Em Fri, 24 Jan 2025 09:26:33 -0500 Nicolas Dufresne nicolas.dufresne@collabora.com escreveu:
Hi,
Le vendredi 24 janvier 2025 à 15:00 +0200, Nikolai Kondrashov a écrit :
On 1/24/25 2:16 PM, Jarkko Sakkinen wrote:
On Fri Jan 24, 2025 at 10:12 AM EET, Laurent Pinchart wrote:
Gitlab as an open-source software project (the community edition) is one thing, but can we please avoid advertising specific proprietary services in the kernel documentation ?
I don't think we should have any of this in the mainline kernel.
One angle is that "no regressions rule" applies also to the shenanigans.
Do we really spend energy on this proprietary crap to the eternity?
This is not getting included into the kernel itself, the contributed code is, of course, open-source. And yes it would execute just fine on the fully open-source community-edition GitLab.
I don't think "no regressions rule" should apply here.
It doesn't, as this is not a Kernel userspace API. It is just some facility to integrate Kernel builds using a CI infrastructure. This can change with time as needed.
Still, once people start using it, developers need to take some care to avoid regressions that would cause CI builds to fail for the ones using such facilities.
Also, ideally, this should be completely independent of the Kernel version, e.g. if one sets up an infra using the version that was there when, let's say, Kernel 6.14 is released, the same CI scripts should work just fine with stable Kernels and even future Kernels.
Due to that, I'm not convinced that such kernel CI files should be hosted at the Kernel tree.
IMO, this should be stored on a separate repository hosted at kernel.org, using Semantic Versoning (https://semver.org/) - e. g. when there are incompatible changes, major version number will be increased.
This is for developers only, and is a template for making your own pipeline mostly, with pieces which can be reused.
Perhpas worth clarifying that Media and DRM subsystem have opted for the Freedesktop instance. This instance is running the Open Source version of Gitlab, with hundreds of CI runners contributed and shared among many projects (which includes Mesa, GStreamer, Wayland, Pipewire, libcamera, just to name few).
It doesn't matter much what git forge some projects are currently using, as things like that could change with time.
Starting with supporting just one type of git forge sounds OK to me, but long term goal should be to make it generic enough to be used with as much CI engines as possible - not only forges developed by companies that provide paid services like Gitlab/Github, but also completely open source forges and even Jenkins.
Thanks, Mauro