1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: (GPL-2.0+ OR CC-BY-4.0) 2.. See the bottom of this file for additional redistribution information. 3 4Handling regressions 5++++++++++++++++++++ 6 7*We don't cause regressions* -- this document describes what this "first rule of 8Linux kernel development" means in practice for developers. It complements 9Documentation/admin-guide/reporting-regressions.rst, which covers the topic from a 10user's point of view; if you never read that text, go and at least skim over it 11before continuing here. 12 13The important bits (aka "The TL;DR") 14==================================== 15 16#. Ensure subscribers of the `regression mailing list <https://lore.kernel.org/regressions/>`_ 17 (regressions@lists.linux.dev) quickly become aware of any new regression 18 report: 19 20 * When receiving a mailed report that did not CC the list, bring it into the 21 loop by immediately sending at least a brief "Reply-all" with the list 22 CCed. 23 24 * Forward or bounce any reports submitted in bug trackers to the list. 25 26#. Make the Linux kernel regression tracking bot "regzbot" track the issue (this 27 is optional, but recommended): 28 29 * For mailed reports, check if the reporter included a line like ``#regzbot 30 introduced v5.13..v5.14-rc1``. If not, send a reply (with the regressions 31 list in CC) containing a paragraph like the following, which tells regzbot 32 when the issue started to happen:: 33 34 #regzbot ^introduced 1f2e3d4c5b6a 35 36 * When forwarding reports from a bug tracker to the regressions list (see 37 above), include a paragraph like the following:: 38 39 #regzbot introduced: v5.13..v5.14-rc1 40 #regzbot from: Some N. Ice Human <some.human@example.com> 41 #regzbot monitor: http://some.bugtracker.example.com/ticket?id=123456789 42 43#. When submitting fixes for regressions, add "Link:" tags to the patch 44 description pointing to all places where the issue was reported, as 45 mandated by Documentation/process/submitting-patches.rst and 46 :ref:`Documentation/process/5.Posting.rst <development_posting>`. 47 48#. Try to fix regressions quickly once the culprit has been identified; fixes 49 for most regressions should be merged within two weeks, but some need to be 50 resolved within two or three days. 51 52 53All the details on Linux kernel regressions relevant for developers 54=================================================================== 55 56 57The important basics in more detail 58----------------------------------- 59 60 61What to do when receiving regression reports 62~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 63 64Ensure the Linux kernel's regression tracker and others subscribers of the 65`regression mailing list <https://lore.kernel.org/regressions/>`_ 66(regressions@lists.linux.dev) become aware of any newly reported regression: 67 68 * When you receive a report by mail that did not CC the list, immediately bring 69 it into the loop by sending at least a brief "Reply-all" with the list CCed; 70 try to ensure it gets CCed again in case you reply to a reply that omitted 71 the list. 72 73 * If a report submitted in a bug tracker hits your Inbox, forward or bounce it 74 to the list. Consider checking the list archives beforehand, if the reporter 75 already forwarded the report as instructed by 76 Documentation/admin-guide/reporting-issues.rst. 77 78When doing either, consider making the Linux kernel regression tracking bot 79"regzbot" immediately start tracking the issue: 80 81 * For mailed reports, check if the reporter included a "regzbot command" like 82 ``#regzbot introduced 1f2e3d4c5b6a``. If not, send a reply (with the 83 regressions list in CC) with a paragraph like the following::: 84 85 #regzbot ^introduced: v5.13..v5.14-rc1 86 87 This tells regzbot the version range in which the issue started to happen; 88 you can specify a range using commit-ids as well or state a single commit-id 89 in case the reporter bisected the culprit. 90 91 Note the caret (^) before the "introduced": it tells regzbot to treat the 92 parent mail (the one you reply to) as the initial report for the regression 93 you want to see tracked; that's important, as regzbot will later look out 94 for patches with "Link:" tags pointing to the report in the archives on 95 lore.kernel.org. 96 97 * When forwarding a regressions reported to a bug tracker, include a paragraph 98 with these regzbot commands:: 99 100 #regzbot introduced: 1f2e3d4c5b6a 101 #regzbot from: Some N. Ice Human <some.human@example.com> 102 #regzbot monitor: http://some.bugtracker.example.com/ticket?id=123456789 103 104 Regzbot will then automatically associate patches with the report that 105 contain "Link:" tags pointing to your mail or the mentioned ticket. 