George Dunlap writes ("Re: [Xen-devel] [Notes for xen summit 2018 design
session] Process changes: is the 6 monthly release Cadence too short, Security
Process, ..."):
> I don’t really understand why you’re more worried about a test
> corrupting a backup partition or LVM snapshot, than of a test
> corrupting a filesystem even when the test actually passed. I don’t
> have the same experience you do, but it seems like random stuff left
> over from a previous test — even if the test passes — would have
> more of a chance of screwing up a future test than some sort of
> corruption of an LVM snapshot, and even less so a backup partition.
The difference is that these are tests *in the same flight*. That
means they're testing the same software.
If test A passes, but corrupts the disk which is detected by test B
because the host wasn't wiped in between, causing test B to fail, then
that is a genuine test failure - albeit one whose repro conditions are
complicated. I'm betting that this will be rare enough not to matter.
Ian.
_______________________________________________
Xen-devel mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.xenproject.org/mailman/listinfo/xen-devel