16:00:58 #startmeeting F28-blocker-review 16:00:58 Meeting started Mon Apr 23 16:00:58 2018 UTC. The chair is adamw. Information about MeetBot at http://wiki.debian.org/MeetBot. 16:00:58 Useful Commands: #action #agreed #halp #info #idea #link #topic. 16:00:58 The meeting name has been set to 'f28-blocker-review' 16:00:58 #meetingname F28-blocker-review 16:00:58 #topic Roll Call 16:00:58 The meeting name has been set to 'f28-blocker-review' 16:01:06 morning folks, who's around for some blocker review? 16:01:10 * sumantro is here 16:01:12 * lruzicka is here 16:01:31 .hello2 16:01:32 frantisekz: frantisekz 'František Zatloukal' 16:02:01 * kparal is here 16:02:14 .hello2 16:02:15 sgallagh: sgallagh 'Stephen Gallagher' 16:02:22 .hello2 16:02:23 dustymabe: dustymabe 'Dusty Mabe' 16:03:39 * Southern_Gentlem 16:05:03 Hello 16:05:05 * satellit listening 16:05:13 .fas lailah 16:05:13 Lailah: lailah 'Sylvia Sánchez' 16:05:13 * pwhalen is here 16:05:28 .fas roca 16:05:30 frantisekz: is pschindl coming, do you know? 16:05:31 morning folks! 16:05:32 lroca: aliasgiogiwyvernspur 'Kenny Bolser' - grocanar 'Eric Doutreleau' - roca 'Luis Roca' - bhamilton 'Benjamin Hamilton' - pedrocarvalho 'pedro carvalho' - dgollub 'Daniel Gollub' - rixx 'Rick Tessari' - rocavalcante 'Rodrigo Araujo Cavalcante' (1 more message) 16:05:34 how's everyone doing? 16:05:40 * kparal pokes coremodule 16:05:44 Good afternoon 16:05:46 #chair sgallagh dustymabe 16:05:46 Current chairs: adamw dustymabe sgallagh 16:05:49 .hello2 16:05:50 kalev: kalev 'Kalev Lember' 16:05:57 kparal: Don't know for sure, but I wouldn't be ton it 16:05:57 impending boilerplate alert: 16:05:58 #topic Introduction 16:05:58 Why are we here? 16:05:59 #info Our purpose in this meeting is to review proposed blocker and nice-to-have bugs and decide whether to accept them, and to monitor the progress of fixing existing accepted blocker and nice-to-have bugs. 16:05:59 #info We'll be following the process outlined at: 16:05:59 Hello, I am fine, hope you're too 16:06:00 #link https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/QA:SOP_Blocker_Bug_Meeting 16:06:01 #info The bugs up for review today are available at: 16:06:01 Hello 16:06:03 #link http://qa.fedoraproject.org/blockerbugs/current 16:06:05 #info The criteria for release blocking bugs can be found at: 16:06:07 #link https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Basic_Release_Criteria 16:06:09 #link https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Fedora_28_Beta_Release_Criteria 16:06:11 #link https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Fedora_28_Final_Release_Criteria 16:06:13 anyone want to secretarialize? 16:06:39 frantisekz: hint hint 16:06:52 :D 16:07:06 * adamw prepares the Volunteering Stick 16:07:17 well then :) 16:07:28 adamw: Is that the blunt one or the sharp one? 16:07:29 What is a volunteering stick adamw ? 16:07:35 awesome, nice counting on you frantisekz :) 16:07:54 sgallagh: it's the one with splinters and nails in it 16:08:07 I thought that one was the clue-by-four 16:08:13 #info frantisekz will secretarialize 16:08:21 we have: 16:08:32 What is the cut off for blockers, bugs etc.? 16:08:33 #info 3 Proposed Blockers 16:08:33 #info 4 Accepted Blockers 16:08:39 #info 10 Proposed Freeze Exceptions 16:08:39 #info 4 Accepted Freeze Exceptions 16:08:44 lroca: how do you mean, 'cutoff'? 16:08:58 lroca: A "Go" declaration at a Go/No-Go meeting 16:09:18 After that point, the machinery is in motion and not realistically stoppabel 16:09:22 I entered a bug report this morning for gnome-calendar 16:09:22 *stoppable 16:09:43 lroca: Did you submit it for consideration? 16:10:10 sgallagh: To bugzilla but didn't label it 16:10:26 * lbrabec is here 16:10:27 hi 16:10:28 it won't come up unless it's proposed as a blocker or FE 16:10:31 you can propose it now if you like 16:10:33 lroca: If you think it's a blocker, propose it using https://qa.fedoraproject.org/blockerbugs/propose_bug 16:11:37 lbrabec++ 16:11:37 kparal: Karma for lbrabec changed to 1 (for the f27 release cycle): https://badges.fedoraproject.org/tags/cookie/any 16:11:51 I'll do both for (here and on the form) 16:12:10 OK, let's get started with the proposed blockers! 16:12:19 #info starting with proposed blockers 16:12:25 #topic (1569321) cloud-init-17.1-4.fc28 sets BOOTPROTO=none when using EC2 private network only 16:12:25 #link https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1569321 16:12:25 #info Proposed Blocker, cloud-init, MODIFIED 16:13:12 From the replies on the BZ, it sounds like a judgement call. It's not going to affect everyone, so we have to decide if it's a sufficiently-large subset of Cloud users to block on. 16:13:31 I'm definitely +1 FE in any case and there appears to be a fix ready. 16:13:39 I don't have a strong opinion on blocker status, but definitely +1 FE 16:14:12 +1 FE 16:14:14 The size of the patch makes me a little nervous, but it's fixing a serious issue so I'd be amenable 16:14:14 +1FE 16:14:23 it's going to affect everyone with private ip, doesn't it? 16:14:23 I think that this one is not so severe to block the whole release 16:14:23 i'm rather influenced to +1 blocker by https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1569321#c3 16:14:26 +1 FE 16:14:40 do the math on that comment: out of 200 VMs he has running Fedora, 6 have public IPs 16:14:44 that means 194 *don't* 16:14:50 and thus would be affected by the bug... 16:14:56 it seems like a clear blocker to me unless I'm missing something 16:15:09 +1 blocker 16:15:10 adamw, agreed, +1 blocker 16:15:11 of course, that's just one user, but...seems significant 16:15:32 +1 blocker 16:15:43 I don't understand this one TBH so I'm +0 16:15:45 Sorry 16:16:16 adamw: Well, it's hard to say how significant it would be. 16:16:22 I don't have any information on how common a setup that is. 16:16:37 If 99.99% of Amazon users use only public IPs... ? 16:16:42 according to the bugzilla, it is fixed anyway 16:17:05 well, yeah, but if we make this a blocker, if any issue appears with the fix, we have to fix that 16:17:09 lruzicka: the point is, if this is a blocker, the fix is pulled in and it has to work. so it it turns out it's not working, we will wait further 16:17:11 if we make it an FE, we can back out the fix and still ship 16:17:18 so it's still significantly 16:17:24 Lailah: that's fine, better than voting at random :) thanks 16:17:55 I guess I'm 0 on blocker because I don't have a sense of how widespread it might be. I'm definitely +1 FE 16:18:04 (And, reading the patch, the fix seems sensible) 16:18:13 I can't say how often public IPs are used in cloud envs, but unless proven otherwise, I'd assume the answer is "significantly enough" 16:18:29 kparal: it's the opposite 16:18:33 would this bug affect testcloud instances in taskotron stack? 16:18:35 kparal: instances *with* public IPs are fine 16:18:42 kparal: it's instances *without* public IPs that have the bug 16:18:53 s/public/private 16:18:59 =) 16:19:01 mistyped 16:19:08 Right, and in general (it seems to me) the point of using a public cloud would be for your VMs to be, well, publicly accessible 16:19:27 kparal: adamw: I feel the same as sgallagh, I think that it is too strict to block everything based on this one ... 16:19:27 like, say, projects on github? 16:19:30 But obviously we know of at least one case where there's a different policy 16:19:42 sgallagh: not really. we're all about the microservices and containers now, right? 16:19:57 sgallagh: only the ones which are ultimately public-facing need public IPs - the public-facing web server or whatever. 