Re: Performance Patches Was: Lock Wait Statistics (next commitfest)
От | Robert Haas |
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Тема | Re: Performance Patches Was: Lock Wait Statistics (next commitfest) |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 603c8f071002271753k7b4594afq3906d214b63d7f7b@mail.gmail.com обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Performance Patches Was: Lock Wait Statistics (next commitfest) (Mark Kirkwood <mark.kirkwood@catalyst.net.nz>) |
Список | pgsql-hackers |
On Sat, Feb 27, 2010 at 6:22 PM, Mark Kirkwood <mark.kirkwood@catalyst.net.nz> wrote: > Greg Smith wrote: >> While I was in there I also added some more notes on my personal top patch >> submission peeve, patches whose purpose in life is to improve performance >> that don't come with associated easy to run test cases, including a sample >> of that test running on a system that shows the speedup clearly. If I were >> in charge I just would make it standard project policy to reject any >> performance patch without those characteristics immediately. > > While I completely agree that the submitter should be required to supply a > test case and their results, so the rest of us can try to reproduce said > improvement - rejecting the patch out of hand is a bit harsh I feel - Hey, > they may just have forgotten to supply these things! The reviewer can always > ask, can they not? I would prefer to see the wiki say something along the > lines of "If you don't supply a test case you will be asked for one before > any further review can proceed..." Agreed. Personally, I have no problem with giving a patch a brief once-over even if it lacks an appropriate test case, but serious review without a test case is really hard. That's one of the things that slowed down rbtree a lot this last CommitFest. We should probably try to make a point of trying to point this problem out to patch submitters before the CommitFest even starts, so that they can address it in advance. ...Robert
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