Chris Lattner via llvm-dev
2020-Jun-02 20:19 UTC
[llvm-dev] [PROPOSAL] Introduce a new LLVM process to resolve contentious decisions
Hi all, Following up on the extensive discussions since January, many of us would like to put in place a process to improve LLVM’s decision making process for contentious issues. I’ve put together a proposal for how this works, and am recursively using it to get feedback on the process itself. Thank you to the many people who contributed great ideas and improvements during the pitch phases and early drafts of the doc. Because this is a weird case, I’m not setting up the standard review manager team for this. We’ll wing it, and if it doesn’t work out, we can try again. -Chris —— Hello LLVM community, The review of "Introduce a new LLVM process to resolve contentious decisions" begins now and runs through June 12, 2020. The proposal is available online <https://github.com/llvm/llvm-www/blob/master/proposals/LP0001-LLVMDecisionMaking.md>. Feedback is an important part of the LLVM Proposal process. All review feedback should be either on this forum thread or, if you would like to keep your feedback private, directly to one of the review managers. **What goes into a review?** The goal of the review process is to improve the proposal under review through constructive criticism and, eventually, determine the direction of LLVM. When writing your response, here are some questions you might want to answer in your review: * What is your evaluation of the proposal? What positive or negative implications would accepting this have? * Do you have experience from other communities that relates to this issue and is important to consider? * How involved have you been in the LLVM project? Frequent contributor, occasional contributor, user of LLVM libraries, user of LLVM-based tools, or other? * Self Evaluation: How much effort did you put into your review and how knowledgeable are you about this area? For example, a quick reading or an in-depth study? In addition to your opinion and thoughts, please include any additional framing that may be useful. Thank you, Chris Lattner Review Manager -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20200602/c44c06f0/attachment.html>
Kit Barton via llvm-dev
2020-Jun-02 20:57 UTC
[llvm-dev] [PROPOSAL] Introduce a new LLVM process to resolve contentious decisions
Evaluation of the proposal: I fully support this proposal and think it will overall have a positive impact on the LLVM community. Related Experience: None external, but I have been involved in various internal guidelines for decision making (both creating them and following them). I think this proposal strikes a nice balance between additional process and giving members of the community a (time-boxed) opportunity to provide their inputs. As with any proposal like this, it is likely subject to change over time, but I think this is a very good starting point. Involvement in LLVM Occasional contributor, heavy user. Self Evaluation I went through several iterations of the proposal on google docs and suggested a few changes. I've skimmed through the processes by the other communities reference in the document to get a high level understanding of how they work, but have not participated in them first hand. As mentioned above though, I've been through several different versions of similar processes through my work and can appreciate the motivation for this, and see the benefits of much of what is proposed here. Additional Comments A few comments on the document: 1. It seems the current document has settled on using threads on llvm-dev, however there are still two reference to the LLVM Proposal Reviews category on Discourse: last paragraph of Proposed Solution section, first paragraph of the Review Discussion Template section. 2. I think it would be nice to try and keep the proposal document on GitHub as up-to-date as possible as it evolves based on the discussion on llvm-dev. I know this was mentioned and resolved on google docs, but something short like: "The review managers and/or authors will update the document on GitHub as the proposal evolves during discussions" as part of step 7, would be good (IMO). Thanks, Kit Chris Lattner via llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> writes:> Hi all, > > Following up on the extensive discussions since January, many of us would like to put in place a process to improve LLVM’s decision making process for contentious issues. I’ve put together a proposal for how this works, and am recursively using it to get feedback on the process itself. Thank you to the many people who contributed great ideas and improvements during the pitch phases and early drafts of the doc. > > Because this is a weird case, I’m not setting up the standard review manager team for this. We’ll wing it, and if it doesn’t work out, we can try again. > > -Chris > > —— > > Hello LLVM community, > > The review of "Introduce a new LLVM process to resolve contentious decisions" begins now and runs through > June 12, 2020. The proposal is available online <https://github.com/llvm/llvm-www/blob/master/proposals/LP0001-LLVMDecisionMaking.md>. > > Feedback is an important part of the LLVM Proposal process. All review feedback > should be either on this forum thread or, if you would like to keep your feedback > private, directly to one of the review managers. > > **What goes into a review?