16:20:01 deploying a cloud image without connectivity is pretty bad, seems to me 16:20:06 all the microservices that whir away in the background don't need to be. 16:20:13 * sgallagh nods 16:20:15 they only need to be able to talk to *each other* 16:20:23 adamw: good point 16:20:40 does anyone have any questions about the bug 16:20:40 or we can ask cloud sig, of course 16:20:42 I'm not disagreeing with you, it's that I just have no information about the relative usage 16:20:43 I might be able to answer 16:20:51 dustymabe: welcome 16:20:56 * dustymabe waves 16:21:11 dustymabe: how often do cloud instances have private IPs? 16:21:19 please explain. dustymabe 16:21:33 dustymabe: i don't think we have questions about the bug 16:21:40 kparal: it depends on the user. 16:21:42 the question is how common/uncommin it's likely to be. 16:21:57 so for example a lot of "cloud shops" tend to set up a few nodes as entrypoints for services 16:22:12 and then they connect to other hosts within a "private" network 16:22:16 are there lots of folks out there running fedora on cloud instances with no public ip, like Joe, or are there...not. 16:22:54 adamw: I think if you are running a more compicated setup (like most businesses do) then you are probably using a setup like what Joe is doing 16:23:00 dustymabe: Sounds like you're saying this would be the rule rather than the exception for the set of users Fedora Cloud addresses, yes? 16:23:04 well 16:23:07 there's a missing link there 16:23:11 if you are a casual user, then no you wouldn't do this 16:23:25 are 'most businesses' running 'more complicated setups' going to be running *fedora*? :P 16:23:31 adamw: :) 16:23:48 good question, probably more of them would be running CentOS or RHEL 16:23:52 dustymabe: Would such businesses use Fedora for their cloud? 16:23:54 most csual users are not running amazon clouds either 16:24:04 adamw: Not a valid question. 16:24:07 adamw: You were faster :) 16:24:16 I think the real answer is "If they ARE running Fedora, would they be doing this?" 16:24:25 Southern_Gentlem: I think "spin a node up in AWS" is becoming a lot more common than you think 16:24:30 s/real answer/real question/ 16:24:44 Because if the answer to that question is "yes", I'd call it a blocker 16:24:55 sgallagh: i'd say they're the same question spun two different ways. 16:25:26 is it worth arguing over the blocker status? let's just take the fix and argue over blocker status if it doesn't work? 16:25:30 note, i'm not necessarily advocating for *blocker* here, just trying to present information 16:25:30 sgallagh: if our userbase is 99% people experimenting on single nodes, that's one case. if our userbase is 50% that and 50% people running serious setups at scale, that's another case. 16:25:47 kalev: i had a proposal for that lined up when we started interrogating dusty... 16:25:48 proposed #agreed 1569231 - AcceptedFreezeException (Final), punt (delay decision) on blocker - this is a judgment call as it depends how common ec2 instances with only private IPs are. We agree this is at least serious enough to be an FE; we don't yet have enough data to be totally sure if it's serious enough to be a blocker. If the fix presents problems, we will revisit whether to make this a blocker. 16:25:58 ack 16:25:59 adamw: +1 16:26:00 ack 16:26:02 adamw: Yes, that's what I'm trying to work out 16:26:03 ack 16:26:04 ack 16:26:06 ack 16:26:08 ack 16:26:09 ack 16:26:12 ack 16:26:12 #agreed 1569231 - AcceptedFreezeException (Final), punt (delay decision) on blocker - this is a judgment call as it depends how common ec2 instances with only private IPs are. We agree this is at least serious enough to be an FE; we don't yet have enough data to be totally sure if it's serious enough to be a blocker. If the fix presents problems, we will revisit whether to make this a blocker. 16:26:13 ack 16:26:16 alrighty then! 16:26:17 ack 16:26:19 ack 16:26:24 #topic (1557655) Install to system with HPSA storage fails to boot, stops at "Failed to start udev Wait for Complete Device Initialization" 16:26:25 #link https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1557655 16:26:25 #info Proposed Blocker, kernel, NEW 16:26:32 if I get some cloud images prepared would anybody here be willing to test it out? 16:27:23 Uhm, let me read.... 16:27:26 coremodule's not around, right? OK, I volunteer him. :P 16:27:31 i also volunteer sgallagh 16:27:33 dustymabe, sure 16:27:37 * adamw wipes the blood off the Volunteering Stick 16:27:40 thanks! 16:27:48 dustymabe, for sure! 16:27:53 also lbrabec is our local cloud guru 16:28:02 let's volunteer him as well 16:28:04 yeah? that's awesome 16:28:11 Didn't we decide a release or two ago that we didn't have the test capability to block on FCoE? 16:28:20 dustymabe: meaning he knows what the cloud is, which we don't 16:28:21 sgallagh: well, two things. 16:28:22 * lroca wishes "Steps to reproduce" was filled out more often 16:28:26 one, now we do, which is why this bug. 16:28:35 two, this bug is not in fact about fcoe any more, which is why i re-proposed it. 16:28:39 oh 16:28:44 * sgallagh reads further 16:28:50 lroca: "steps to reproduce" involves "go get a system with an HPSA raid controller". 16:29:09 adamw: Another bug I don't understand :-( 16:29:19 well, it's not actually that complicated 16:29:20 * jforbes notes this bug is also not kernel 16:29:33 if you've got a system with a particular storage controller, installing to it doesn't work. 16:29:36 is more or less what it boils down to. 16:29:45 Oh... 16:29:59 And how common is this particular type of storage? 16:30:04 good question! 16:30:18 jforbes: stop me if i'm wrong anywhere here, this is all five-minutes-of-google expertise 16:30:21 adamw: true :) 16:30:27 aiui, hpsa is HP's enterprise storage stuff 16:30:30 kparal: sure 16:30:35 it stands for 'hp smart array' i think 16:30:37 so, stuff like https://www.hpe.com/us/en/product-catalog/servers/smart-array-controllers-and-smart-host-bus-adapters.hits-12.html 16:30:42 right 16:31:07 As a fedora userbase I expect usage is low, but not nonexistent. 16:31:23 if you do 'man hpsa' you'll see a list of supported models 16:31:27 https://www.idc.com/getdoc.jsp?containerId=prUS43274017 suggests that HP has the largest chunk of the storage market. Not sure how much of that is HPSA though 16:31:29 (it's quite long so i won't paste it here) 16:31:42 Okay 16:32:13 sgall "enterprise storage systems" covers quite a lot of...stuff, i think... 16:32:31 sgallagh: that has no relevance on how it is connected, I know shops with massive racks of IBM storage, not connected to a single IBM machine or using their adapters 16:32:36 * sgallagh nods 16:32:52 i cited the criterion and relevant footnote at https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1557655#c43 16:33:03 so i'd say we're basically making a judgment call under that footnote here 16:33:26 i'm probably inclined to -1 on the basis that i really suspect this is pretty niche hardware for fedora usage 16:33:31 I'm leaning towards -1 16:33:34 * sgallagh nods 16:33:35 * mkolman sees smart array being mentioned and remembers how bloody annoying to was it to fix it yet again back in RHEL 5 16:33:41 never again 16:33:43 Me too 16:33:44 =) 16:33:44 -1 16:33:46 -1 16:33:50 -1 16:33:56 I would agree, though it would be nice to see it fixed still. 16:34:05 -1 16:34:06 -1 16:34:07 I'd actually also go so far as to -1 FE it, since I worry that fixes might break other stuff 16:34:16 i'd want to see the fix before voting on any fe 16:34:24 yes 16:34:36 reasonable 16:34:40 sgallagh: at this point, we don't even know where the issue lies other than "not kernel" since the F28 kernel works fine with that storage on F27 16:34:57 It sounds like it doesn't break DURING install, so if it was fixed post-release, we could recommend installing with network repos available 16:35:27 proposed #agreed 1557655 - RejectedBlocker (Final) - we consider this bug as falling under the "System-specific bugs" footnote to the RAID criterion, and our feeling is that this family of storage controllers is not sufficiently commonly used with Fedora to make this bug constitute a release blocker. 16:35:45 ack 16:35:46 ack 16:35:48 ack 16:35:49 ack 16:35:50 ack 16:35:50 ack 16:35:53 ack 16:35:56 sgallagh: no, I think the installer hangs. 