Am Montag, den 04.11.2013, 08:05 -0800 schrieb ron minnich:
well, now that this has come up here, I might as well put the full plan out.
Thanks. Very much appreciated.
The mainboard status repo needs repair.
I did not know that we had one. Or do you mean the status page in the coreboot Wiki?
We want to make a script that produces concise results that make it easy for a potential OEM to make a go/no-go decision. Right now, they can't do this, and we've been asked to fix that problem.
The vendors want to know two things:
- can I build it
- will it boot [my os] -- where that may not be linux.
So we need a simple script that produces this information. It needs to be easy to run, have very few dependencies, and communicate the key information without drowning the user in a bunch of extraneous data.
How do we answer those questions?
We need to present results that are current. So, starting Nov. 15, the static mainboard status page will be more dynamic. The table will become a waterfall of tables, updated each week. Older results will be found in older tables.
So the 'Can I build it' will be answered by looking at the table. How will be answered by seeing what date a build was reported, getting the hash and config, and then trying to build it.
Doesn’t our build bot Jenkins already answer this question? Every board builds with the default configuration.
Will it boot can only be answered by trying to boot it, but the log might be helpful.
Booting an operating system still does not give you the information, if all devices are supported and work. Especially suspend and resume, which does not work on the ASRock E350M1 for example.
The huge amount of detail Paul is proposing doesn't help that much with these questions. This is not about regressions. This is about whether a board worked for someone. The mainboard status page is full of errors and if I could remove it today, I would.
If you mean the Wiki, then in my experience it is pretty accurate.
And, again, the value of dmesg is quite overstated. Linux dmesg is so variable that for the most part it's one bit of information: 'got a dmesg/did not get a dmesg'.
For me as a non-professional having the Linux messages for comparisons helped me several times to improve things or figure out problems.
What this means is we're going to make work for our community. If you have a working board, YOU need to run that script and push the results. The pressure to run the script will increase each week, as your results fall lower down on the waterfall :-)
What I have seen so far, I have no incentive to run that script just to help some vendor, whoever that is. I am looking forward to November 15th and try to stay open minded, but from the non-corporate community, I am again disappointed to be left out and just have probably a non-optimal end product.
Also, you pushed David’s patch with the errors and leave the boring, stupid work to clean it up to the community. Uwe Hermann did a lot of clean up work too in the past and moved to a different project.
I think committing the patch was rushed again. The same with the Lenovo X60 native VGA init patch, which you pushed [2].
Thanks,
Paul