you are implying here (correct me if I'm wrong), is that you would
> > > advocate that we wait to introduce ABI versioning until after such refactoring
> > > is, for lack of a better term "complete". The problem here is that, software
> > > that is growing in user base is never "complete". What you are effectively
> > > saying is that you want to wait until the API is in a state in which no (or
> > > almost no) more changes are required, then fixate it. Thats quite simply never
> > > going to happen. And if it does, it obviates the need for versioning at all.
> >
> > I agree Neil. This point is not about how long we should wait but how the
> > overhead could be estimate for coming releases.
> >
> Well, I understand the desire, but I'm not sure how it can be accomplished. For
> a given release, the overhead will be dependent on two factors:
>
> 1) The number off ABI changes in a given release
>
> 2) The extent of the ABI changes that were made.
>
> If we have a way to predict those, then we can estimate the overhead, but
> without that information, you're kinda stuck. That said, if we all concur that
> this is a necessecary effort to undertake, then the overhead is, not overly
> important. Whats more important is providing enough time to alot enough time to
> do the work for a given project. That is to say, when undertaking a large
> refactoring, or other project that promises to make significant ABI changes,
> that the developer needs to factor in time to design an implement backwards
> compatibility. Put another way, if the developer does their job right, and
> takes backwards compatibility seriously, the overhead to you as a maintainer is
> nil. The onus to handle this extra effort needs to be on the developer.
>
> > > > 2/
> > > > I'm curious to know how you would handle a big change like the recent mbuf rework.
> > > > Should we duplicate the structure and all the functions using mbuf?
> > >
> > > Several ways, what you suggest above is one way, although thats what I would
> > > consider to be a pessimal case. Ideally such large changes are extreemely rare
> > > (a search of the git history I think confirms this). Much more common are
> > > small, limited changes to various API's for which providing multiple versions of
> > > a function is a much more reasonable approach.
> > >
> > > In the event that we do decide to do a refactor that is so far reaching that we
> > > simply don't feel like multi-versioning is feasible, the recourse is then to
> > > deprecate the old API, publish that information on the deprecation schedule,
> > > wait for a release, then replace it wholesale. When the API is released, we
> > > bump the DSO version number. Note the versioning policy never guarantees that
> > > backwards compatibility will always be available, nor does it stipulate that a
> > > newer version of the API is available prior to removing the old one. The goal
> > > here is to give distributors and application vendors advanced notice of ABI
> > > breaking changes so that they can adapt appropriately before they are caught off
> > > guard. If the new ABI can't be packaged alongside the old, then so be it,
> > > downstream vendors will have to use the upstream git head to test and validate,
> > > rather than a newer distribution release
> >
> > Seems reasonable.
> >
> > > Ideally though, that shouldn't happen, because it causes downstream headaches,
> > > and we would really like to avoid that. Thats why I feel its so important to
> > > keep this work in the main tree. If we segregate it to a separate location it
> > > will make it all to easy for developers to ignore these needs and just assume we
> > > constantly drop old ABI versions without providing backwards compatibility.
> > >
> > > > 3/
> > > > Should we add new fields at the end of its structure to avoid ABI breaking?
> > > >
> > > In the common case yes, this usually avoids ABI breakage, though it can't always
> > > be relied upon (e.g. cases where structures are statically allocated by an
> > > application). And then there are patches that attempt to reduce memory usage
> > > and increase performance by re-arranging structures. In those cases we need to
> > > do ABI versioning or announce/delay/release as noted above, though again, that
> > > should really be avoided if possible.
> >
> > So there is no hope of having fields logically sorted.
> > Not a major problem but we have to know it. And it should probably be
> > documented if we choose this way.
> >
> Sure, though I'm not sure I agree with the statement above. Having fields
> logically sorted seems like it should be a forgone conclusion in that the
> developer should have laid those fields out in some semblance of order in the
> first place. If a large data structure re-ordering is taking place such that
> structure fields are getting rearranged, that in my mind is part of a large
> refactoring for which the entire API that is affected by those data structures
> must have a new version created to provide backward compatibility, or in the
> extreeme case, we may need to preform a warn and deprecate/exchange operation as
> noted previously, though again, that is a Nuclear option.