** > > The goal of the review process is to improve the proposal under review through > constructive criticism and, eventually, determine the direction of LLVM. When > writing your response, here are some questions you might want to answer in your > review: > > * What is your evaluation of the proposal? What positive or negative > implications would accepting this have? > * Do you have experience from other communities that relates to this > issue and is important to consider? > * How involved have you been in the LLVM project? Frequent contributor, > occasional contributor, user of LLVM libraries, user of LLVM-based tools, > or other? > * Self Evaluation: How much effort did you put into your review and how > knowledgeable are you about this area? For example, a quick reading or an > in-depth study? > > In addition to your opinion and thoughts, please include any additional > framing that may be useful. > > Thank you, > > Chris Lattner > Review Manager > > > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev
Chris Lattner via llvm-dev
2020-Jun-02 21:04 UTC
[llvm-dev] [PROPOSAL] Introduce a new LLVM process to resolve contentious decisions
On Jun 2, 2020, at 1:57 PM, Kit Barton <kit.barton at gmail.com> wrote:> A few comments on the document: > 1. It seems the current document has settled on using threads on > llvm-dev, however there are still two reference to the LLVM Proposal > Reviews category on Discourse: last paragraph of Proposed Solution > section, first paragraph of the Review Discussion Template section.This was a mistake, fixed.> 2. I think it would be nice to try and keep the proposal document on > GitHub as up-to-date as possible as it evolves based on the discussion on > llvm-dev. I know this was mentioned and resolved on google docs, but > something short like: "The review managers and/or authors will update the > document on GitHub as the proposal evolves during discussions" as > part of step 7, would be good (IMO).Agreed - confirmed and added as an example of this. Thanks! -Chris
Chris Lattner via llvm-dev
2020-Jun-08 21:20 UTC
[llvm-dev] [PROPOSAL] Introduce a new LLVM process to resolve contentious decisions
Thank you to Mehdi and Kit for their feedback on this thread so far - I’d really love to hear from others in the community as well, even if it is a simple “+1 this sounds great” or “I’m concerned about XYZ specific aspect of this” or “-1, LLVM has no problems making decisions” :-) -Chris> On Jun 2, 2020, at 1:19 PM, Chris Lattner <clattner at nondot.org> wrote: > > Hi all, > > Following up on the extensive discussions since January, many of us would like to put in place a process to improve LLVM’s decision making process for contentious issues. I’ve put together a proposal for how this works, and am recursively using it to get feedback on the process itself. Thank you to the many people who contributed great ideas and improvements during the pitch phases and early drafts of the doc. > > Because this is a weird case, I’m not setting up the standard review manager team for this. We’ll wing it, and if it doesn’t work out, we can try again. > > -Chris > > —— > > Hello LLVM community, > > The review of "Introduce a new LLVM process to resolve contentious decisions" begins now and runs through > June 12, 2020. The proposal is available online <https://github.com/llvm/llvm-www/blob/master/proposals/LP0001-LLVMDecisionMaking.md>. > > Feedback is an important part of the LLVM Proposal process. All review feedback > should be either on this forum thread or, if you would like to keep your feedback > private, directly to one of the review managers. > > **What goes into a review?** > > The goal of the review process is to improve the proposal under review through > constructive criticism and, eventually, determine the direction of LLVM. When > writing your response, here are some questions you might want to answer in your > review: > > * What is your evaluation of the proposal? What positive or negative > implications would accepting this have? > * Do you have experience from other communities that relates to this > issue and is important to consider? > * How involved have you been in the LLVM project? Frequent contributor, > occasional contributor, user of LLVM libraries, user of LLVM-based tools, > or other? > * Self Evaluation: How much effort did you put into your review and how > knowledgeable are you about this area? For example, a quick reading or an > in-depth study? > > In addition to your opinion and thoughts, please include any additional > framing that may be useful. > > Thank you, > > Chris Lattner > Review Manager > >-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20200608/6f7f67ed/attachment.html>
Robinson, Paul via llvm-dev
2020-Jun-08 22:35 UTC
[llvm-dev] [PROPOSAL] Introduce a new LLVM process to resolve contentious decisions