16:35:57 ack 16:36:02 https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1557655#c10 16:36:02 Oh? 16:36:07 "As shown in the attached screenshot,the installer just hang there" 16:36:09 ack 16:36:18 * sgallagh sighs 16:36:25 we can ship an upadtes.img, though. 16:36:29 #agreed 1557655 - RejectedBlocker (Final) - we consider this bug as falling under the "System-specific bugs" footnote to the RAID criterion, and our feeling is that this family of storage controllers is not sufficiently commonly used with Fedora to make this bug constitute a release blocker. 16:36:30 ack 16:36:30 I'm sticking with my statement 16:36:40 #topic (1570552) Email composing loses Text when clearing selection by clicking 16:36:41 #link https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1570552 16:36:41 #info Proposed Blocker, webkit2gtk3, NEW 16:36:57 Do we have any hardware usage data via surveys etc.? 16:37:00 oh man, if we're gonna block on evolution composer bugs, we wouldn't have shipped for the last ten releases. :P 16:37:07 lroca: not really, no, unfortunately 16:37:36 Okay, wait a second, I need to read this.... 16:37:45 yes, after reading sgallagh's comment in bugzille, I'd go with -1 16:38:14 huh, this one does sound bad, though. 16:38:20 i've never once run into it, though. 16:38:26 I guess the difference is X vs Wayland 16:38:27 adamw: I suppose it's like herding cats 16:38:36 yup, wayland only 16:38:55 lruzicka: well, you haven't tested latest compose with wayland 16:38:57 I'm not thrilled with the idea of fixing it with a rebase of the package though 16:39:02 kparal: I have 16:39:03 at least according to your description 16:39:04 hmm, the update that fixes this is a big change 16:39:10 * adamw runs wayland 16:39:13 I think I'd be -1 blocker, but possibly +1 FE -- the update that is fixing that has been in updates-testing for 5 days now and has gotten good karma 16:39:16 oh, the bug is a new one? 16:39:21 It says that it should be fixed 16:39:28 kparal: How come, today the latest was 2018-04-22, I tested on this 16:39:31 kalev: well, the update that *introduced* this apparently got good karma too, so...;) 16:39:35 +1 FE 16:39:37 yeah :) 16:39:45 lruzicka: ok, now I understood how you meant it, I guess 16:39:46 kparal: I tried to reproduce the bug and I did :) 16:39:49 Anyway, I don't think is a blocker 16:39:51 +1 FE 16:39:58 +1 FE 16:40:00 I'm -1 blocker. 16:40:05 +1 FE 16:40:10 i'm not sure i agree with -1 blocker, tbh 16:40:12 But totally +1 FE 16:40:14 this is pretty basic stuff 16:40:24 adamw: Finally a bug I understand :D 16:40:30 do we *really* want to ship a desktop OS that eats your text entry? 16:40:36 i mean, that's a pretty bad bug, let's be honest. 16:40:40 none of those apps mentioned are on a default install 16:40:46 evolution is. 16:40:50 Evolution 16:40:52 adamw: But it only happens if you double click on a chunk of text and then click next to it 16:40:57 are you sure evolution is in? 16:41:03 lruzicka: Only directly next to it? 16:41:05 and not just evolution-data-server? 16:41:07 Which is a pretty common action. 16:41:08 * adamw double checks. 16:41:11 kparal, has been for years 16:41:12 I often did it 16:41:13 Yeah, I thought they dropped evo 16:41:15 Evolution is the core app 16:41:24 alright 16:41:37 it's in workstation-product. 16:41:46 lruzicka: Does it matter where you click, or only directly next to it? 16:41:49 Yup. It's the mail default 16:41:54 ok 16:41:55 so this happens every time you select a text and then unselect it? 16:41:58 I use it daily but I have to change prefs from edit in text editor to test this 16:42:13 * adamw still can't reproduce this locally, but if two other people can...that's bad enough. 16:42:16 sgallagh: I did click next to it. Bu I can try, it's still running in my VM 16:42:31 oh hah 16:42:37 i can't reproduce it because i have the fixed gtk3 installed. duh 16:42:48 bad adamw for installing updates 16:42:58 adamw: So the fix works? 16:43:03 adamw: Upkarma! 16:43:07 i mean, if i can't reproduce the bug, i guess it does? 16:43:23 * sgallagh installs evo to try 16:43:24 not necessarily. you can also be lame 16:43:26 so +fe should allow the fix in, if we can test a new compose with this then we can say blocker 16:43:39 guys: I cannot reproduce it now, but I did not do anything to the VM 16:43:41 Southern_Gentlem: eh? 16:43:52 just started Evolution for the second time 16:43:57 * lruzicka is perplexed 16:44:02 lruzicka: still wayland? 16:44:07 kparal: Yes 16:44:13 adamw, has the new fix been allowed in a new compose ? 16:44:18 lruzicka: check gtk version 16:44:43 I can't reproduce this with gtk3-3.22.29-1.fc28.x86_64 16:45:03 kparal: I am checking 16:45:17 https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=794630 has another report of it 16:45:26 "PS. Even worse composer bug has appeared after yesterday's update too: sometimes text gets seemingly randomly deleted just by left-clicking in the text area." 16:45:45 kalev: do we actually know that the two bugs described are the same bug? 16:46:15 I don't know 16:46:15 lruzicka: it can be a race condition 16:46:31 because the RH bug we're discussing here is clearly a report of "text gets eaten" but it's been marked as a downstream of the upstream bug https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/issues/132 , which is clearly a report of "auto-scroll happens unexpectedly" 16:46:59 kparal: GTK is 3.22.30 16:47:12 lruzicka: That's the fixed version (supposedly) 16:47:16 * adamw goes to hunt down an mclasen 16:47:18 You sure you didn't update it? 16:47:25 I'm here, just distracted 16:47:28 whats the question ? 16:47:37 lruzicka: that's the fixed version 16:47:38 adamw: https://bugs.webkit.org/show_bug.cgi?id=184446 seems to indicate it's the same bug 16:47:44 lruzicka: so you have updated it 16:47:45 sgallagh: Oh wait, now I remember. It cried for updates and I did update 16:47:53 "cried" :P 16:48:19 sorry for having mistaken you 16:48:27 lruzicka: at least we can confirm the fix works :) 16:48:37 give it a karma 16:48:48 I still can't reproduce the issue with the .29 version though 16:48:56 So it definitely doesn't apply to all systems 16:49:16 the reports use words like "sometimes" and "often" 16:49:21 mclasen: the question was, does gtk+ 3.22.30 fix https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1570552 ? 16:49:22 which seem to suggest it's not a 100% reproducer 16:49:41 mclasen: right, specifically, i'm concerned that two bugs seem to be treated as one 16:49:46 adamw: I've been opening and closing windows in EVO and typing everywhere I can find 16:50:00 sgallagh, X or wayland? 16:50:03 mclasen: the RH bug that's proposed as a blocker is clearly about "highlighted text sometimes gets eaten" 16:50:05 Southern_Gentlem: Wayland 16:50:19 mclasen: but the upstream bug it's been linked to seems to be about "auto-scrolling happens unexpectedly" 16:50:42 Southern_Gentlem: Wayland on Nouveau as opposed to Intel, though. Which I suppose could be relevant. 