Just to illustrate my thought:
Let's imagine this struct {
fish_name;
fish_taste;
vegetables_name;
}
When adding the new field "fish_cooking", we'll add it at the end to avoid ABI break.
struct {
fish_name;
fish_taste;
vegetables_name;
fish_cooking;
}
So "fish_*" fields won't be grouped.
It's mostly an esthetic/readability consequence.
Now I'm hungry ;)
> > > > 4/
> > > > Developers contribute because they need some changes. So when breaking
> > > > an API, their application is already ready for the new version.
> > > > I mean the author of such patch is probably not really motivated to keep ABI
> > > > compability and duplicate the code path.
> > > >
> > > What? That doesn't make any sense. Its our job to enforce this requirement on
> > > developers during the review cycle. If you don't feel like we can enforce
> > > coding requirements on the project, we've already lost. I agree that an
> > > application developer submitting a patch for DPDK might not care about ABI
> > > compatibility because they've already modified their application, but they (and
> > > we) need to recognize that there are more than just a handful of users of the
> > > DPDK, some of whom don't participate in this community (i.e. are simply end
> > > users). We need to make sure all users needs are met. Thats the entire point
> > > of this patch series, to make DPDK available to a wider range of users.
> >
> > Exact. To make it simple, you care about end users and I have to care about
> > developers motivation. But I perfectly understand the end users needs.
> > I don't say we cannot enforce coding requirements. I just think it will be
> > less pleasant.
> >
> I disagree with the assertion that you will loose developers becausee they don't
> care about compatibility. You're developer base may change. This is no
> different than any other requirement that you place on a developer. You make
> all sorts of mandates regarding development (they can't break other older
> supported cpu architecture, their code has to compile on all configurations,
> etc). This is no different.
>
> > > > 5/
> > > > Intead of simply modifying an API function, it would appear as a whole new
> > > > function with some differences compared to the old one. Such change is really
> > > > not convenient to review.
> > >
> > > Um, yes, versioning is the process of creating an additional
> > > function that closely resembles an older version of the same function, but with
> > > different arguments and a newer version number. Thats what it is by defintion,
> > > and yes, its additional work. All you're saying here is that, its extra work
> > > and we shouldn't do it. I thought I made this clear on the call, its been done
> > > in thousands of other libraries, but if you just don't want to do it, then you
> > > should abandon distributions as a way to reach a larger community, but if you
> > > want to see the DPDK reach a larger community, then this is something that has
> > > to happen, hard or not.
> >
> > The goal of this discussion is to establish all the implications of this
> > decision. We expose the facts. No conclusion.
> >
> You haven't exposed a fact, you've asserted an opinion. Theres is no notion of
> something being convienient or inconvienient to review in any quantitative way.
> If facts are your goal, you missed the mark here.
Maybe you use a tool that I don't know.
My main material for review is the patch. And I think it's simpler to check an
one-line change than a duplicated code path. But instead of giving my opinion,
I must expose what it looks like for a simple example:
- void cook_fish()
+ void cook_fish(oil_bottle)
{
+ use_oil(oil_bottle);
start_fire();
put_fish();
wait();
stop_fire();
}
vs
- void cook_fish()
+ void __vsym cook_fish_v1()
{
start_fire();
put_fish();
wait();
stop_fire();
}
+ VERSION_SYMBOL(cook_fish, _v1, 1);
+ void cook_fish(oil_bottle)
+ {
+ use_oil(oil_bottle);
+ start_fire();
+ put_fish();
+ wait();
+ stop_fire();
+ }
+ BIND_DEFAULT_SYMBOL(cook_fish, 2);
> > > > 6/
> > > > Testing ABI compatibility could be tricky. We would need a tool to check it's
> > > > mostly OK. The good place for such a tool is in app/test. It was designed to be
> > > > the unit tests of the API.
> > >
> > > That seems like a reasonable idea, but I'm not sure what the concern is. Are
> > > you saying that you need to test every old version of the ABI? Thats fine. I
> > > really don't think it has to be as stringent as the latest version testing, but
> > > if you want to, it should be as easy as building the latest release of
> > > the DPDK libraries, and the previous version of the test application. That will
> > > force the previous version code paths to be used by the test app in the new
> > > library and, if the test fully exercize the api, then you should get pretty good
> > > coverage.
