On Thu, 1 May 2008 08:49:19 -0700
Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org> wrote:
no I'm pushing "some classes of hardware are much more popular/relevant
than others".
I did not say "most people". I believe "most people" aren't hitting
bugs right now (or there would be a lot more screaming).
What I do believe is that *within the bugs that hit*, even the hardware
specific ones, there's a clear prioritization by how many people hit
the bug (or have the hardware in general).
now that's a fallacy of your own.. if you care about that one, it's 1)
trivial to track and/or 2) could contain a WARN_ON_ONCE(), at which
point it's automatically tracked. (and more useful information I
suspect, since it suddenly has a full backtrace including driver info
in it)
By your argument we should work hard to make sure we're better at
creating traces for cases we detect something goes wrong.
(I would not argue against that fwiw)
if it's a hardware bug there's little we can do.
If it's a hardware specific bug, yeah then it becomes a function of how
popular that hardware is.
Given that a normal PC has maybe 10 components...
yes we don't want bugcreep that affects common hardware over time.
At the same time, by your argument, a bug that hits a piece of hardware
of which 5 are made (or left on this planet) is equally important to
a bug in something that
This statement is so rediculous and self contradicting to what you
said before that I'm not even going to respond to it.
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