Re: [PATCH-for-11.0] qapi: Remove deprecated SchemaInfoEnumMember::values field
On 24/3/26 04:19, Pierrick Bouvier wrote:
On 3/23/26 8:21 AM, Philippe Mathieu-Daudé wrote:
SchemaInfoEnumMember::values field has been deprecated for more than 5 years (see commit 75ecee72625 "qapi: Enable enum member introspection to show more than name"), it should be safe enough to remove.
Signed-off-by: Philippe Mathieu-Daudé <philmd@linaro.org> --- docs/about/deprecated.rst | 6 ------ docs/about/removed-features.rst | 7 +++++++ qapi/introspect.json | 12 +----------- scripts/qapi/introspect.py | 3 +-- 4 files changed, 9 insertions(+), 19 deletions(-)
By curiosity, is this patch goal is simply to remove a deprecated feature/code, or does it unlock something beyond it? No judgment here, that's a genuine question, and both are valid reasons!
In a previous thread Daniel said past deprecation period, feature must be removed, otherwise undeprecated and re-introduced. I'm just trying to be consistent with the deprecation process, removing what doesn't seem worth to re-introduce (for the code I'm able to figure out at least). Maybe we should clarify the deprecation process, clarifying that, and mentioning that maintainers sending pull request to commit patches with deprecations are also a commitment to remove code when the proper released is out.
Looks good to me, to the limit of my qapi knowledge :). Reviewed-by: Pierrick Bouvier <pierrick.bouvier@linaro.org>
Thanks!
Philippe Mathieu-Daudé <philmd@linaro.org> writes:
On 24/3/26 04:19, Pierrick Bouvier wrote:
On 3/23/26 8:21 AM, Philippe Mathieu-Daudé wrote:
SchemaInfoEnumMember::values field has been deprecated for more than 5 years (see commit 75ecee72625 "qapi: Enable enum member introspection to show more than name"), it should be safe enough to remove.
Signed-off-by: Philippe Mathieu-Daudé <philmd@linaro.org> --- docs/about/deprecated.rst | 6 ------ docs/about/removed-features.rst | 7 +++++++ qapi/introspect.json | 12 +----------- scripts/qapi/introspect.py | 3 +-- 4 files changed, 9 insertions(+), 19 deletions(-)
By curiosity, is this patch goal is simply to remove a deprecated feature/code, or does it unlock something beyond it? No judgment here, that's a genuine question, and both are valid reasons!
In a previous thread Daniel said past deprecation period, feature must be removed, otherwise undeprecated and re-introduced.
I think that's too rigid. Why do we deprecate features? Reasons include: * A feature may have become too much of a burden to support. We deprecate it with the firm intent to remove it at the earliest opportunity. The motivation is to help developers, and deprecation is the means to do so without inflicting unnecessary pain on users. * A certain interface has turned out to be too limited, necessitating a more expressive one. Now we have two ways to do the same thing. We deprecate the limited one to guide users to the new one, because that's the one we think they should use for their own good. The motivation is to help users, and deprecation is the means. Removing the old interface later on helps future users a bit more. It also inconveniences any remaining users of the old interface. Mixed reasons are possible. For instance, we might start for the second reason (need a new interface), then find the first reason now applies (maintaining the old interface in addition is bothersome). Removing a deprecated feature is always a tradeoff, and time is commonly a factor. The deprecation grace period is merely a lower bound we commit to so we don't surprise users. docs/about/deprecated.rst: The [deprecated] feature will remain functional for the release in which it was deprecated and one further release. After these two releases, the feature is liable to be removed. Note "liable".
I'm just trying to be consistent with the deprecation process, removing what doesn't seem worth to re-introduce (for the code I'm able to figure out at least).
Maybe we should clarify the deprecation process, clarifying that, and mentioning that maintainers sending pull request to commit patches with deprecations are also a commitment to remove code when the proper released is out.