> >
> > Yes it will provide an unit test to developpers.
> >
> > > > 7/
> > > > This system would allow application developpers to upgrade DPDK to n+1 without
> > > > rebuilding. But when upgrading to n+2, they should have adapted their
> > > > application to comply with n+1 API (because n will be removed).
> > >
> > > Only assuming that the old ABI facet was deprecated at the same time the new ABI
> > > was introduced. Theres nothing that says we have to do that, but I digress.
> > >
> > > > So this solution offers a delay between the upgrade decision and the
> > > > app work. Note that they could prepare their application before upgrading.
> > > > Anyway, an upgrade should be tested before doing it effectively. The behaviour
> > > > of the application could change and require some adaptations.
> > > >
> > > Um, yes. Whats the concern here?
> >
> > I'm just trying to figure which workflows are eased by progressive ABI deprecation.
> >
> The workflow for end users, in that they are given an alert prior to a breaking
> change, and the time to fix it, in a way that distributions can manage without
> having to individually (as distributions) undertake that effort on their own, an
> in a way that might one day provide for multi version compatibility.
>
> > > Downstream application developers need 2
> > > things:
> > >
> > > A) The ability to note that ABI changes are comming so that they can adapt to
> > > the new version
> > >
> > > B) Time to do so
> > >
> > > The deprecation policy, if properly distributed by Distributions provide (A),
> > > and the ABI versioning provides (B). I.e. they can get all the latest bug fixes
> > > and enhancements while in parallel adapting to the comming new version. Note
> > > ideally this will happen rarely, as having to constantly rebuild/adapt does not
> > > sit will with application vendors who choose to go through distributions, but
> > > we'll do the best we can.
> >
> > It's an interesting point. In a long-term distribution model like RHEL, do you
> > plan to upgrade DPDK at each new release?
> >
> Given that you intermix hardware support with bug fixes and new features (which
> granted is not uncommon), yes, I don't see any way to avoid doing so. We could
> of course cherry pick bug fixes and non-ABI-breaking features, to preserve
> compatibility, but doing so diverges from upstream quickly to the point that it
> becomes extreemely difficult to maintain. As an example, the one project that
> Red Hat does this on routinely is the kernel, and to do so employs a staff of
> hundreds of engineers. No distribution wants to do that for every user space
> library that they support. They/we are willing to do minor fixes in a given
> release with the foreknoweldge that we can drop them when the next relase comes
> out, but beyond that, the logistics just don't scale.
>
> > > > 8/
> > > > How to handle a change in the implementation of a PMD which severely impact
> > > > the application? Example: an ol_flag was mis-used and the application has
> > > > a workaround to interpret this flag but it's now incompatible with the fix.
> > > >
> > > We run into this sometimes in Fedora and RHEL, and doesn't require versioning.
> > > The problem you describe is one in which something internal to the library that
> > > an application has come to rely on. Fixing the bug isn't typically considered
> > > within the purview of versioning, because you're not changing the ABI, you're
> > > just correcting a bug in the PMD's behavior. Customers who ask for the behavior
> > > to remain unchanged are asking for what's commonly referred to as "Bug for Bug
> > > compatibility" and in those cases the application vendor needs to release a
> > > corresponding fix. Developers can't be required to preserve buggy behavior.
> > >
> > > It should also be noted that in this case, ABI never changed. All the data
> > > types/sizes/locations/etc have remained unchanged. Its just a bug in
> > > interpretation of data passed accross the ABI. As such, theres nothing for ABI
> > > versioning to do here.
> >
> > OK, that's what I thought.
> >
> > > > 9/
> > > > When we don't want to adapt an application, it means the development is
> > > > finished and we don't care about the new features of the library.
> > > > So I wonder if it wouldn't be more appropriate to provide stable releases
> > > > with true maintenance to such users. I understood that is what Redhat provides
> > > > to their customers.