Hi Chris, Overall, having a defined/more-formal process to fall back on (rather than start with—a problem with other processes I’ve had to use) seems like a good idea, and what’s outlined here seems basically fine. Two specific comments: * Still seeing a reference to discourse (last para of Proposed Solution, after item 9). Thought that should be gone? * I thought about the Yet Another Mailing List idea, and concluded that’s not a good idea, unless all RFCs also go there. In practical terms, if you want downstream consumers (or other more casual observers) to notice/track proposals, all proposals need to be in the same place. Whether that’s llvm-dev, or a new “llvm-rfc” list (or whatever), splitting up Where To Look doesn’t help people find anything.[1] As an aside, I noticed a use of the term “core LLVM contributor” which is not a defined role in this project. I’ve actually bumped into this before, had a panel proposal bounced by a Dev Meeting Program Committee due to lack of “core contributors” signed up to participate. It’s a notion in people’s heads, and probably well defined elsewhere, but is a very fuzzy notion on this project. If we don’t have the role formally, best not to refer to it? Thanks for driving this, and basically +1 from me. --paulr [1] I was once on a project where we had several topic-oriented forums; in particular one call Methods, and one called Designs. People would post process/tip kinds of things in Methods, and design documents/discussions in Designs. Until one day the tech lead decided to post a pointer to his separate design document in Methods, arguing that a pointer to a document is a Method not a Design. I argued (in vain) that having to look in Methods for design info was counter-productive. So, let’s not split how to find RFCs and how to find Proposals into two separate places, okay? From: llvm-dev <llvm-dev-bounces at lists.llvm.org> On Behalf Of Chris Lattner via llvm-dev Sent: Monday, June 8, 2020 5:21 PM To: llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> Subject: Re: [llvm-dev] [PROPOSAL] Introduce a new LLVM process to resolve contentious decisions Thank you to Mehdi and Kit for their feedback on this thread so far - I’d really love to hear from others in the community as well, even if it is a simple “+1 this sounds great” or “I’m concerned about XYZ specific aspect of this” or “-1, LLVM has no problems making decisions” :-) -Chris On Jun 2, 2020, at 1:19 PM, Chris Lattner <clattner at nondot.org<mailto:clattner at nondot.org>> wrote: Hi all, Following up on the extensive discussions since January, many of us would like to put in place a process to improve LLVM’s decision making process for contentious issues. I’ve put together a proposal for how this works, and am recursively using it to get feedback on the process itself. Thank you to the many people who contributed great ideas and improvements during the pitch phases and early drafts of the doc. Because this is a weird case, I’m not setting up the standard review manager team for this. We’ll wing it, and if it doesn’t work out, we can try again. -Chris —— Hello LLVM community, The review of "Introduce a new LLVM process to resolve contentious decisions" begins now and runs through June 12, 2020. The proposal is available online<https://github.com/llvm/llvm-www/blob/master/proposals/LP0001-LLVMDecisionMaking.md>. Feedback is an important part of the LLVM Proposal process. All review feedback should be either on this forum thread or, if you would like to keep your feedback private, directly to one of the review managers. **What goes into a review?** The goal of the review process is to improve the proposal under review through constructive criticism and, eventually, determine the direction of LLVM. When writing your response, here are some questions you might want to answer in your review: * What is your evaluation of the proposal? What positive or negative implications would accepting this have? * Do you have experience from other communities that relates to this issue and is important to consider? * How involved have you been in the LLVM project? Frequent contributor, occasional contributor, user of LLVM libraries, user of LLVM-based tools, or other? * Self Evaluation: How much effort did you put into your review and how knowledgeable are you about this area? For example, a quick reading or an in-depth study? In addition to your opinion and thoughts, please include any additional framing that may be useful. Thank you, Chris Lattner Review Manager -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20200608/b25722c3/attachment-0001.html>
Krzysztof Parzyszek via llvm-dev
2020-Jun-08 23:03 UTC
[llvm-dev] [PROPOSAL] Introduce a new LLVM process to resolve contentious decisions
A part of the problem with “chiming in late” is that people don’t have time to read everything, or even to continuously keep track of what’s going on. I don’t think that people in such position will want to be review managers and take on moderating further discussion. My guess is that they might be inclined to just give up unless the proposal is straight up catastrophic. On a different note.. On more than one occasion, there would be disagreements regarding the interpretation of the official project policies. In the specific cases I remember they related to the downstream/out-of-tree projects. Person A would say “this affects OOT projects”, while person B would say “we should have no concerns about what’s not in tree”. What consequences do you see coming out of resolving these controversies? Would they be “precedents” for the purposes of interpretation of policies? -- Krzysztof Parzyszek