On Wed, Sep 23, 2020 at 8:26 AM Christophe Lyon via Gcc <gcc@gcc.gnu.org> wrote:
>
> On Wed, 23 Sep 2020 at 12:26, Richard Earnshaw
> <richard.earns...@foss.arm.com> wrote:
> >
> > On 23/09/2020 11:20, Jakub Jelinek via Gcc wrote:
> > > On Wed, Sep 23, 2020 at 10:22:52AM +0100, Richard Sandiford wrote:
> > >> So that would give:
> > >>
> > >>   Results for 8.4.1 20200918 [r8-10517] on arm-none-linux-gnueabihf
> > >>
> > >> and hopefully free up some space at the end for the kind of thing
> > >> you mention.
> > >
> > > Even that 8.4.1 20200918 is redundant, r8-10517 uniquely and shortly
> > > identifies both the branch and commit.
> > > So just
> > > Results for r8-10517 on ...
> > > and in ... also include something that uniquely identifies the
> > > configuration.
> > >
> > >       Jakub
> > >
> >
> > I was thinking similarly, but then realised anyone using snapshots
> > rather than git might not have that information.
> >
> > If that's not the case, however, then simplifying this would be a great
> > idea.
> >
> > On the other hand, I use subject filters in my mail to steer results to
> > a separate folder, so I do need some invariant key in the subject line
> > that is sufficient to match without (too many) false positives.
> >
>
> I always assumed there was a required format for the title/email
> contents, is that documented somewhere?
> There must be a smart filter to avoid spam, doesn't it require some
> "keywords" in the title for instance?
>
> Same question for the gcc-regression list: is there a mandatory format?

The format is generated by contrib/test_summary.

- David

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