106 107What's important when fixing regressions 108~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 109 110You don't need to do anything special when submitting fixes for regression, just 111remember to do what Documentation/process/submitting-patches.rst, 112:ref:`Documentation/process/5.Posting.rst <development_posting>`, and 113Documentation/process/stable-kernel-rules.rst already explain in more detail: 114 115 * Point to all places where the issue was reported using "Link:" tags:: 116 117 Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/30th.anniversary.repost@klaava.Helsinki.FI/ 118 Link: https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1234567890 119 120 * Add a "Fixes:" tag to specify the commit causing the regression. 121 122 * If the culprit was merged in an earlier development cycle, explicitly mark 123 the fix for backporting using the ``Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org`` tag. 124 125All this is expected from you and important when it comes to regression, as 126these tags are of great value for everyone (you included) that might be looking 127into the issue weeks, months, or years later. These tags are also crucial for 128tools and scripts used by other kernel developers or Linux distributions; one of 129these tools is regzbot, which heavily relies on the "Link:" tags to associate 130reports for regression with changes resolving them. 131 132Expectations and best practices for fixing regressions 133~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 134 135As a Linux kernel developer, you are expected to give your best to prevent 136situations where a regression caused by a recent change of yours leaves users 137only these options: 138 139 * Run a kernel with a regression that impacts usage. 140 141 * Switch to an older or newer kernel series. 142 143 * Continue running an outdated and thus potentially insecure kernel for more 144 than three weeks after the regression's culprit was identified. Ideally it 145 should be less than two. And it ought to be just a few days, if the issue is 146 severe or affects many users -- either in general or in prevalent 147 environments. 148 149How to realize that in practice depends on various factors. Use the following 150rules of thumb as a guide. 151 152In general: 153 154 * Prioritize work on regressions over all other Linux kernel work, unless the 155 latter concerns a severe issue (e.g. acute security vulnerability, data loss, 156 bricked hardware, ...). 157 158 * Expedite fixing mainline regressions that recently made it into a proper 159 mainline, stable, or longterm release (either directly or via backport). 160 161 * Do not consider regressions from the current cycle as something that can wait 162 till the end of the cycle, as the issue might discourage or prevent users and 163 CI systems from testing mainline now or generally. 164 165 * Work with the required care to avoid additional or bigger damage, even if 166 resolving an issue then might take longer than outlined below. 167 168On timing once the culprit of a regression is known: 169 170 * Aim to mainline a fix within two or three days, if the issue is severe or 171 bothering many users -- either in general or in prevalent conditions like a 172 particular hardware environment, distribution, or stable/longterm series. 173 174 * Aim to mainline a fix by Sunday after the next, if the culprit made it 175 into a recent mainline, stable, or longterm release (either directly or via 176 backport); if the culprit became known early during a week and is simple to 177 resolve, try to mainline the fix within the same week. 178 179 * For other regressions, aim to mainline fixes before the hindmost Sunday 180 within the next three weeks. One or two Sundays later are acceptable, if the 181 regression is something people can live with easily for a while -- like a 182 mild performance regression. 183 184 * It's strongly discouraged to delay mainlining regression fixes till the next 185 merge window, except when the fix is extraordinarily risky or when the 186 culprit was mainlined more than a year ago. 187 188On procedure: 189 190 * Always consider reverting the culprit, as it's often the quickest and least 191 dangerous way to fix a regression. Don't worry about mainlining a fixed 192 variant later: that should be straight-forward, as most of the code went 193 through review once already. 194 195 * Try to resolve any regressions introduced in mainline during the past 196 twelve months before the current development cycle ends: Linus wants such 197 regressions to be handled like those from the current cycle, unless fixing 198 bears unusual risks. 