kparzysz at quicinc.com<mailto:kparzysz at quicinc.com> AI tools development From: llvm-dev <llvm-dev-bounces at lists.llvm.org> On Behalf Of Chris Lattner via llvm-dev Sent: Monday, June 8, 2020 4:21 PM To: llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> Subject: [EXT] Re: [llvm-dev] [PROPOSAL] Introduce a new LLVM process to resolve contentious decisions Thank you to Mehdi and Kit for their feedback on this thread so far - I’d really love to hear from others in the community as well, even if it is a simple “+1 this sounds great” or “I’m concerned about XYZ specific aspect of this” or “-1, LLVM has no problems making decisions” :-) -Chris On Jun 2, 2020, at 1:19 PM, Chris Lattner <clattner at nondot.org<mailto:clattner at nondot.org>> wrote: Hi all, Following up on the extensive discussions since January, many of us would like to put in place a process to improve LLVM’s decision making process for contentious issues. I’ve put together a proposal for how this works, and am recursively using it to get feedback on the process itself. Thank you to the many people who contributed great ideas and improvements during the pitch phases and early drafts of the doc. Because this is a weird case, I’m not setting up the standard review manager team for this. We’ll wing it, and if it doesn’t work out, we can try again. -Chris —— Hello LLVM community, The review of "Introduce a new LLVM process to resolve contentious decisions" begins now and runs through June 12, 2020. The proposal is available online<https://github.com/llvm/llvm-www/blob/master/proposals/LP0001-LLVMDecisionMaking.md>. Feedback is an important part of the LLVM Proposal process. All review feedback should be either on this forum thread or, if you would like to keep your feedback private, directly to one of the review managers. **What goes into a review?** The goal of the review process is to improve the proposal under review through constructive criticism and, eventually, determine the direction of LLVM. When writing your response, here are some questions you might want to answer in your review: * What is your evaluation of the proposal? What positive or negative implications would accepting this have? * Do you have experience from other communities that relates to this issue and is important to consider? * How involved have you been in the LLVM project? Frequent contributor, occasional contributor, user of LLVM libraries, user of LLVM-based tools, or other? * Self Evaluation: How much effort did you put into your review and how knowledgeable are you about this area? For example, a quick reading or an in-depth study? In addition to your opinion and thoughts, please include any additional framing that may be useful. Thank you, Chris Lattner Review Manager -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20200608/4b8cf500/attachment.html>
Eli Friedman via llvm-dev
2020-Jun-08 23:04 UTC
[llvm-dev] [PROPOSAL] Introduce a new LLVM process to resolve contentious decisions
I appreciate the emphasis on making sure the arguments are laid out clearly, and that the process happens in the open. The proposal says “A group of either 2 or 4 community members are selected”; the document doesn’t really make it clear who selects them. Reading it a few more times, it sounds like the process is supposed to be “The person writing the [PITCH] selects […]” (and then Chris can suggest adjustments)? Is the person writing the [PITCH] allowed to be a review manager? I think some broader changes to the LLVM RFC process would make sense, particular in terms of the evolution of LLVM IR. But this seems like a reasonable starting point for ensuring proposals don’t just grind to a halt without any decision being made. -Eli From: llvm-dev <llvm-dev-bounces at lists.llvm.org> On Behalf Of Chris Lattner via llvm-dev Sent: Monday, June 8, 2020 2:21 PM To: llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> Subject: [EXT] Re: [llvm-dev] [PROPOSAL] Introduce a new LLVM process to resolve contentious decisions Thank you to Mehdi and Kit for their feedback on this thread so far - I’d really love to hear from others in the community as well, even if it is a simple “+1 this sounds great” or “I’m concerned about XYZ specific aspect of this” or “-1, LLVM has no problems making decisions” :-) -Chris On Jun 2, 2020, at 1:19 PM, Chris Lattner <clattner at nondot.org<mailto:clattner at nondot.org>> wrote: Hi all, Following up on the extensive discussions since January, many of us would like to put in place a process to improve LLVM’s decision making process for contentious issues. I’ve put together a proposal for how this works, and am recursively using it to get feedback on the process itself. Thank you to the many people who contributed great ideas and improvements during the pitch phases and early drafts of the doc. Because this is a weird case, I’m not setting up the standard review manager team for this. We’ll wing it, and if it doesn’t work out, we can try again. -Chris —— Hello LLVM community, The review of "Introduce a new LLVM process to resolve contentious decisions" begins now and runs through June 12, 2020. The proposal is available online<https://github.com/llvm/llvm-www/blob/master/proposals/LP0001-LLVMDecisionMaking.md>. Feedback is an important part of the LLVM Proposal process. All review feedback should be either on this forum thread or, if you would like to keep your feedback private, directly to one of the review managers. **What goes into a review?