> > > >
> > > No, thats incorrect, we frequently update packages to the latest upstream
> > > version when at all possible. We are able to do this sepcifically because
> > > upstream library releases provide ABI versioning, so that we can update with
> > > confidence. If they don't do that, then yes, we are often restricted to
> > > selecting a release and maintaining it for the duration of a major RHEL release,
> > > which implies that security and feature updates are extreemely limited
> > >
> > > That said, if you wanted to do ongoing maintenence on each release, I suppsose
> > > you could, in fact its somewhat simmilar to the -stable series that the kernel
> > > uses, exept that the kernel enoys an extreemly stable user space ABI, and even
> > > then the kernel -stable series doesn't take internal ABI changing patches, so
> > > theres alot of divergence. You don't currently have that stable ABI interface,
> > > and so I think you'll find that that doing this is way more work than just
> > > supporting versioning.
> > >
> > > To illustrate, lets say you want to support maintenence releases the latest 3
> > > releases of the DPDK with patches. To do this, for every patch that is posted
> > > to the dpdk that is a bug fix, you will have to apply it four times, one for
> > > the git head, and again for each of the three releases that you are doing
> > > maintenence on. the patch will of course apply cleanly to the git head, as
> > > thats what the developer wrote it against, but the other three releases have
> > > every opportunity to conflict with code introduced in the git head but that
> > > couldn't be taken into the maintenece releases. Fixing those up is work that
> > > you will either have to do, or request that the patch author do. And for this
> > > work you will provide distibutions with about 2 years of ABI stability
> > > (presuming an ~8 month release cycle), after which they are back to just living
> > > with whatever they stabilized on until the next major relase (note a single RHEL
> > > major release has a 10+ year life cycle). I would personally rather avoid that
> > > work, and just do the ABI compatibility, as those patches are far fewer in
> > > number, and it buys for the effort.
> >
> > Interesting point of view.
> > Note that there is no plan to maintain stable version on dpdk.org.
> > But if some volunteers want absolutely to do it (even after reading your comment),
> > we cannot forbid it.
> >
> Certainly, and as I noted the kernel does that. But given the rate of change
> that the DPDK undergoes, and the current size of the community, I don't think
> anyone is going to step up to do that work. Thats really the underlying problem
> here, you can solve this problem lots of ways if you have enough manpower, but
> given the resources at hand, doing versioning in the master tree is really the
> only viable solution.
>
> > > > Hope this discussion will bring a clear idea of what should be done with
> > > > which implications.
> > > > Thanks
> > Thanks again
I think my concerns are now well explained.
It was important to expose clearly what a such ABI policy means.
If nobody disagree with your approach, it should be accepted.
Thanks
--
Thomas
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: [dpdk-dev] versioning and maintenance
2014-11-21 13:23 ` Thomas Monjalon
@ 2014-11-21 20:17 ` Neil Horman
0 siblings, 0 replies; 9+ messages in thread
From: Neil Horman @ 2014-11-21 20:17 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Thomas Monjalon; +Cc: dev
On Fri, Nov 21, 2014 at 02:23:15PM +0100, Thomas Monjalon wrote:
> 2014-11-20 20:05, Neil Horman:
> > On Thu, Nov 20, 2014 at 10:08:25PM +0100, Thomas Monjalon wrote:
> > > 2014-11-20 13:25, Neil Horman:
> > > > On Thu, Nov 20, 2014 at 06:09:10PM +0100, Thomas Monjalon wrote:
> > > > > 2014-11-19 10:13, Neil Horman:
> > > > > > On Wed, Nov 19, 2014 at 11:35:08AM +0000, Bruce Richardson wrote:
> > > > > > > On Wed, Nov 19, 2014 at 12:22:14PM +0100, Thomas Monjalon wrote:
> > > > > > > > Following the discussion we had with Neil during the conference call,
> > > > > > > > I suggest this plan, starting with the next release (2.0):
> > > > > > > > - add version numbers to libraries
> > > > > > > > - add version numbers to functions inside .map files
> > > > > > > > - create a git tree dedicated to maintenance and API compatibility
> > > > > > > >
> > > > > > > > It means these version numbers must be incremented when breaking the API.
> > > > > > > > Though the old code paths will be maintained and tested separately by volunteers.
> > > > > > > > A mailing list for maintenance purpose could be created if needed.
> > > > > > > >
> > > > > > > Hi Thomas,
> > > > > > >
> > > > > > > I really think that the versionning is best handled inside the main repository
> > > > > > > itself. Given that the proposed deprecation policy is over two releases i.e. an
> > > > > > > API is marked deprecated in release X and then removed in X+1, I don't see the
> > > > > > > maintaining of old code paths to be particularly onerous.