199 200 * Consider CCing Linus on discussions or patch review, if a regression seems 201 tangly. Do the same in precarious or urgent cases -- especially if the 202 subsystem maintainer might be unavailable. Also CC the stable team, when you 203 know such a regression made it into a mainline, stable, or longterm release. 204 205 * For urgent regressions, consider asking Linus to pick up the fix straight 206 from the mailing list: he is totally fine with that for uncontroversial 207 fixes. Ideally though such requests should happen in accordance with the 208 subsystem maintainers or come directly from them. 209 210 * In case you are unsure if a fix is worth the risk applying just days before 211 a new mainline release, send Linus a mail with the usual lists and people in 212 CC; in it, summarize the situation while asking him to consider picking up 213 the fix straight from the list. He then himself can make the call and when 214 needed even postpone the release. Such requests again should ideally happen 215 in accordance with the subsystem maintainers or come directly from them. 216 217Regarding stable and longterm kernels: 218 219 * You are free to leave regressions to the stable team, if they at no point in 220 time occurred with mainline or were fixed there already. 221 222 * If a regression made it into a proper mainline release during the past 223 twelve months, ensure to tag the fix with "Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org", as a 224 "Fixes:" tag alone does not guarantee a backport. Please add the same tag, 225 in case you know the culprit was backported to stable or longterm kernels. 226 227 * When receiving reports about regressions in recent stable or longterm kernel 228 series, please evaluate at least briefly if the issue might happen in current 229 mainline as well -- and if that seems likely, take hold of the report. If in 230 doubt, ask the reporter to check mainline. 231 232 * Whenever you want to swiftly resolve a regression that recently also made it 233 into a proper mainline, stable, or longterm release, fix it quickly in 234 mainline; when appropriate thus involve Linus to fast-track the fix (see 235 above). That's because the stable team normally does neither revert nor fix 236 any changes that cause the same problems in mainline. 237 238 * In case of urgent regression fixes you might want to ensure prompt 239 backporting by dropping the stable team a note once the fix was mainlined; 240 this is especially advisable during merge windows and shortly thereafter, as 241 the fix otherwise might land at the end of a huge patch queue. 242 243On patch flow: 244 245 * Developers, when trying to reach the time periods mentioned above, remember 246 to account for the time it takes to get fixes tested, reviewed, and merged by 247 Linus, ideally with them being in linux-next at least briefly. Hence, if a 248 fix is urgent, make it obvious to ensure others handle it appropriately. 249 250 * Reviewers, you are kindly asked to assist developers in reaching the time 251 periods mentioned above by reviewing regression fixes in a timely manner. 252 253 * Subsystem maintainers, you likewise are encouraged to expedite the handling 254 of regression fixes. Thus evaluate if skipping linux-next is an option for 255 the particular fix. Also consider sending git pull requests more often than 256 usual when needed. And try to avoid holding onto regression fixes over 257 weekends -- especially when the fix is marked for backporting. 258 259 260More aspects regarding regressions developers should be aware of 261---------------------------------------------------------------- 262 263 264How to deal with changes where a risk of regression is known 265~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 266 267Evaluate how big the risk of regressions is, for example by performing a code 268search in Linux distributions and Git forges. Also consider asking other 269developers or projects likely to be affected to evaluate or even test the 270proposed change; if problems surface, maybe some solution acceptable for all 271can be found. 272 273If the risk of regressions in the end seems to be relatively small, go ahead 274with the change, but let all involved parties know about the risk. Hence, make 275sure your patch description makes this aspect obvious. Once the change is 276merged, tell the Linux kernel's regression tracker and the regressions mailing 277list about the risk, so everyone has the change on the radar in case reports 278trickle in. Depending on the risk, you also might want to ask the subsystem 279maintainer to mention the issue in his mainline pull request. 280 281What else is there to known about regressions? 