Re: [RFC] Btrfs mainline plans

From: Chris Mason
Date: Tue Oct 07 2008 - 12:12:10 EST


On Tue, 2008-10-07 at 18:27 +0300, Adrian Bunk wrote:
> On Mon, Oct 06, 2008 at 09:40:03AM -0400, Chris Mason wrote:
>
> >
> > The btrfs timelines have always been aggressive, and as btrfs gets
> > closer to feature complete, the testing matrix grows dramatically. I
> > can't promise my crazy timelines won't slip, but I've been hacking away
> > in the basement for almost 18 months now and it's time for me to get off
> > the pot and make it stable.
> >
> > Ext4 has always had to deal with the ghost of ext3. Both from a
> > compatibility point of view and everyone's expectations of stability. I
> > believe that most of us underestimated how difficult it would be to move
> > ext4 forward.
> >
> > Btrfs is different for lots of reasons, and being in mainline will
> > definitely increase the pressure on the btrfs developers to finish, and
> > the resources available for us to finish with.
>
> Your last sentence does not make sense:
>
> According to your timeline btrfs 1.0 will be released in Q408 [1] - and
> the merge window for 2.6.29 will be in Q109.
>

Planning for mainline inclusion is always a guessing game. Cutting 1.0
is different from being in mainline, and the dates don't have to be the
same.

> >...
> > > For people wanting to try WIP code you don't need it in mainline.
> > >
> > > Stable kernels will anyway usually contain months old code of the
> > > WIP filesystem that is not usable for testing, so for any meaningful
> > > testing you will still have to follow the btrfs tree and not mainline.
> >
> > For ext4 at least, the mainline code is very usable. I hope to have
> > btrfs in shape for that by the 2.6.29 merge cycle.
>
> One risk you should be aware of is that when btrfs is in 2.6.29 part of
> the Linux press might pick it up and stress test and benchmark this new
> filesystem.

I think the gains from early testing far outweigh the risks of bad early
press.

-chris


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