> > > > > > >
> > > > > > > /Bruce
> > > > > >
> > > > > > I agree with Bruce, even if it is on occasion an added workload, its not the
> > > > > > sort of thing that can or should be placed on an alternate developer. Backwards
> > > > > > compatibility is the sort of thing that has to be on the mind of the developer
> > > > > > when modifying an API, and on the mind of the reviewer when reviewing code. To
> > > > > > shunt that responsibility elsewhere invites the opportunity for backwards
> > > > > > compatibilty to be a second class citizen who's goal will never be reached,
> > > > > > because developers instituting ABI changes will never care about the
> > > > > > consequences, and anyone worrying about backwards compatibility will always be
> > > > > > playing catch up, possibly allowing ABI breaks to slip through.
> > > > > >
> > > > > > Neil
> > > > >
> > > > > Before taking a decision, we should detail every concern.
> > > > >
> > > > > 1/
> > > > > Currently there are not a lot of API refactoring because DPDK is well tailored
> > > > > for x86 and Intel NICs. But we are seeing that new CPU and new NICs to support
> > > > > would require some adaptations.
> > > > >
> > > > Yes, you're absolutely right here. I had hoped that, during my presentation
> > > > that this would happen occasionaly, and that we would need to deal with it.
> > > > What I think you are implying here (correct me if I'm wrong), is that you would
> > > > advocate that we wait to introduce ABI versioning until after such refactoring
> > > > is, for lack of a better term "complete". The problem here is that, software
> > > > that is growing in user base is never "complete". What you are effectively
> > > > saying is that you want to wait until the API is in a state in which no (or
> > > > almost no) more changes are required, then fixate it. Thats quite simply never
> > > > going to happen. And if it does, it obviates the need for versioning at all.
> > >
> > > I agree Neil. This point is not about how long we should wait but how the
> > > overhead could be estimate for coming releases.
> > >
> > Well, I understand the desire, but I'm not sure how it can be accomplished. For
> > a given release, the overhead will be dependent on two factors:
> >
> > 1) The number off ABI changes in a given release
> >
> > 2) The extent of the ABI changes that were made.
> >
> > If we have a way to predict those, then we can estimate the overhead, but
> > without that information, you're kinda stuck. That said, if we all concur that
> > this is a necessecary effort to undertake, then the overhead is, not overly
> > important. Whats more important is providing enough time to alot enough time to
> > do the work for a given project. That is to say, when undertaking a large
> > refactoring, or other project that promises to make significant ABI changes,
> > that the developer needs to factor in time to design an implement backwards
> > compatibility. Put another way, if the developer does their job right, and
> > takes backwards compatibility seriously, the overhead to you as a maintainer is
> > nil. The onus to handle this extra effort needs to be on the developer.
> >
> > > > > 2/
> > > > > I'm curious to know how you would handle a big change like the recent mbuf rework.
> > > > > Should we duplicate the structure and all the functions using mbuf?
> > > >
> > > > Several ways, what you suggest above is one way, although thats what I would
> > > > consider to be a pessimal case. Ideally such large changes are extreemely rare
> > > > (a search of the git history I think confirms this). Much more common are
> > > > small, limited changes to various API's for which providing multiple versions of
> > > > a function is a much more reasonable approach.
> > > >
> > > > In the event that we do decide to do a refactor that is so far reaching that we
> > > > simply don't feel like multi-versioning is feasible, the recourse is then to
> > > > deprecate the old API, publish that information on the deprecation schedule,
> > > > wait for a release, then replace it wholesale. When the API is released, we
> > > > bump the DSO version number. Note the versioning policy never guarantees that
> > > > backwards compatibility will always be available, nor does it stipulate that a
> > > > newer version of the API is available prior to removing the old one. The goal
> > > > here is to give distributors and application vendors advanced notice of ABI
> > > > breaking changes so that they can adapt appropriately before they are caught off
> > > > guard. If the new ABI can't be packaged alongside the old, then so be it,
> > > > downstream vendors will have to use the upstream git head to test and validate,
> > > > rather than a newer distribution release
> > >
> > > Seems reasonable.
