2009-06-08 22:17:54

by Muntz, Daniel

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: RE: should we make --enable-tirpc the default in current nfs-utils?



> -----Original Message-----
> From: Jeff Layton [mailto:[email protected]]
> Sent: Monday, June 08, 2009 10:00 AM
> To: Muntz, Daniel
> Cc: Chuck Lever; Mike Frysinger; [email protected]
> Subject: Re: should we make --enable-tirpc the default in
> current nfs-utils?
>
> On Mon, 8 Jun 2009 08:46:23 -0700
> "Muntz, Daniel" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > >
> > > The reason to build without it is that libtirpc is
> largely untested
> > > code (on Linux), and the nfs-utils support to use TI-RPC is also
> > > largely untested. I think the default config settings should
> > > configure a safe, known-working configuration, not the
> most advanced
> > > configuration.
> > >
> > > As much as I like the idea of wider testing, the idea
> that we happen
> > > to be testing with live users is not inviting. But I
> guess it's all
> > > we've got at this point.
> >
> > It would be nice if RH had a way of testing this with
> Fedora without
> > making it the default in the standard nfs-utils package
> until _after_
> > testing. Perhaps nfs-utils has evolved to the point where it could
> > use a release-candidate model. Then all distros could pull an RC
> > build if they want it, while production users could pull
> the last "stable"
> > release.
>
> This has very little to do with Red Hat. We can enable or
> disable TIRPC in our own distros without making this change
> upstream. The question here is whether we should make this
> the default now, or does it make more sense to wait until
> everything has been converted to TIRPC, and had IPv6 support
> added and *then* enable it.

But **IF** you had a release candidate model, then you would have a
mechanism for OTHERS to pick up "pre-release" code and get the
additional testing you are after. Without it, your only option is to
put un/little-tested code into mainline nfs-utils (I am going on your
assertion and Chuck's that this code needs more testing). I can't see
any reasonable excuse (non-FUD as you say) for not doing things this
way.

>
> I believe the latter option will be more disruptive. Phasing
> support in slowly makes sense and there's an easy "fix" for
> people who find they have problems with it (--disable-tirpc).
>
> --
> Jeff Layton <[email protected]>
>