16:50:50 those seem like rather different bugs to me...so i want to be sure that pulling in what appears to be the fix for "auto-scrolling happens unexpectedly" in fact also fixed "highlighted text gets eaten" 16:50:53 But if the fix is in gtk3, I wouldn't expect that to be the case 16:54:05 I'm -1 Blocker, +1 FE here, but I'm (still) not thrilled with the idea of pulling in a rebase to fix it. But if it's sufficiently karma'd, I'll be okay with it 16:54:16 the so-called fix appears to be done so what do we need to do for it to be iin the final compsde 16:54:37 in any case...since we have three different people saying they'd hit this (j. haas, lukas, and tanu in https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=794630 ), i'm really kinda inclined to +1 it, i really don't think we can ship a 'stable' workstation OS that is known to do this. 16:54:45 +1 FE 16:54:56 to be clear, i meant +1 blocker 16:55:03 but if everyone else is -1, hey. 16:55:09 ok, +1 blocker too then :) 16:55:11 +1 16:55:20 +1 blocker 16:55:42 Mmmh... 16:55:42 ok, +1 blocker 16:55:44 +1 blocker 16:55:47 Still think the same 16:55:54 adamw: can't look in detail right now. I'll put it on my list 16:55:57 -1 blocker +1 FE 16:56:13 there was at least one fix wrt to input methods. not sure if I cherry picked that for 3.22 16:56:14 mclasen: thanks 16:56:17 will check 16:56:45 mclasen: if we can look into it in more detail later today that'd be great, i want to be sure someone knows what's going on with this one... 16:57:18 oh, https://bugs.webkit.org/show_bug.cgi?id=184446 also seems relevant. fun 16:57:19 I have it open in a tab now, so there's hope 16:57:27 +1 blocker 16:57:58 ah. that appears to be the source of the claim that they're the same bug: it says that "wayland: Don't emit signals if nothing changed" fixes it. 16:58:06 OK, let's follow up after the meeting 16:58:08 * adamw counts votes 16:58:16 +1 blocker 16:58:34 we have -2/+8 blocker, i think 16:58:41 that seems a big enough consensus to accept 16:59:26 btw, i'll note that one evolution composer issue I *do* know about is that 'undo' is nowhere near 100% reliable in evolution 16:59:48 formatting issues and particularly anything that touches anywhere near the signature can really confuse it 17:00:05 you can't rely at all that if you do 5 things in the evo composer than undo them, you'll be back in the state you started 17:00:07 so. 17:00:23 * lroca nods 17:00:56 proposed #agreed 1570552 - AcceptedBlocker (Final) - accepted as a violation of "All applications that can be launched using the standard graphical mechanism of a release-blocking desktop after a default installation of that desktop must...withstand a basic functionality test", on the basis that being able to type, select and unselect text is pretty 'basic functionality' for Evolution, dissenting votes from sgallagh and lailah 17:01:13 ack 17:01:18 ack 17:01:19 ack 17:01:20 ack 17:01:28 ack 17:01:29 ack 17:01:31 ack 17:01:31 ack 17:01:35 ack 17:01:46 #agreed 1570552 - AcceptedBlocker (Final) - accepted as a violation of "All applications that can be launched using the standard graphical mechanism of a release-blocking desktop after a default installation of that desktop must...withstand a basic functionality test", on the basis that being able to type, select and unselect text is pretty 'basic functionality' for Evolution, dissenting votes from sgallagh and lailah 17:02:08 ack 17:02:10 OK, that's all the proposed blockers 17:02:28 may I propose the gnome-calendar? 17:02:37 ah, yes 17:03:00 what bug is that? 17:03:01 #1570879 17:03:43 When I select an event calendar crashes 17:03:44 lroca: you've reported it as a private bug. 17:03:49 so most people here will not be able to see it. 17:03:52 :( 17:04:05 Can I change that? 17:04:15 Iroca: why did you do that? 17:04:47 I fixed it 17:05:01 Lailah: problem reporting flagged keybase and pass phrases as exposed 17:05:24 I thought I "deselected" from the checkbox list but.. guess not 17:05:34 Lailah: it's a common issue with abrt... 17:05:41 ah 17:05:55 #topic (1570879) [abrt] gnome-calendar: gcal_date_chooser_day_set_date(): gnome-calendar killed by SIGSEGV 17:05:57 sgallagh: thank you 17:06:03 #link https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1570879 17:06:12 #info Proposed Blocker, gnome-calendar, NEW 17:06:38 is calendar preinstalled now? 17:06:45 it's in gnome-desktop comps group 17:06:48 which is in the workstation kickstart 17:06:51 so i think yes 17:06:52 * adamw double checks 17:06:53 kparal, yes 17:07:09 Hmm, I just went ahead and installed it and I'm not seeing the reported crash 17:07:16 This happens every time for you lroca ? 17:07:21 kparal: I think it is. 17:07:25 Every time. Just did again 17:07:32 it might be specific to lroca's events 17:07:41 what's the source for your calendar, lroca? 17:07:43 I can't select an event.. any event 17:07:46 kparal: I have also reported such crash via abrt, but I have not seen it for a while now. 17:08:03 the backtrace points to a memory allocation issue for some reason, bwt 17:08:03 error: Cannot access memory at address 0x38 17:08:04 lruzicka: can you check now? 17:08:11 These are imported from Fedora Calendar. I was trying to change a meeting time for comm-ops 17:08:16 kparal: Of course. 17:08:20 we could also be in i18n stuff here, i guess 17:08:24 what's your locale, lroca? 17:08:28 lroca: you can't edit fedocal events remotely 17:08:35 kparal: clicking on one shouldn't crash the app. 17:08:38 but of course that doesn't disqualify this bug 17:09:11 can't reproduce here either (with my own calendar server as the data source...) 17:09:22 Creating a new event /within/ the calendar does not crash the app when I click to edit 17:09:46 I remember long ago getting some sort of warning like "This is a read-only event" or something like that, not crashing. So I think that is quite a nasty bug. 17:09:58 i have a read-only event in my caaaalendar too, as it happens 17:09:59 Anything I've imported from FedoCal crashes 17:09:59 it's not crashing 17:10:07 I mean, it's frustrating trying to do something and the app just crashes without explanation 17:10:11 lroca: how did you 'import' the events exactly? 17:10:47 From the site.. selected the iCal (i believe). It opened up calendar and I added it 17:10:55 this worked before F28 17:11:35 Selecting an event wouldn't crash. .. There were /other/ issues like UTC not syncing I couldn't quite explain but not this 17:12:30 lroca: i asked before, but - what's your locale? 17:12:48 NYC metro 17:12:56 how do I delete an event? if click on it, left right button it only opens 17:12:58 ..Jersey (: 17:14:02 I can't reproduce this issue here either 17:14:02 lruzicka: these events won't open. Calendar crashes the moment I select them so I can't even delete and start over or reimport 17:14:26 hum, seems like date = 0x0 is wrong here. 17:14:28 So while I feel bad for lroca, I am inclined to vote -1 blocker 17:14:33 lroca: In my instance, I can create and delete events without crashes, but I did not try import a calendar 17:14:49 yeah, it looks to me like there's clearly an issue here but it's not sufficiently reproducible to block fedora on... 17:14:55 lroca: Can you try `california` as a replacement and see if you can edit your entries through that? 17:15:26 * sgallagh refers to the app named california and is not recommending that lroca move across the continent. 17:15:32 lroca: kparal: adamw: I am going to report another bug, since the event cannot be deleted when the "announcement" is switched on 17:15:32 sgallagh: trying... 17:16:11 lroca: And now, after the event has been deleted ... it crashed 17:16:40 And since the calendar is a core app .... definitely a blocker to me 17:16:53 lruzicka: sorry, can you explain what you did in more detail? 17:17:13 adamw: Now ... I have just opened the calendar, added a new event. 17:17:17 That went fine. 17:17:22 sgallagh: crashes 17:17:55 lroca: That suggests to me that you may actually have bad data somewhere and the underlying routines they both share breaks when parsing it. 17:17:57 I also changed some event's details, went fine. Then I wanted to delete it, but there was no delete button to be seen until I switched off anouncements. 17:18:06 After I deleted the event, it crashed. 17:18:12 there are some extremely bizarre year, month and date values in this backtrace 17:18:16 So... a painful bug, but I'm still not convinced we should block on it. 17:18:17 IIRC calendar events are imported via Evolution, no? 17:18:21 which i suspect is the source of the problem... 17:18:30 lroca: evolution-data-server is likely involved 17:18:38 adamw: does it start with "star date"? 17:18:41 adamw: Either that or lroca is a time-traveler. 17:18:59 kparal: well, look at frame 13 17:18:59 y1 = 2025 17:18:59 m1 = 12 17:18:59 d1 = 31 17:19:00 y2 = 1 17:19:00 m2 = 0 17:19:02 d2 = 1415120992 17:19:17 d2 looks a lot like some sort of integer signing wraparound, in fact? 17:19:25 or, wait 17:19:25 no 17:19:27 not a unix timestamp? 