282~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 283 284Check out Documentation/admin-guide/reporting-regressions.rst, it covers a lot 285of other aspects you want might want to be aware of: 286 287 * the purpose of the "no regressions rule" 288 289 * what issues actually qualify as regression 290 291 * who's in charge for finding the root cause of a regression 292 293 * how to handle tricky situations, e.g. when a regression is caused by a 294 security fix or when fixing a regression might cause another one 295 296Whom to ask for advice when it comes to regressions 297~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 298 299Send a mail to the regressions mailing list (regressions@lists.linux.dev) while 300CCing the Linux kernel's regression tracker (regressions@leemhuis.info); if the 301issue might better be dealt with in private, feel free to omit the list. 302 303 304More about regression tracking and regzbot 305------------------------------------------ 306 307 308Why the Linux kernel has a regression tracker, and why is regzbot used? 309~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 310 311Rules like "no regressions" need someone to ensure they are followed, otherwise 312they are broken either accidentally or on purpose. History has shown this to be 313true for the Linux kernel as well. That's why Thorsten Leemhuis volunteered to 314keep an eye on things as the Linux kernel's regression tracker, who's 315occasionally helped by other people. Neither of them are paid to do this, 316that's why regression tracking is done on a best effort basis. 317 318Earlier attempts to manually track regressions have shown it's an exhausting and 319frustrating work, which is why they were abandoned after a while. To prevent 320this from happening again, Thorsten developed regzbot to facilitate the work, 321with the long term goal to automate regression tracking as much as possible for 322everyone involved. 323 324How does regression tracking work with regzbot? 325~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 326 327The bot watches for replies to reports of tracked regressions. Additionally, 328it's looking out for posted or committed patches referencing such reports 329with "Link:" tags; replies to such patch postings are tracked as well. 330Combined this data provides good insights into the current state of the fixing 331process. 332 333Regzbot tries to do its job with as little overhead as possible for both 334reporters and developers. In fact, only reporters are burdened with an extra 335duty: they need to tell regzbot about the regression report using the ``#regzbot 336introduced`` command outlined above; if they don't do that, someone else can 337take care of that using ``#regzbot ^introduced``. 338 339For developers there normally is no extra work involved, they just need to make 340sure to do something that was expected long before regzbot came to light: add 341"Link:" tags to the patch description pointing to all reports about the issue 342fixed. 343 344Do I have to use regzbot? 345~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 346 347It's in the interest of everyone if you do, as kernel maintainers like Linus 348Torvalds partly rely on regzbot's tracking in their work -- for example when 349deciding to release a new version or extend the development phase. For this they 350need to be aware of all unfixed regression; to do that, Linus is known to look 351into the weekly reports sent by regzbot. 352 353Do I have to tell regzbot about every regression I stumble upon? 354~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 355 356Ideally yes: we are all humans and easily forget problems when something more 357important unexpectedly comes up -- for example a bigger problem in the Linux 358kernel or something in real life that's keeping us away from keyboards for a 359while. Hence, it's best to tell regzbot about every regression, except when you 360immediately write a fix and commit it to a tree regularly merged to the affected 361kernel series. 362 363How to see which regressions regzbot tracks currently? 364~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 365 366Check `regzbot's web-interface <https://linux-regtracking.leemhuis.info/regzbot/>`_ 367for the latest info; alternatively, `search for the latest regression report 368<https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/?q=%22Linux+regressions+report%22+f%3Aregzbot>`_, 369which regzbot normally sends out once a week on Sunday evening (UTC), which is a 370few hours before Linus usually publishes new (pre-)releases. 371 372What places is regzbot monitoring? 373~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 374 375Regzbot is watching the most important Linux mailing lists as well as the git 376repositories of linux-next, mainline, and stable/longterm. 377 378What kind of issues are supposed to be tracked by regzbot? 