** The goal of the review process is to improve the proposal under review through constructive criticism and, eventually, determine the direction of LLVM. When writing your response, here are some questions you might want to answer in your review: * What is your evaluation of the proposal? What positive or negative implications would accepting this have? * Do you have experience from other communities that relates to this issue and is important to consider? * How involved have you been in the LLVM project? Frequent contributor, occasional contributor, user of LLVM libraries, user of LLVM-based tools, or other? * Self Evaluation: How much effort did you put into your review and how knowledgeable are you about this area? For example, a quick reading or an in-depth study? In addition to your opinion and thoughts, please include any additional framing that may be useful. Thank you, Chris Lattner Review Manager -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20200608/f7f7f1f3/attachment.html>
Chris Tetreault via llvm-dev
2020-Jun-09 00:08 UTC
[llvm-dev] [PROPOSAL] Introduce a new LLVM process to resolve contentious decisions
Chris, I am greatly in favor of having a process to elevate issues and settle contentious arguments once and for all. Throughout my career, I often see organizations get bogged down in arguments over the course of years, never solving anything because nobody is able/willing to “have the final say.” An assorted list of thoughts and feedback items: * 2 weeks might be a bit short of a discussion period for major policy changes. Many people go on vacation for that amount of time, and it would be unfortunate to come back from vacation and find that some major decision went in while you were out. * I think a separate mailing list would be good for these. RFC’s should also go into this new mailing list, so people who are too busy to follow [whatever]-dev can at least keep up to date on the RFC’s mailing list. I think that it would also be good to have all the subproject RFC’s in once place; more than once I’ve seen an RFC get cross-posted to llvm-dev, then tried to reply and got the “your message is being held for moderation” message because I’m not subscribed to flang-dev (or whatever mailing list). This might also have the side benefit of reducing noise on the subproject mailing lists if RFC’s are not posted (or cross posted) there. * Once the process is settled, it might be a good idea to settle some contentious issues that have been argued on the mailing list recently. For instance, the issue of bumping the CMake minimum bound and API stability have been discussed on and off over the last 6 months, with no real resolution. I’m sure there are others that I haven’t noticed. * From the FAQ: “Should we improve the existing LLVM RFC processes?” I think this would be a good idea. I think many RFC’s don’t really get discussed until patches start landing, which is really frustrating. If there were a process whereby RFC’s would be approved/denied, I think it would motivate people to pay more attention to them. * From reading the pitch, it sounds like the person drafting the pitch is responsible for nominating the 2-4 review managers. Assuming I understand this correctly, I think there are a few issues with this: 1) It might create a conflict of interests. The person drafting the pitch obviously wants it to go their way. They may attempt to (either unconsciously, or consciously), “stack the panel” with people sympathetic to their cause. 2) Similar to how it can be hard to pick code reviewers, it can be hard to know who to pick for the panel. This issue is especially true for new contributors who don’t know all the major players. It might be nice if there were an impartial third party responsible for picking the panel. * In a previous round, you posted a google doc instead of a static page in github. I liked this because it allowed for inline comments to be posted and addressed. I think this would be a better format for discussing specific proposals than the mailing lists. If not a google doc (since it’s hard to do versioning there), then perhaps as a phabricator diff, or github PR? Regardless, thanks for working on this issue! Thank you, Christopher Tetreault From: llvm-dev <llvm-dev-bounces at lists.llvm.org> On Behalf Of Chris Lattner via llvm-dev Sent: Monday, June 8, 2020 2:21 PM To: llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> Subject: [EXT] Re: [llvm-dev] [PROPOSAL] Introduce a new LLVM process to resolve contentious decisions Thank you to Mehdi and Kit for their feedback on this thread so far - I’d really love to hear from others in the community as well, even if it is a simple “+1 this sounds great” or “I’m concerned about XYZ specific aspect of this” or “-1, LLVM has no problems making decisions” :-) -Chris On Jun 2, 2020, at 1:19 PM, Chris Lattner <clattner at nondot.org<mailto:clattner at nondot.org>> wrote: Hi all, Following up on the extensive discussions since January, many of us would like to put in place a process to improve LLVM’s decision making process for contentious issues. I’ve put