17:19:28 it looks like a timestamp 17:19:28 yeah 17:19:29 * lroca jumps back into his police box 17:19:31 that's what i meant 17:19:56 for Tue, 04 Nov 2014 17:09:52 GMT apparently. 17:20:14 Can't you see!? lroca is trying to warn us that the world will end on New Year's Eve, 2025! 17:20:26 :D 17:20:31 LMAO 17:20:39 so, i can kinda cut this both ways 17:21:00 on the one hand, you can boot a clean VM, run gnome-calendar, and create and delete and edit some simple events 17:21:04 which is kinda what i'd call 'basic functionality' 17:21:11 otoh, two people have been able to crash it without trying too hard 17:21:32 And I can't crash it while trying everything I can think of 17:21:33 adamw: When I deleted now a simple event, it crashed. 17:21:43 I'm of the mind to push this and see if evolution-data-server is involved 17:21:54 adamw: So the basic functionality is still questionable 17:21:56 still, to me, it's in a bit of a different bucket from Evolution, yes it's in the default install, but i'm not really sure it's got the kind of functionality expectation behind it... 17:21:58 awkward one 17:22:20 I'd like to see if this happens on calendar importing... 17:22:35 I take that back, I finally reproduced it 17:22:35 err.. because of importing 17:23:21 In this case, I just kept adding and deleting events in the local calendar until it crashed 17:23:41 I'm still not convinced I would slip the release over this though 17:24:12 I think I'd not block over this either 17:24:50 it's also not something that neccessarily needs to be on the media, can easily be fixed with a 0 day update 17:25:49 I'm not disputing and would go from +1 to 0 but does this not violate basic functionality? 17:26:05 kalev: Are you suggesting that we just drop it from the default install to bypass the blocker criterion? 17:26:12 (FTR, I'd be fine with that) 17:26:56 sgallagh: what would Evolution use as a calendar? 17:27:02 Well, I would like to mention that a calendar somehow is a "basic" app that the gnome users might expect 17:27:03 lroca... it has its own 17:27:07 lroca: "basic functionality" has turned out to be an extremely elastic phrase :P 17:27:11 evolution is its own calendar 17:27:16 this crash is clearly in gnome-calendar code 17:27:21 Hmm, I wonder if the built-in one has this same bug 17:27:30 it's possible e-d-s is feeding it garbage, but even so it should probably cope. 17:27:34 sgallagh: no, I was suggesting that this bug doesn't sound serious enough to cause a slip for a whole fedora release 17:27:39 adamw: I thought they were connected 17:27:54 lroca: they both ultimately store the data in e-d-s. 17:28:09 look at e-d-s as the common backend storage and evolution and gnome-calendar as alternative clients. 17:28:24 but this crash is clearly happening in code that's unique to gnome-calendar. 17:28:41 nothing in the bug suggestions evolution itself would crash in the same way. 17:28:53 i mean, it's easy enough to check - run evolution and try importing the event through that... 17:28:59 adamw: thanks for the clarityRE e-d-s 17:29:02 Yeah, doing that now 17:29:50 Evolution doesn't crash 17:29:54 (: 17:30:19 Yeah, I can't crash it there either 17:30:49 ok 17:31:03 so yeah, this comes down to whether we consider this to be breaking 'basic functionality' of gnome-calendar, really 17:31:47 i think i'm shading -1 blocker, it's obvious there's some buggy code in the app, but given it's a relatively new app that probably doesn't have the same expectations as shell or evolution or firefox or something, i think this just falls the other side of the line for me 17:32:02 * kalev agrees. 17:32:11 0 17:32:18 Ok ... as you wish. 17:32:45 Yeah, I'm -1 here. 17:33:14 It wouldn't pass the "last blocker" test for me 17:33:53 -1 blocker 17:33:59 * lroca switches to using Evolution calendar for... 17:34:24 I'll keep an eye on this and if a fix appears, I'll propose it as a FE 17:34:39 I'm +1 to FE 17:34:43 kalev: i might have a quick poke at it after the meeting, i'm intrigued now 17:34:49 cool :) 17:35:26 proposed #agreed 1570879 - RejectedBlocker (Final) - this is close, but we agreed it doesn't quite meet the definition of "basic functionality" - people testing in meeting were able to make gnome-calendar crash by poking at it a bit, but no-one else could exactly reproduce lroca's crash, and just the basics of creating and editing events don't reliably crash the app 17:35:27 Thanks all. Didn't mean to hold us up on this 17:35:36 patch 17:35:46 proposed #agreed 1570879 - RejectedBlocker (Final) - this is close, but we agreed it doesn't quite meet the definition of "basic functionality" - people testing in meeting were able to make gnome-calendar crash by poking at it a bit, but no-one else could exactly reproduce lroca's crash, and just the basics of creating and editing events don't reliably crash the app. We will consider an FE if crasher fix(es) appear 17:36:03 ack 17:36:06 ack 17:36:09 ack 17:36:46 #agreed 1570879 - RejectedBlocker (Final) - this is close, but we agreed it doesn't quite meet the definition of "basic functionality" - people testing in meeting were able to make gnome-calendar crash by poking at it a bit, but no-one else could exactly reproduce lroca's crash, and just the basics of creating and editing events don't reliably crash the app. We will consider an FE if crasher fix(es) appear 17:37:04 with my 'meta' hat on, those two gnome bugs we just considered are an interesting pair...=) 17:37:07 anyhoo! 17:37:12 #info moving onto proposed freeze exception 17:37:27 we've got like 10 of these, so let's try and be quick 17:37:27 #topic (1570363) Update to 0.6.46 17:37:28 #link https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1570363 17:37:28 #info Proposed Freeze Exceptions, accountsservice, MODIFIED 17:38:22 this...is unfortunately timed 17:38:26 i'd've been a lot more +1 on it last week 17:38:48 yes, same here 17:38:50 Yeah, I'm -1 17:38:58 There's too much churn for an FE 17:39:02 for information, this is a really key bit of workstation 17:39:11 accountsservice is deeply wired into the whole process of authentication in gnome 17:39:29 I'd honestly have been -1 on it last week too 17:39:48 so, i think =1 17:39:49 -1 17:39:54 the memory leak is something that can easily fixed with a 0 day. at the same time, would be nice to ship the fix on the base media, to ensure it goes through all the final validation, as it's really a key component 17:39:56 i did just ping pbrobinson to give us a chance to come lobby us 17:40:08 kalev: i'm honestly happier doing it as an update 17:40:15 ok 17:40:21 account services as in "Google, Pocket etc."? 17:40:28 lroca: it's really everything 17:40:32 lroca: No, that's GNOME Online Accounts 17:40:37 just logging in as a local user still runs through accountsservice 17:40:40 no, accountsservice is local accounts 17:40:42 yeah 17:40:46 This is the service that feeds GDM for logins, gnome-shell for screen-lock... 17:41:09 got it 17:41:22 anyone want to argue for +1? 17:41:22 kalev: Well, login accounts rather than local accounts 17:41:28 Since SSSD is in play too 17:41:28 +1, any memory improvements for workstation are welcome on low end systems like arm 17:42:07 pwhalen: Not arguing, just asking that your vote implies you're willing to risk possible breakage for those improvements? 17:42:24 pwhalen: and you don't think it's sufficient to ship them as updates? 