379~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 380 381The bot is meant to track regressions, hence please don't involve regzbot for 382regular issues. But it's okay for the Linux kernel's regression tracker if you 383use regzbot to track severe issues, like reports about hangs, corrupted data, 384or internal errors (Panic, Oops, BUG(), warning, ...). 385 386Can I add regressions found by CI systems to regzbot's tracking? 387~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 388 389Feel free to do so, if the particular regression likely has impact on practical 390use cases and thus might be noticed by users; hence, please don't involve 391regzbot for theoretical regressions unlikely to show themselves in real world 392usage. 393 394How to interact with regzbot? 395~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 396 397By using a 'regzbot command' in a direct or indirect reply to the mail with the 398regression report. These commands need to be in their own paragraph (IOW: they 399need to be separated from the rest of the mail using blank lines). 400 401One such command is ``#regzbot introduced <version or commit>``, which makes 402regzbot consider your mail as a regressions report added to the tracking, as 403already described above; ``#regzbot ^introduced <version or commit>`` is another 404such command, which makes regzbot consider the parent mail as a report for a 405regression which it starts to track. 406 407Once one of those two commands has been utilized, other regzbot commands can be 408used in direct or indirect replies to the report. You can write them below one 409of the `introduced` commands or in replies to the mail that used one of them 410or itself is a reply to that mail: 411 412 * Set or update the title:: 413 414 #regzbot title: foo 415 416 * Monitor a discussion or bugzilla.kernel.org ticket where additions aspects of 417 the issue or a fix are discussed -- for example the posting of a patch fixing 418 the regression:: 419 420 #regzbot monitor: https://lore.kernel.org/all/30th.anniversary.repost@klaava.Helsinki.FI/ 421 422 Monitoring only works for lore.kernel.org and bugzilla.kernel.org; regzbot 423 will consider all messages in that thread or ticket as related to the fixing 424 process. 425 426 * Point to a place with further details of interest, like a mailing list post 427 or a ticket in a bug tracker that are slightly related, but about a different 428 topic:: 429 430 #regzbot link: https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=123456789 431 432 * Mark a regression as fixed by a commit that is heading upstream or already 433 landed:: 434 435 #regzbot fixed-by: 1f2e3d4c5d 436 437 * Mark a regression as a duplicate of another one already tracked by regzbot:: 438 439 #regzbot dup-of: https://lore.kernel.org/all/30th.anniversary.repost@klaava.Helsinki.FI/ 440 441 * Mark a regression as invalid:: 442 443 #regzbot invalid: wasn't a regression, problem has always existed 444 445Is there more to tell about regzbot and its commands? 446~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 447 448More detailed and up-to-date information about the Linux 449kernel's regression tracking bot can be found on its 450`project page <https://gitlab.com/knurd42/regzbot>`_, which among others 451contains a `getting started guide <https://gitlab.com/knurd42/regzbot/-/blob/main/docs/getting_started.md>`_ 452and `reference documentation <https://gitlab.com/knurd42/regzbot/-/blob/main/docs/reference.md>`_ 453which both cover more details than the above section. 454 455Quotes from Linus about regression 456---------------------------------- 457 458Find below a few real life examples of how Linus Torvalds expects regressions to 459be handled: 460 461 * From `2017-10-26 (1/2) 462 <https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/CA+55aFwiiQYJ+YoLKCXjN_beDVfu38mg=Ggg5LFOcqHE8Qi7Zw@mail.gmail.com/>`_:: 463 464 If you break existing user space setups THAT IS A REGRESSION. 465 466 It's not ok to say "but we'll fix the user space setup". 467 468 Really. NOT OK. 469 470 [...] 471 472 The first rule is: 473 474 - we don't cause regressions 475 476 and the corollary is that when regressions *do* occur, we admit to 477 them and fix them, instead of blaming user space. 