> > >
> > > > Ideally though, that shouldn't happen, because it causes downstream headaches,
> > > > and we would really like to avoid that. Thats why I feel its so important to
> > > > keep this work in the main tree. If we segregate it to a separate location it
> > > > will make it all to easy for developers to ignore these needs and just assume we
> > > > constantly drop old ABI versions without providing backwards compatibility.
> > > >
> > > > > 3/
> > > > > Should we add new fields at the end of its structure to avoid ABI breaking?
> > > > >
> > > > In the common case yes, this usually avoids ABI breakage, though it can't always
> > > > be relied upon (e.g. cases where structures are statically allocated by an
> > > > application). And then there are patches that attempt to reduce memory usage
> > > > and increase performance by re-arranging structures. In those cases we need to
> > > > do ABI versioning or announce/delay/release as noted above, though again, that
> > > > should really be avoided if possible.
> > >
> > > So there is no hope of having fields logically sorted.
> > > Not a major problem but we have to know it. And it should probably be
> > > documented if we choose this way.
> > >
> > Sure, though I'm not sure I agree with the statement above. Having fields
> > logically sorted seems like it should be a forgone conclusion in that the
> > developer should have laid those fields out in some semblance of order in the
> > first place. If a large data structure re-ordering is taking place such that
> > structure fields are getting rearranged, that in my mind is part of a large
> > refactoring for which the entire API that is affected by those data structures
> > must have a new version created to provide backward compatibility, or in the
> > extreeme case, we may need to preform a warn and deprecate/exchange operation as
> > noted previously, though again, that is a Nuclear option.
>
> Just to illustrate my thought:
> Let's imagine this struct {
> fish_name;
> fish_taste;
> vegetables_name;
> }
> When adding the new field "fish_cooking", we'll add it at the end to avoid ABI break.
> struct {
> fish_name;
> fish_taste;
> vegetables_name;
> fish_cooking;
> }
You're right, asthetically the above is displeasing, which is unfortunate. The
decision we have to make is twofold:
1) Are asthetics more important that backwards compatibility (theres also a
correlary here, which is "are the performance/space gains acheived by
reorganizing the above structure sufficent to warant an ABI breakage)
and
2) How can we mitigate the ABI impact if the answer to the above is "yes"
I think the answer to (1) is going to be situationally specific. Generally,
Asthetics aren't worth breaking ABI, but performance gains might be, if they're
large enough. We'll have to wait for an example case to see where exactly we
draw that line
Assuming the answer to (2) is yes, then we need to know how to mitigate it.
Ideally what we would do is create a secondary structure like so:
struct1 {
fish_name;
fish_taste;
veg_name;
};
struct2 {
fish_name;
fish_taste;
fish_cook;
veg_name;
};
and then we would version the API calls that use struct1 to instead accept
struct2. So if a function used struct1 we would have:
static void foo_v1(struct1 *a) {
struct2 b;
b.fish_name = a->name;
b.fish_taste = a->fish_taste;
b.veg_name = a->veg_name;
a-fish_cook = SOME_VALUE;
foo_v2(&b);
}
VERSION_SYMBOL(foo, v1, 1.8);
static void foo_v2(struct2 *a) {
...
if (a->fish_cook == SOME_VALUE)
/* we know this is from the old api version */
...
}
VERSION_SYMBOL(foo, v2, 1.9);
That would be repeated of course for every function that used struct1. Then we
can decide on a deprecation schedule, which might be the next release after this
change is published. Or it might be longer, if the decision is that this change
is easy enough to maintain.
> It's mostly an esthetic/readability consequence.
> Now I'm hungry ;)
>
I don't think I ever told you, my family and I were in Paris last summer, and
had lunch at this place just south of Notre Dame. My wife still occasionally
mentions that as the best fish she ever had. And my 7 year old daughter is
willing to forgo a trip to Disney World to go back :)
> > > > > 4/
> > > > > Developers contribute because they need some changes. So when breaking
> > > > > an API, their application is already ready for the new version.
> > > > > I mean the author of such patch is probably not really motivated to keep ABI
> > > > > compability and duplicate the code path.