17:42:43 I'm slightly worried about shipping it as 0 day because I know then it won't get as much testing as if we include it on the media. at the same time, including can easily cause us to slip, if something is wrong there 17:42:59 accountsservice maintainer is halfline and can probably quickly address any issues if something crops up though 17:43:10 it would be nice out of the box, get lots of testing done 17:43:19 that was my pitch for +1 :) (not sure I'm +1 myself, just tried to list some reasons) 17:43:36 i don't think it's actually a particularly good argument for workstation components 17:43:50 they get a lot of testing as updates 17:44:01 and it's more likely to be in-depth and/or hit less common configurations than validation testing is 17:44:15 validation testing is commonly done as just 'install in a VM create a local account and call it good' 17:44:15 adamw: Well, *apps* do, but I'm not sure if the services get tested specifically as much 17:44:26 Sorry, guys, I have to go. See ya. 17:44:27 ok, fair enough 17:44:29 * Kohane waves 17:44:35 sgallagh: well not tested specifically, but people are at least likely to notice if their stuff breaks and start yelling 17:45:00 adamw: Sure, but for services I think that tends to end up happening after it goes stable 17:45:20 But I'll stop arguing because I'm still on the -1 FE side of this 17:45:34 The risks (to me) outweigh the benefits 17:45:40 even there, a bad update is notably less disastrous than the bad thing being baked into the released workstation media forever 17:45:49 that's the case that worries me the most, in fact, not a slip 17:45:50 adamw++ 17:46:04 bad updates we have options; we can, in the worst case, just pull one, we've done that before 17:46:15 I agree ... 17:46:16 * sgallagh nods 17:47:03 -1 FE, I'm convinced 17:47:04 proposed #agreed 1570363 - RejectedFreezeException (Final) - while the improvements to resource use are attractive, the risks of a major update to something as significant as accountsservice this late in the release process substantially outweigh the benefits 17:47:15 ack 17:47:18 ack 17:47:22 ack 17:47:24 ack 17:47:25 ack 17:47:26 ack 17:47:40 #agreed 1570363 - RejectedFreezeException (Final) - while the improvements to resource use are attractive, the risks of a major update to something as significant as accountsservice this late in the release process substantially outweigh the benefits 17:47:51 #topic (1507940) Root password listed as 'set' on AArch64 disk images 17:47:51 #link https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1507940 17:47:51 #info Proposed Freeze Exceptions, anaconda, POST 17:47:59 +1 17:48:19 +1 FE 17:48:31 +1 FE 17:48:35 +1 FE 17:48:52 +1 FE 17:49:13 +1 FE 17:49:40 proposed #agreed 1507940 - AcceptedFreezeException (Final) - this can result in the user being locked out of the install, and cannot be fully fixed with a post-release update 17:49:54 ack 17:49:54 ack 17:49:56 ack 17:50:01 ack 17:50:01 #agreed 1507940 - AcceptedFreezeException (Final) - this can result in the user being locked out of the install, and cannot be fully fixed with a post-release update 17:50:12 #topic (1569045) kickstart file trigger critical exception in anaconda 17:50:13 #link https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1569045 17:50:13 #info Proposed Freeze Exceptions, anaconda, POST 17:50:38 +1 FE 17:50:50 +1 17:50:51 +1 FE 17:50:53 +1 FE 17:51:23 +1 FE 17:51:25 I think I'm +1 FE here as well, mostly because it's sufficiently exercised by automated testing 17:51:26 +1 FE 17:51:41 proposed #agreed 1569045 - AcceptedFreezeException (Final) - this can cause kickstart / console installs to crash on certain systems, and cannot be fixed with a post-release update 17:51:46 ack 17:51:47 ack 17:51:50 ack 17:51:54 ack 17:52:07 ack 17:52:18 ack 17:52:31 ack 17:52:34 ACK 17:52:37 #agreed 1569045 - AcceptedFreezeException (Final) - this can cause kickstart / console installs to crash on certain systems, and cannot be fixed with a post-release update 17:52:44 #topic (1567622) bluetoothd (bluez 5.49) crashes on start: core-dump 17:52:45 #link https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1567622 17:52:45 #info Proposed Freeze Exceptions, bluez, ON_QA 17:52:52 I looked at the patch fixing this the other day and it's just adding a != NULL guard, should be safe to take 17:53:00 and nice to get a hardware support fix on the media 17:53:04 +1 FE 17:53:05 +1 FE 17:53:08 +1FE 17:53:19 +1FE 17:53:20 +1 fe 17:53:21 +1 FE 17:53:35 +1 FE 17:53:49 This feels like a blocker to me, actually 17:53:53 +1 17:54:01 sgallagh: i was wondering the same 17:54:08 though, not quite sure 17:54:09 what criterion? 17:54:22 it seems it only crashes if you actually try and pair some hardware 17:54:32 ("so long as you don't use it, it doesn't crash!") 17:54:38 Basic functionality of the desktop env? 17:55:05 It’s presented as a prominent feature of gnome-shell 17:55:10 panel functionality? 17:55:15 it's in the menus 17:55:19 It’s right in the UI panel, not even buried in settings. 17:56:01 yeah, fair argument 17:56:03 i can go +1 blocker on that 17:56:05 other votes? 17:56:13 +1 blocker 17:56:14 +1 17:56:32 (glad you guys didn't push accountsservice, there was a regression found in the release a couple of days ago, going to do a new release soon) 17:56:58 yay :) 17:57:46 score one for conservatism! 17:57:50 be it ... +1 blocker 17:59:12 proposed #agreed 1567622 - AcceptedBlocker (Final) - we are accepting this as a blocker (not just FE) for Final as a violation of criterion "All elements of the default panel (or equivalent) configuration in all release-blocking desktops must function correctly in typical use", this is a major function which can be reached (and users with bluetooth devices will commonly interact with) via the panel 17:59:33 ack 17:59:51 ack 17:59:52 ack 17:59:54 ack 17:59:57 ack 18:00:02 #agreed 1567622 - AcceptedBlocker (Final) - we are accepting this as a blocker (not just FE) for Final as a violation of criterion "All elements of the default panel (or equivalent) configuration in all release-blocking desktops must function correctly in typical use", this is a major function which can be reached (and users with bluetooth devices will commonly interact with) via the panel 18:00:38 #topic (1568670) gnome-shell should obsolete caribou in F28+ 18:00:38 #link https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1568670 18:00:38 #info Proposed Freeze Exceptions, gnome-shell, NEW 18:01:04 this is a sensible change, but i don't think it really needs an FE, particularly. 18:01:10 we can just do it as an update with the same effect. 18:01:19 * kalev agrees. 18:01:20 -1 18:01:34 -1 FE 18:01:36 -1 FE 18:01:37 -1 FE 18:01:39 -1 18:02:19 I also don't think gnome-shell should obsolete caribou. I can imagine cases where someone has uninstalled gnome-shell, but forgotten caribou, and then this obsolete would put gnome-shell back 18:02:36 fedora-bosolete-package feels like a better place 18:02:47 fedora-obsolete-packages 18:03:15 kalev: i'm not sure if Obsoletes works that way, but interesting point 18:03:29 we should check, can you mention it in the bug? 18:03:36 adamw: I think he's right, actually. 18:03:38 sure 18:03:40 i think gnome-shell would also have to *provides* caribou 18:03:42 but imbw 18:03:42 Or... wait. 18:03:44 Yeah 18:04:19 of course, it means then that your theoretical person wouldn't get caribou removed either. but hey 18:04:45 proposed #agreed 1568670 - RejectedFreezeException (Final) - there's no reason we can think of that this actually needs an FE, it can be done fine as an update 18:04:59 ack 18:05:06 ack 18:05:09 ack 18:05:11 ack 18:05:13 ack 18:05:56 ack 18:06:23 #agreed 1568670 - RejectedFreezeException (Final) - there's no reason we can think of that this actually needs an FE, it can be done fine as an update 18:06:30 #topic (1566988) repomd.xml GPG signature verification error: gpgme_op_verify() 18:06:30 #link https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1566988 18:06:30 #info Proposed Freeze Exceptions, gpgme, NEW 18:07:47 looks like the PR linked has been rejected by our gnupg2 maintainer. https://src.fedoraproject.org/rpms/gnupg2/pull-request/1 18:08:09 ahh, sorry, I failed to read further comments 18:08:13 scratch that :) 18:08:59 Is there a link to the gnupg2 bug file? 18:09:33 I think I'm a weak +1 here. If this bug is breaking repos (including the OpenH264 repo), then it's hard to fix with an update 18:09:43 * kalev nods. 18:10:23 I think I'm leaning towards +1 as well here, for the same reason as sgallagh 18:10:48 yeah, it's at least plausible to hit it between install and update and be sad. 18:10:50 so i guess +1. 