478 479 The fact that you have apparently been denying the regression now for 480 three weeks means that I will revert, and I will stop pulling apparmor 481 requests until the people involved understand how kernel development 482 is done. 483 484 * From `2017-10-26 (2/2) 485 <https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/CA+55aFxW7NMAMvYhkvz1UPbUTUJewRt6Yb51QAx5RtrWOwjebg@mail.gmail.com/>`_:: 486 487 People should basically always feel like they can update their kernel 488 and simply not have to worry about it. 489 490 I refuse to introduce "you can only update the kernel if you also 491 update that other program" kind of limitations. If the kernel used to 492 work for you, the rule is that it continues to work for you. 493 494 There have been exceptions, but they are few and far between, and they 495 generally have some major and fundamental reasons for having happened, 496 that were basically entirely unavoidable, and people _tried_hard_ to 497 avoid them. Maybe we can't practically support the hardware any more 498 after it is decades old and nobody uses it with modern kernels any 499 more. Maybe there's a serious security issue with how we did things, 500 and people actually depended on that fundamentally broken model. Maybe 501 there was some fundamental other breakage that just _had_ to have a 502 flag day for very core and fundamental reasons. 503 504 And notice that this is very much about *breaking* peoples environments. 505 506 Behavioral changes happen, and maybe we don't even support some 507 feature any more. There's a number of fields in /proc/<pid>/stat that 508 are printed out as zeroes, simply because they don't even *exist* in 509 the kernel any more, or because showing them was a mistake (typically 510 an information leak). But the numbers got replaced by zeroes, so that 511 the code that used to parse the fields still works. The user might not 512 see everything they used to see, and so behavior is clearly different, 513 but things still _work_, even if they might no longer show sensitive 514 (or no longer relevant) information. 515 516 But if something actually breaks, then the change must get fixed or 517 reverted. And it gets fixed in the *kernel*. Not by saying "well, fix 518 your user space then". It was a kernel change that exposed the 519 problem, it needs to be the kernel that corrects for it, because we 520 have a "upgrade in place" model. We don't have a "upgrade with new 521 user space". 522 523 And I seriously will refuse to take code from people who do not 524 understand and honor this very simple rule. 525 526 This rule is also not going to change. 527 528 And yes, I realize that the kernel is "special" in this respect. I'm 529 proud of it. 530 531 I have seen, and can point to, lots of projects that go "We need to 532 break that use case in order to make progress" or "you relied on 533 undocumented behavior, it sucks to be you" or "there's a better way to 534 do what you want to do, and you have to change to that new better 535 way", and I simply don't think that's acceptable outside of very early 536 alpha releases that have experimental users that know what they signed 537 up for. The kernel hasn't been in that situation for the last two 538 decades. 539 540 We do API breakage _inside_ the kernel all the time. We will fix 541 internal problems by saying "you now need to do XYZ", but then it's 542 about internal kernel API's, and the people who do that then also 543 obviously have to fix up all the in-kernel users of that API. Nobody 544 can say "I now broke the API you used, and now _you_ need to fix it 545 up". Whoever broke something gets to fix it too. 546 547 And we simply do not break user space. 548 549 * From `2020-05-21 550 <https://lore.kernel.org/all/CAHk-=wiVi7mSrsMP=fLXQrXK_UimybW=ziLOwSzFTtoXUacWVQ@mail.gmail.com/>`_:: 551 552 The rules about regressions have never been about any kind of 553 documented behavior, or where the code lives. 554 555 The rules about regressions are always about "breaks user workflow". 556 557 Users are literally the _only_ thing that matters. 558 559 No amount of "you shouldn't have used this" or "that behavior was 560 undefined, it's your own fault your app broke" or "that used to work 561 simply because of a kernel bug" is at all relevant. 562 563 Now, reality is never entirely black-and-white. So we've had things 564 like "serious security issue" etc that just forces us to make changes 565 that may break user space. But even then the rule is that we don't 566 really have other options that would allow things to continue. 567 568 And obviously, if users take years to even notice that something 569 broke, or if we have sane ways to work around the breakage that 570 doesn't make for too much trouble for users (ie "ok, there are a 571 handful of users, and they can use a kernel command line to work 572 around it" kind of things) we've also been a bit less strict. 573 574 But no, "that was documented to be broken" (whether it's because the 575 code was in staging or because the man-page said something else) is 576 irrelevant. If staging code is so useful that people end up using it, 577 that means that it's basically regular kernel code with a flag saying 578 "please clean this up". 