> > > > >
> > > > What? That doesn't make any sense. Its our job to enforce this requirement on
> > > > developers during the review cycle. If you don't feel like we can enforce
> > > > coding requirements on the project, we've already lost. I agree that an
> > > > application developer submitting a patch for DPDK might not care about ABI
> > > > compatibility because they've already modified their application, but they (and
> > > > we) need to recognize that there are more than just a handful of users of the
> > > > DPDK, some of whom don't participate in this community (i.e. are simply end
> > > > users). We need to make sure all users needs are met. Thats the entire point
> > > > of this patch series, to make DPDK available to a wider range of users.
> > >
> > > Exact. To make it simple, you care about end users and I have to care about
> > > developers motivation. But I perfectly understand the end users needs.
> > > I don't say we cannot enforce coding requirements. I just think it will be
> > > less pleasant.
> > >
> > I disagree with the assertion that you will loose developers becausee they don't
> > care about compatibility. You're developer base may change. This is no
> > different than any other requirement that you place on a developer. You make
> > all sorts of mandates regarding development (they can't break other older
> > supported cpu architecture, their code has to compile on all configurations,
> > etc). This is no different.
> >
> > > > > 5/
> > > > > Intead of simply modifying an API function, it would appear as a whole new
> > > > > function with some differences compared to the old one. Such change is really
> > > > > not convenient to review.
> > > >
> > > > Um, yes, versioning is the process of creating an additional
> > > > function that closely resembles an older version of the same function, but with
> > > > different arguments and a newer version number. Thats what it is by defintion,
> > > > and yes, its additional work. All you're saying here is that, its extra work
> > > > and we shouldn't do it. I thought I made this clear on the call, its been done
> > > > in thousands of other libraries, but if you just don't want to do it, then you
> > > > should abandon distributions as a way to reach a larger community, but if you
> > > > want to see the DPDK reach a larger community, then this is something that has
> > > > to happen, hard or not.
> > >
> > > The goal of this discussion is to establish all the implications of this
> > > decision. We expose the facts. No conclusion.
> > >
> > You haven't exposed a fact, you've asserted an opinion. Theres is no notion of
> > something being convienient or inconvienient to review in any quantitative way.
> > If facts are your goal, you missed the mark here.
>
> Maybe you use a tool that I don't know.
> My main material for review is the patch. And I think it's simpler to check an
> one-line change than a duplicated code path. But instead of giving my opinion,
> I must expose what it looks like for a simple example:
>
> - void cook_fish()
> + void cook_fish(oil_bottle)
> {
> + use_oil(oil_bottle);
> start_fire();
> put_fish();
> wait();
> stop_fire();
> }
>
> vs
>
> - void cook_fish()
> + void __vsym cook_fish_v1()
> {
> start_fire();
> put_fish();
> wait();
> stop_fire();
> }
> + VERSION_SYMBOL(cook_fish, _v1, 1);
> + void cook_fish(oil_bottle)
> + {
> + use_oil(oil_bottle);
> + start_fire();
> + put_fish();
> + wait();
> + stop_fire();
> + }
> + BIND_DEFAULT_SYMBOL(cook_fish, 2);
>
You make a fair point in that, generally speaking less code is easier to review
than more code, but that said, you need to normalize the comparison. That is to
say, in the example above your first patch adds functionality (i.e. you add a
feature by which you use oil to cook a fish), in the second patch, you not only
add that feature, but allow older code that was already built to continue to
work. You've not just added complexity, you've added features as well. Its
like comparing a patch that adds features a and b, and indicating that you
would only accept feature a because you didn't want to review 2 features. I
think thats important to remember, we're not adding code for the sake of making
our lives more difficult. We're doing it to fullfill a need that a large group
of potential end users have.
>
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2014-11-21 20:06 UTC | newest]
Thread overview: 9+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed)
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2014-11-19 11:22 [dpdk-dev] versioning and maintenance Thomas Monjalon
2014-11-19 11:35 ` Bruce Richardson
2014-11-19 15:13 ` Neil Horman
2014-11-20 17:09 ` Thomas Monjalon
2014-11-20 18:25 ` Neil Horman
2014-11-20 21:08 ` Thomas Monjalon
2014-11-21 1:05 ` Neil Horman
2014-11-21 13:23 ` Thomas Monjalon
2014-11-21 20:17 ` Neil Horman
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