together a proposal for how this works, and am recursively using it to get feedback on the process itself. Thank you to the many people who contributed great ideas and improvements during the pitch phases and early drafts of the doc. Because this is a weird case, I’m not setting up the standard review manager team for this. We’ll wing it, and if it doesn’t work out, we can try again. -Chris —— Hello LLVM community, The review of "Introduce a new LLVM process to resolve contentious decisions" begins now and runs through June 12, 2020. The proposal is available online<https://github.com/llvm/llvm-www/blob/master/proposals/LP0001-LLVMDecisionMaking.md>. Feedback is an important part of the LLVM Proposal process. All review feedback should be either on this forum thread or, if you would like to keep your feedback private, directly to one of the review managers. **What goes into a review?** The goal of the review process is to improve the proposal under review through constructive criticism and, eventually, determine the direction of LLVM. When writing your response, here are some questions you might want to answer in your review: * What is your evaluation of the proposal? What positive or negative implications would accepting this have? * Do you have experience from other communities that relates to this issue and is important to consider? * How involved have you been in the LLVM project? Frequent contributor, occasional contributor, user of LLVM libraries, user of LLVM-based tools, or other? * Self Evaluation: How much effort did you put into your review and how knowledgeable are you about this area? For example, a quick reading or an in-depth study? In addition to your opinion and thoughts, please include any additional framing that may be useful. Thank you, Chris Lattner Review Manager -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20200609/e3013453/attachment.html>
Philip Reames via llvm-dev
2020-Jun-10 20:34 UTC
[llvm-dev] [PROPOSAL] Introduce a new LLVM process to resolve contentious decisions
Overall, +1 from me. I have a few concerns about the detail, but adopting this with the attitude that we're expecting to iterate on the process itself seems like a step in the right direction. I'll simply list my concerns as I think each of these has been expanded on down thread by others. 1) Length of review period - two weeks is too short. 2) Who selects review managers - I'd be fine with Chris having final call. I also think concerns about selection can largely be handled on a case by case basis as part of review feedback. 3) I'd prefer llvm-dev over another mailing list for now. We could switch later, but I don't see a strong reason to switch now. 4) I think it needs to be very clear that reviewers are only expected to have read the current proposal. It should be the responsibility of author to summarize previous discussion. I consider the "this was discussed in X old thread" an anti pattern for this type of discussion. Philip On 6/2/20 1:19 PM, Chris Lattner via llvm-dev wrote:> Hi all, > > Following up on the extensive discussions since January, many of us > would like to put in place a process to improve LLVM’s decision making > process for contentious issues. I’ve put together a proposal for how > this works, and am recursively using it to get feedback on the process > itself. Thank you to the many people who contributed great ideas and > improvements during the pitch phases and early drafts of the doc. > > Because this is a weird case, I’m not setting up the standard review > manager team for this. We’ll wing it, and if it doesn’t work out, we > can try again. > > -Chris > > —— > > Hello LLVM community, > > The review of "Introduce a new LLVM process to resolve contentious > decisions" begins now and runs through > June 12, 2020. The proposal is available online > <https://github.com/llvm/llvm-www/blob/master/proposals/LP0001-LLVMDecisionMaking.md>. > > Feedback is an important part of the LLVM Proposal process. All review > feedback > should be either on this forum thread or, if you would like to keep > your feedback > private, directly to one of the review managers. > > **What goes into a review?** > > The goal of the review process is to improve the proposal under review > through > constructive criticism and, eventually, determine the direction of > LLVM. When > writing your response, here are some questions you might want to > answer in your > review: > > * What is your evaluation of the proposal? What positive or negative > implications would accepting this have? > * Do you have experience from other communities that relates to this > issue and is important to consider? > * How involved have you been in the LLVM project? Frequent > contributor, > occasional contributor, user of LLVM libraries, user of LLVM-based > tools, > or other? > * Self Evaluation: How much effort did you put into your review and how > knowledgeable are you about this area? For example, a quick > reading or an > in-depth study? > > In addition to your opinion and thoughts, please include any additional > framing that may be useful. > > Thank you, > > Chris Lattner > Review Manager > > > > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20200610/33370cac/attachment.html>
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