579 580 The other side of the coin is that people who talk about "API 581 stability" are entirely wrong. API's don't matter either. You can make 582 any changes to an API you like - as long as nobody notices. 583 584 Again, the regression rule is not about documentation, not about 585 API's, and not about the phase of the moon. 586 587 It's entirely about "we caused problems for user space that used to work". 588 589 * From `2017-11-05 590 <https://lore.kernel.org/all/CA+55aFzUvbGjD8nQ-+3oiMBx14c_6zOj2n7KLN3UsJ-qsd4Dcw@mail.gmail.com/>`_:: 591 592 And our regression rule has never been "behavior doesn't change". 593 That would mean that we could never make any changes at all. 594 595 For example, we do things like add new error handling etc all the 596 time, which we then sometimes even add tests for in our kselftest 597 directory. 598 599 So clearly behavior changes all the time and we don't consider that a 600 regression per se. 601 602 The rule for a regression for the kernel is that some real user 603 workflow breaks. Not some test. Not a "look, I used to be able to do 604 X, now I can't". 605 606 * From `2018-08-03 607 <https://lore.kernel.org/all/CA+55aFwWZX=CXmWDTkDGb36kf12XmTehmQjbiMPCqCRG2hi9kw@mail.gmail.com/>`_:: 608 609 YOU ARE MISSING THE #1 KERNEL RULE. 610 611 We do not regress, and we do not regress exactly because your are 100% wrong. 612 613 And the reason you state for your opinion is in fact exactly *WHY* you 614 are wrong. 615 616 Your "good reasons" are pure and utter garbage. 617 618 The whole point of "we do not regress" is so that people can upgrade 619 the kernel and never have to worry about it. 620 621 > Kernel had a bug which has been fixed 622 623 That is *ENTIRELY* immaterial. 624 625 Guys, whether something was buggy or not DOES NOT MATTER. 626 627 Why? 628 629 Bugs happen. That's a fact of life. Arguing that "we had to break 630 something because we were fixing a bug" is completely insane. We fix 631 tens of bugs every single day, thinking that "fixing a bug" means that 632 we can break something is simply NOT TRUE. 633 634 So bugs simply aren't even relevant to the discussion. They happen, 635 they get found, they get fixed, and it has nothing to do with "we 636 break users". 637 638 Because the only thing that matters IS THE USER. 639 640 How hard is that to understand? 641 642 Anybody who uses "but it was buggy" as an argument is entirely missing 643 the point. As far as the USER was concerned, it wasn't buggy - it 644 worked for him/her. 645 646 Maybe it worked *because* the user had taken the bug into account, 647 maybe it worked because the user didn't notice - again, it doesn't 648 matter. It worked for the user. 649 650 Breaking a user workflow for a "bug" is absolutely the WORST reason 651 for breakage you can imagine. 652 653 It's basically saying "I took something that worked, and I broke it, 654 but now it's better". Do you not see how f*cking insane that statement 655 is? 656 657 And without users, your program is not a program, it's a pointless 658 piece of code that you might as well throw away. 659 660 Seriously. This is *why* the #1 rule for kernel development is "we 661 don't break users". Because "I fixed a bug" is absolutely NOT AN 662 ARGUMENT if that bug fix broke a user setup. You actually introduced a 663 MUCH BIGGER bug by "fixing" something that the user clearly didn't 664 even care about. 665 666 And dammit, we upgrade the kernel ALL THE TIME without upgrading any 667 other programs at all. It is absolutely required, because flag-days 668 and dependencies are horribly bad. 669 670 And it is also required simply because I as a kernel developer do not 671 upgrade random other tools that I don't even care about as I develop 672 the kernel, and I want any of my users to feel safe doing the same 673 time. 674 675 So no. Your rule is COMPLETELY wrong. If you cannot upgrade a kernel 676 without upgrading some other random binary, then we have a problem. 677 678 * From `2021-06-05 679 <https://lore.kernel.org/all/CAHk-=wiUVqHN76YUwhkjZzwTdjMMJf_zN4+u7vEJjmEGh3recw@mail.gmail.com/>`_:: 680 681 THERE ARE NO VALID ARGUMENTS FOR REGRESSIONS. 682 683 Honestly, security people need to understand that "not working" is not 684 a success case of security. It's a failure case. 685 686 Yes, "not working" may be secure. But security in that case is *pointless*. 687 688 * From `2011-05-06 (1/3) 689 <https://lore.kernel.org/all/BANLkTim9YvResB+PwRp7QTK-a5VNg2PvmQ@mail.gmail.com/>`_:: 690 691 Binary compatibility is more important. 692 693 And if binaries don't use the interface to parse the format (or just 694 parse it wrongly - see the fairly recent example of adding uuid's to 695 /proc/self/mountinfo), then it's a regression. 696 697 And regressions get reverted, unless there are security issues or 698 similar that makes us go "Oh Gods, we really have to break things". 