18:10:57 +1 18:11:26 +1 18:11:49 +1 18:12:28 do we need someone from this meeting to submit the update to bodhi? 18:13:03 well, if we want to get the fix in, someone should submit an update, yeah. 18:13:06 nothing goes in without an update. 18:13:09 I'll go do it now then 18:13:43 proposed #agreed 1566988 - AcceptedFreezeException (Final) - this can affect trying to enable repos from live environments or between install and first update, and could affect installing updates in that case, so fixing it in the release seems worthwhile 18:13:51 ack 18:13:54 ack 18:13:55 ack 18:14:22 ack 18:14:27 https://bodhi.fedoraproject.org/updates/gpgme-1.10.0-4.fc28 18:14:38 ack 18:14:46 #agreed 1566988 - AcceptedFreezeException (Final) - this can affect trying to enable repos from live environments or between install and first update, and could affect installing updates in that case, so fixing it in the release seems worthwhile 18:15:18 (next one in list was accepted as a blocker already, skipping) 18:15:18 #topic (1531140) no console output with acpi on mustang (Warning: unable to open an initial console.) 18:15:19 #link https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1531140 18:15:20 #info Proposed Freeze Exceptions, kernel, POST 18:16:11 +1 for me, this is awkward on affected hardware, can't be fully fixed with update (would affect install) 18:16:23 +1 18:16:23 +1, acpi is default on m400 18:16:30 +1 18:16:39 Do we have an isolated fix or would we be pulling in a kernel rebase for it? 18:17:41 sgallagh, not isolated afaik 18:18:08 🎌 18:18:31 (I don't know if that shows up as red flags on all implementations, but..) 18:19:03 I get really tense when I hear "kernel rebase as a freeze exception" 18:19:17 well, we could do a build from kernel git at the point this fix was added i think 18:19:20 there is no rebase involved 18:19:39 I'd be +1 in that case (I just looked at the patch, it's super-constrained) 18:20:03 it'd pull in one other patch 18:20:14 well, commit 18:20:15 "actually add the full PocketBeagle DT" 18:20:19 commit 5c3e312120cfa5c750421047eebd1fa592113a2c 18:20:51 i'll talk to jforbes and pbrobinson about the details after the meeting... 18:21:38 proposed #agreed 1531140 - AcceptedFreezeException (Final) - this is a significant issue on affected hardware which can't be fully fixed with an update. however, we note there are several other unrelated changes in current f28 kernel git branch, and would strongly prefer an update to fix this pull in as few other non-blocker/non-FE changes as possible 18:21:42 * jforbes notes kernel rebases in this sense are stable updates, not major rebases 18:22:02 jforbes: still, the policy is supposed to be that during freezes we *only* pull in changes that fix FE/blocker issues 18:22:11 not "the change that fixes those plus whatever other changes come along for the ride" 18:22:23 ack 18:22:24 i've been a bit slack about pushing people on this for the last *cough* years, but it's still what's supposed to happen 18:22:24 ack 18:22:35 ack 18:22:38 ack 18:22:40 ack 18:22:50 #agreed 1531140 - AcceptedFreezeException (Final) - this is a significant issue on affected hardware which can't be fully fixed with an update. however, we note there are several other unrelated changes in current f28 kernel git branch, and would strongly prefer an update to fix this pull in as few other non-blocker/non-FE changes as possible 18:23:04 adamw: I hear you, at the same time, this is the way kernel has always maintained the branch 18:23:15 #topic (1569242) Weak dependencies (Recommends, Supplements) not included in install trees, hence DVD media, ostrees 18:23:15 #link https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1569242 18:23:15 #info Proposed Freeze Exceptions, pungi, ASSIGNED 18:23:32 jforbes: what i'm saying is, if we can at least just do a build at fa3b85b25c112a965b70546d3a0bb274290ca8ac , that would be a lot better than building current f28 head, from that perspective 18:23:41 (since there are two other commits since that one, one which looks big) 18:24:26 so, this one...the basic issue is relatively simple, the consequences of the change are not *entirely* predicted yet 18:25:31 Neither are actually that big, and they are all fixes for tiny arm platforms 18:25:52 I'd very much like to see this fixed because this is causing various packages to keep falling out of Atomic WOrkstation, compared to regular Workstation live media 18:26:02 adamw: This is *intentional* behavior. We want the trees to be more minimalist and explicit. 18:26:03 but at the same time, slightly worried about a late change in pungi that could have unforseen consequences 18:26:36 sgallagh: did whoever "intended" it think through the consequences? 18:27:07 sgallagh: note, we are talking about the *trees* here. not the contents of the installer environment or anything like that. 18:27:15 adamw: The intention is that we need to be able to use pungi to produce minimal things like container base images and cloud images 18:27:21 sgallagh: fundamentally i don't see a defence for the inconsistency i described. 18:27:38 sgallagh: i don't see what that has to do with populating the install trees. 18:27:57 Hmm, maybe I'm confusing pungi and lorax again 18:28:11 the image compose tools/processes obviously don't have to pull in *every* package that's in the tree they're using as a source. nor do any of them actually *do* that unintentionally, AFAIK. 18:28:27 sgallagh: i honestly don't know which of them is responsible for this 18:28:46 +1 fe 18:29:06 +1 fe 18:29:09 sgallagh: but the actual...thing the bug is about, ultimately, is basically: "does trousers wind up in https://kojipkgs.fedoraproject.org/compose/branched/Fedora-28-20180423.n.0/compose/Server/x86_64/os/Packages/t/ or not?" 18:29:43 it's not about whether trousers should be in a minimal cloud image or disk image or anything like that. 18:29:51 adamw: OK, I think there's a good argument to be made for making the trees more complete. 18:30:06 i can add a comment to the bug to clarify this. 18:30:11 I'm *really* not comfortable changing our compose process three days and change before Go/No-Go 18:30:22 if we accept this, can we action item someone to check that it doesn't make cloud images explode with new pulled in packages? 18:30:24 It's been like this for several releases 18:30:32 sgallagh: but we haven't used Recommends much. 18:30:48 the more people start using it, the more problems this might expose. 18:30:53 it already entirely broke Atomic Workstation last week. 18:31:19 still, i can see the argument that we can just try and keep on top of it for f28 given that we're in freeze 18:31:21 adamw: It's not going to break anyone more than they already are for the frozen set 18:31:22 and change it for f29 or whatever 18:31:31 Yeah, that's what I'm suggesting 18:31:32 still, there's clearly at least *one* inconsistency already baked into f28 because of this 18:31:36 and i've no idea if there are others 18:31:49 i didn't look through 300 potential cases and find just 1, this was the very first case i looked at 18:31:51 adamw: For the one we know about, I can add it to our comps definition 18:31:55 (aside from the FAW one) 18:32:08 If you are particularly concerned about the disconnect 18:32:17 i don't know how concerned to be, honestly 18:32:28 the linux-firmware PR / FE request that was resolved in the ticket was about this issue, by the way 18:32:30 what would be useful, i guess, is a list of all the Recommends / Supplements actually in f28 packages as of now. 18:32:46 kalev: ah, this was also why linux-firmware wasn't in FAW? 18:32:52 I believe so 18:33:01 I don't think we'd necessarily want Supplements included. 18:33:12 sgallagh: Supplements is the same strength as Recommends. 18:33:22 Oh, wait. Sorry. 18:33:29 I parsed that as Suggests: 18:33:29 it's just in the opposite direction. 