I believe that wouldn't be a clarification of actual practice, it would be a change of practice. We can certainly debate such a change. Back to the patch. SchemaInfoEnumMember member @values has been deprecated for five years. I figure by now the benefit of simplifying the interface outweighs the inconvenience of removing the deprecated part. I'd like an Acked-by from libvirt developers, though. [...]
On Tue, Mar 24, 2026 at 08:02:48AM +0100, Markus Armbruster wrote:
Philippe Mathieu-Daudé <philmd@linaro.org> writes:
On 24/3/26 04:19, Pierrick Bouvier wrote:
On 3/23/26 8:21 AM, Philippe Mathieu-Daudé wrote:
SchemaInfoEnumMember::values field has been deprecated for more than 5 years (see commit 75ecee72625 "qapi: Enable enum member introspection to show more than name"), it should be safe enough to remove.
Signed-off-by: Philippe Mathieu-Daudé <philmd@linaro.org> --- docs/about/deprecated.rst | 6 ------ docs/about/removed-features.rst | 7 +++++++ qapi/introspect.json | 12 +----------- scripts/qapi/introspect.py | 3 +-- 4 files changed, 9 insertions(+), 19 deletions(-)
By curiosity, is this patch goal is simply to remove a deprecated feature/code, or does it unlock something beyond it? No judgment here, that's a genuine question, and both are valid reasons!
In a previous thread Daniel said past deprecation period, feature must be removed, otherwise undeprecated and re-introduced.
I think that's too rigid.
Definitely s/must/should/.
Why do we deprecate features? Reasons include:
* A feature may have become too much of a burden to support. We deprecate it with the firm intent to remove it at the earliest opportunity. The motivation is to help developers, and deprecation is the means to do so without inflicting unnecessary pain on users.
* A certain interface has turned out to be too limited, necessitating a more expressive one. Now we have two ways to do the same thing. We deprecate the limited one to guide users to the new one, because that's the one we think they should use for their own good. The motivation is to help users, and deprecation is the means. Removing the old interface later on helps future users a bit more. It also inconveniences any remaining users of the old interface.
Mixed reasons are possible. For instance, we might start for the second reason (need a new interface), then find the first reason now applies (maintaining the old interface in addition is bothersome).
Removing a deprecated feature is always a tradeoff, and time is commonly a factor. The deprecation grace period is merely a lower bound we commit to so we don't surprise users. docs/about/deprecated.rst:
The [deprecated] feature will remain functional for the release in which it was deprecated and one further release. After these two releases, the feature is liable to be removed.
Note "liable".
I'm just trying to be consistent with the deprecation process, removing what doesn't seem worth to re-introduce (for the code I'm able to figure out at least).
Maybe we should clarify the deprecation process, clarifying that, and mentioning that maintainers sending pull request to commit patches with deprecations are also a commitment to remove code when the proper released is out.
I believe that wouldn't be a clarification of actual practice, it would be a change of practice. We can certainly debate such a change.
Yes, that's too rigid. Some of the things are very complicated to remove from the code and so it is valid for maintainers to want to focus on other things as a higher priority. It is upto maintainers to decide what priorities deliver most value. I've tried several times to remove some of the very old deprecated block features, and it is very hard to untangle the deps and get tests fixed. The deprecation process is there to put users on notice, and give maintainers a clear date, after which they have the freedom to choose to break / remove things. The ideal situation is that things are removed promptly after the 2 release cycle marker, but sometimes reality intervenes, sometimes for a very long time. I think it is unhelpful to let things fester in a deprecated state for many years though, as it potentially leads to a situation where users cease to believe they'll ever be removed, undermining the goal of deprecation. Perhaps we could open tickets for each deprecated item. That would give us a place to record some of the info about the removal process that contributors need to remember, and any related discussion around the process. ? With regards, Daniel -- |: https://berrange.com ~~ https://hachyderm.io/@berrange :| |: https://libvirt.org ~~ https://entangle-photo.org :| |: https://pixelfed.art/berrange ~~ https://fstop138.berrange.com :|
participants (3)
-
Daniel P. Berrangé -
Markus Armbruster -
Philippe Mathieu-Daudé