699 700 I don't understand why this simple logic is so hard for some kernel 701 developers to understand. Reality matters. Your personal wishes matter 702 NOT AT ALL. 703 704 If you made an interface that can be used without parsing the 705 interface description, then we're stuck with the interface. Theory 706 simply doesn't matter. 707 708 You could help fix the tools, and try to avoid the compatibility 709 issues that way. There aren't that many of them. 710 711 From `2011-05-06 (2/3) 712 <https://lore.kernel.org/all/BANLkTi=KVXjKR82sqsz4gwjr+E0vtqCmvA@mail.gmail.com/>`_:: 713 714 it's clearly NOT an internal tracepoint. By definition. It's being 715 used by powertop. 716 717 From `2011-05-06 (3/3) 718 <https://lore.kernel.org/all/BANLkTinazaXRdGovYL7rRVp+j6HbJ7pzhg@mail.gmail.com/>`_:: 719 720 We have programs that use that ABI and thus it's a regression if they break. 721 722 * From `2012-07-06 <https://lore.kernel.org/all/CA+55aFwnLJ+0sjx92EGREGTWOx84wwKaraSzpTNJwPVV8edw8g@mail.gmail.com/>`_:: 723 724 > Now this got me wondering if Debian _unstable_ actually qualifies as a 725 > standard distro userspace. 726 727 Oh, if the kernel breaks some standard user space, that counts. Tons 728 of people run Debian unstable 729 730 * From `2019-09-15 731 <https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/CAHk-=wiP4K8DRJWsCo=20hn_6054xBamGKF2kPgUzpB5aMaofA@mail.gmail.com/>`_:: 732 733 One _particularly_ last-minute revert is the top-most commit (ignoring 734 the version change itself) done just before the release, and while 735 it's very annoying, it's perhaps also instructive. 736 737 What's instructive about it is that I reverted a commit that wasn't 738 actually buggy. In fact, it was doing exactly what it set out to do, 739 and did it very well. In fact it did it _so_ well that the much 740 improved IO patterns it caused then ended up revealing a user-visible 741 regression due to a real bug in a completely unrelated area. 742 743 The actual details of that regression are not the reason I point that 744 revert out as instructive, though. It's more that it's an instructive 745 example of what counts as a regression, and what the whole "no 746 regressions" kernel rule means. The reverted commit didn't change any 747 API's, and it didn't introduce any new bugs. But it ended up exposing 748 another problem, and as such caused a kernel upgrade to fail for a 749 user. So it got reverted. 750 751 The point here being that we revert based on user-reported _behavior_, 752 not based on some "it changes the ABI" or "it caused a bug" concept. 753 The problem was really pre-existing, and it just didn't happen to 754 trigger before. The better IO patterns introduced by the change just 755 happened to expose an old bug, and people had grown to depend on the 756 previously benign behavior of that old issue. 757 758 And never fear, we'll re-introduce the fix that improved on the IO 759 patterns once we've decided just how to handle the fact that we had a 760 bad interaction with an interface that people had then just happened 761 to rely on incidental behavior for before. It's just that we'll have 762 to hash through how to do that (there are no less than three different 763 patches by three different developers being discussed, and there might 764 be more coming...). In the meantime, I reverted the thing that exposed 765 the problem to users for this release, even if I hope it will be 766 re-introduced (perhaps even backported as a stable patch) once we have 767 consensus about the issue it exposed. 768 769 Take-away from the whole thing: it's not about whether you change the 770 kernel-userspace ABI, or fix a bug, or about whether the old code 771 "should never have worked in the first place". It's about whether 772 something breaks existing users' workflow. 773 774 Anyway, that was my little aside on the whole regression thing. Since 775 it's that "first rule of kernel programming", I felt it is perhaps 776 worth just bringing it up every once in a while 777 778.. 779 end-of-content 780.. 781 This text is available under GPL-2.0+ or CC-BY-4.0, as stated at the top 782 of the file. If you want to distribute this text under CC-BY-4.0 only, 783 please use "The Linux kernel developers" for author attribution and link 784 this as source: 785 https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/plain/Documentation/process/handling-regressions.rst 786.. 787 Note: Only the content of this RST file as found in the Linux kernel sources 788 is available under CC-BY-4.0, as versions of this text that were processed 789 (for example by the kernel's build system) might contain content taken from 790 files which use a more restrictive license. 791