18:33:30 Never mind 18:34:07 so...proposal, punt this briefly and see if we can get a bit more data? find *all* the potentially affected cases and think through the consequences? 18:34:17 adamw: +1 18:34:21 +1 punt 18:34:48 +1 punt 18:35:13 ..and, unfortunately, I have to go 18:35:29 proposed #agreed 1569242 - punt (delay decision) - we would like to gather more data on this, particularly get a list of all Recommends: and Supplements: in F28 stable at present, and think through the potential consequences of changing or not changing this before making a decision 18:35:33 lroca: thanks, we're nearly done anyhow 18:35:52 thanks all... speak again soon 18:36:06 ack 18:36:10 ack 18:36:23 ack 18:36:24 ack 18:37:34 #agreed 1569242 - punt (delay decision) - we would like to gather more data on this, particularly get a list of all Recommends: and Supplements: in F28 stable at present, and think through the potential consequences of changing or not changing this before making a decision 18:37:44 #topic (1360289) CVE-2016-7103 python-XStatic-jquery-ui: jquery-ui: cross-site scripting in dialog closeText [fedora-all] 18:37:44 #link https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1360289 18:37:44 #info Proposed Freeze Exceptions, python-XStatic-jquery-ui, ASSIGNED 18:38:42 I don't know if it's on media, but I guess if it's on media then we should accept this since it's a security issue, and if it's not on a media then it should be safe to pull in anyway ... 18:38:46 +1 FE :) 18:39:13 Impact is LOW according to the CVE BZ 18:39:25 mehhhhhh ? 18:39:27 Also there's no update currently available for it 18:39:43 * adamw tosses a coin 18:39:51 coin lands on edge 18:40:07 ahh, no update available? pffff 18:40:47 let's just punt it 18:41:13 +1 punt 18:41:22 I'm happy enough with -1 FE 18:41:37 +1 punt 18:41:58 But sure, punt. Whatever. 18:42:00 +1 punt 18:42:20 proposed #agreed 1360289 - punt (delay decision) - there's no update here, so we can't really judge how significant the change would be and thus whether it's worth pulling in for a LOW severity CVE 18:42:31 (aka 'make up some crap') 18:42:41 ack 18:42:44 ack 18:42:57 ack 18:43:11 avk 18:43:33 #agreed 1360289 - punt (delay decision) - there's no update here, so we can't really judge how significant the change would be and thus whether it's worth pulling in for a LOW severity CVE 18:43:40 alright, that's all the proposals 18:43:53 unless anyone had any other off-the-books ones (or ones they've proposed in the last hour or so) 18:44:03 I do not 18:44:07 :) 18:44:28 * kalev is looking forward to having dinner. 18:44:47 ok 18:44:56 let's take a quick look at the status of accepted blockers then wrap up 18:45:02 #info quick accepted blocker check-in 18:45:23 skipping uninteresting ones 18:45:23 #topic (1560481) Some core applications in Gnome 3.28 are unresponsive and not working on AMD graphics cards 18:45:23 #link https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1560481 18:45:23 #info Accepted Blocker, gnome-shell, NEW 18:45:35 this one i'm a bit worried about as it's accepted but not clearly going anywhere 18:45:44 kalev: is anyone driving this from your side? 18:45:54 I don't think so 18:46:12 mclasen: do you know who's supposed to take care of clutter these days? 18:46:23 The maid? 18:46:29 (sorry) 18:46:32 .fire sgallagh 18:46:33 adamw fires sgallagh 18:46:42 * adamw reports sgallagh to HR 18:46:52 kalev: the only clutter we care about is the one inside mutter 18:47:26 mclasen: the stand alone one that totem and cheese and maps uses has a bug that prevents people from clicking on buttons 18:47:52 and it's accepted as a fedora blocker 18:48:01 anything else using clutter is living on borrowed time 18:48:51 when those 'things' include core workstation apps, we seem to have a problem 18:49:39 * mclasen has no better answers 18:50:10 I think we could maybe ask jadahl to port the mutter fix to the stand alone cogl+clutter? 18:51:04 well, jonas has clearly been doing some follow-up in bug, which is great 18:51:25 i just want to make sure someone's clear that as things stand this needs bodging up somehow by, like...tomorrow 18:52:03 we can revisit whether it's a blocker, but honestly i'm still pretty +1 on it 18:52:13 'users of lots of common graphics hardware can't click on buttons in core apps' is badf 18:52:55 I would tend to be +1 on it as well... 18:53:10 kalev: "Sadly we can't just port over the fix in mutter since mutter itself has its own cogl backend where the issue is fixed." 18:53:17 kale (from #c31) 18:53:33 ah 18:53:49 we can perhaps disable 10bit colors support then? 18:53:58 since it seems there's some magic setting that can be used to disable rgb10 configs entirely, perhaps we could ask jonas if we can just *do* that at the level of clutter itself at least as a temporary fix? 18:54:06 can we just build it entirely without that support? 18:54:20 until at least we come up with a better fix, which can then be shipped as an update... 18:54:32 sounds like a good plan to me 18:55:03 OK, i'll mention it in the bug, but can you guys talk to jonas about it? obviously you all know each other better :) 18:55:24 sure, I'll talk to him tomorrow 18:55:27 thanks a lot 18:56:13 Yes, I agree with getting rid of the rgb10 support temporarily 18:56:26 #info there is some progress being made on this, but kalev will talk to jonas and explain the need to do some kind of fix/bodge for this urgently given the release schedule 18:56:37 #topic (1569411) When installing Fedora to dual boot with Windows, Anaconda does not add GRUB entry for Windows. 18:56:37 #link https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1569411 18:56:37 #info Accepted Blocker, grub2, NEW 18:56:57 so i talked to pjones about this and he said he'd do a build/update of grub2 with the dep restored, but...he hasn't 18:57:19 the tricky thing here is, only a few people can tag builds of grub2, it's part of the set of packages that's protected due to being the boot chain 18:57:54 so our choices here are: 1) get pjones to actually do it, 2) get someone else with the necessary superpowers to do it (nirik? puiterwijk? who else can do it?), 3) add the dep to anaconda instead as a hack 18:58:08 #info our choices here are: 1) get pjones to actually do it, 2) get someone else with the necessary superpowers to do it (nirik? puiterwijk? who else can do it?), 3) add the dep to anaconda instead as a hack 18:58:11 * jsmith would prefer 1, then 2 if 1 can't be done. 18:58:21 3 sounds very hackish :-) 18:58:33 agreed 18:58:39 the kernel people should be able to build grub as well 18:58:41 those were in order of preference for me too :P 18:58:45 oo, point 18:58:49 jforbes: could/would you do this? 18:58:58 i can send you the log of my chat with pjones if it helps :) 19:00:11 welp, we're at the 3 hour cutoff 19:00:38 #action adamw to follow up with pjones again and also try to find someone else who can do a grub2 build with the dep re-added if pjones can't 19:00:47 and with that, i guess we're done 19:00:47 ok 19:00:50 #topic Open floor 19:01:02 anything super mega-urgent enough to be worth extending beyond 3 hours? 19:01:08 dinneeeeer! :) 19:01:08 adamw: Once again, thanks for running the gauntlet... three hours is a long meeting to run :-) 19:01:15 adamw++ 19:01:15 jsmith: Karma for adamwill changed to 19 (for the f27 release cycle): https://badges.fedoraproject.org/tags/cookie/any 19:01:17 thanks for sticking it out folks 19:01:21 sorry to hold up your dinner, kalev :) 19:01:24 adamw++ 19:01:24 kparal: Karma for adamwill changed to 20 (for the f27 release cycle): https://badges.fedoraproject.org/tags/cookie/any 19:01:28 * nirik is happy to help if you cannot find pjones. 19:01:33 .fire kparal what, you hadn't ++ed me before? 19:01:33 adamw fires kparal what, you hadn't ++ed me before? 19:01:37 no worries, thanks for running the meeting adamw! 19:01:38 thank you adamw and other, too 19:01:47 nirik++ 19:02:18 thanks again, folks 19:02:18 sgallagh: nirik already overflowed the int range with his karma 19:02:21 #endmeeting