[Users] [GSOC][Gerrit] add potential reviewers - questions
Eyal Edri
eedri at redhat.com
Tue Mar 11 15:14:26 UTC 2014
----- Original Message -----
> From: "Itamar Heim" <iheim at redhat.com>
> To: "Eyal Edri" <eedri at redhat.com>, "Tomasz Kołek" <tomasz-kolek at o2.pl>, users at ovirt.org, "infra" <infra at ovirt.org>
> Sent: Tuesday, March 11, 2014 5:10:54 PM
> Subject: Re: [Users] [GSOC][Gerrit] add potential reviewers - questions
>
> On 03/11/2014 05:06 PM, Ewoud Kohl van Wijngaarden wrote:
> > On Tue, Mar 11, 2014 at 10:37:22AM -0400, Eyal Edri wrote:
> >>> Tomasz Kołek wrote:
> >>>
> >>> I've got a few questions about project description.
> >>> Please tell me if my problem's understanding is good or not.
> >>> We need to add a few flags/methods to git review module. This flags
> >>> should
> >>> allow to add potential reviewers in gerrit.
> >>> So:
> >>> Let's assume that we've got special flags for this operations. What's
> >>> next?
> >>> 1. In gerrit system we need to add special place for potential reviewers?
> >>> 2. Potential reviewers should agree that they want to review?
> >>> 3. We can have more than one accepted reviewer?
> >>
> >> I'm not sure i understood exactly what you mean by 'potential
> >> reviewers'. do want gerrit (hook?) to automatically add reviewers to
> >> a patch according to the code sent? so in fact you'll have a place
> >> somewhere for mapping code & specific developers?
> >
> > I really like this idea. Gerrit currently requires new users to know who
> > to add as reviewers, IMHO impeding new contributors.
> >
> > One relative simple solution would be to look at who recently touched
> > the files that are being modified and add them as reviewers. This can be
> > done by looking at the git log for a file. Some pseudo python code
> > solution:
> >
> > reviewers = set()
> >
> > for modified_file in commit.files:
> > reviewers += set(commit.author for commit in git.log(modified_file))
> >
> > return reviewers
> >
> > This gives a system that those who touche a file, become the maintainer
> > for that file. A more complex solution could improve on that and limit
> > the reviewers added per patch. One can think of limiting to only
> > contributions in the last X months, weigh contributions so common
> > committers are prefered. It could also combine several methods.
> >
> > For example to limit to the 5 authors who touched the most files:
> >
> > reviewers = collections.Counter() # New in python 2.7
> >
> > for modified_file in commit.files:
> > reviewers += collections.Counter(commit.author for commit in
> > git.log(modified_file))
> >
> > return [author for author, count in reviewers.most_common(5)]
> >
> > Since Counter also accepts a dictionary, one could also weigh the
> > touched lines per file. Downside there is big whitespace/formatting
> > patches can skew the line count.
> >
> > In short, I think an entire thesis could be written on the optimal way
> > to determine reviewers but a simple algorithm could do to show the
> > method works.
> >
> > Does this help?
> > _______________________________________________
> > Users mailing list
> > Users at ovirt.org
> > http://lists.ovirt.org/mailman/listinfo/users
> >
>
> I think if we do this, we want to make sure we cover per file who is
> required to +2 it before we consider it acked.
>
won't it require maintaining static lists of people per file/path/project?
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