[FFmpeg-devel] [PATCH 1/2] avcodec/s302m: enable non-PCM decoding

Gyan Doshi ffmpeg at gyani.pro
Mon Feb 19 07:10:56 EET 2024



On 2024-02-19 03:16 am, Vittorio Giovara wrote:
> On Sun, Feb 18, 2024 at 8:02 PM Gyan Doshi <ffmpeg at gyani.pro> wrote:
>
>>
>> On 2024-02-18 11:33 pm, Anton Khirnov wrote:
>>> Quoting Gyan Doshi (2024-02-18 05:06:30)
>>>> b) what "maximalist" interpretation?
>>> A non-maximalist interpretation would be that a TC member is only
>>> excluded from voting when they authored the patch that is being
>>> disputed.
>> If the promulgators meant to only prevent proposers of the disputed
>> change to not take part, then
>> the verbiage would be different.
>>
>> In looking up how this clause came to be present, I came across the
>> following messages:
>>
>> https://ffmpeg.org/pipermail/ffmpeg-devel/2020-December/273443.html
>> (Nicolas George originally proposes this clause - wording is more
>> restrictive)
>>
>> https://ffmpeg.org/pipermail/ffmpeg-devel/2021-January/274822.html
>> (this one is interesting, you objected to the clause but on the grounds
>> that it was all-encompassing i.e.  anyone commenting on the dispute was
>> potentially subjected to recusal and referred to some 'model'
>> discussion, so your describing my reading as maximalist is weird since
>> that is how you read it - you just happen to object to this rule)
>>
>> https://ffmpeg.org/pipermail/ffmpeg-devel/2021-January/274826.html
>> (Ronald clarifies that "involved" should be constrained to just be one
>> of the two parties -- of which you happen to be one)
>>
>> There's the matter of what the rule currently is, distinct from what it
>> should be. What it ideally should be is that the decision should be
>> taken by a fresh set of eyes consisting of those who haven't become or
>> are seen to be publicly invested in the outcome. So the TC should have a
>> set of alternates - those who can make up the quorum and constitute an
>> odd number of voters when some from the first 5 are recused.
>>
> I'd like to offer a lighter interpretation of the rule, the mailing list is
> the common playing ground, where discussions and disagreements can be had.
> In case of a technical "maximalist" disagreement, then either party can
> invoke the TC to judge on the matter. If anyone in the TC is involved in
> the patch, as if it's an author or significantly contributed to it, then
> they should step away from voting. In other words the "level of
> involvement" rule takes place at the TC level, not at the ffmpeg-devel
> discussion.

The TC is invoked when there's an intractable dispute. So the dispute 
precedes the TC activity hence the parties to the dispute are the main 
opposing participants at the venue of the dispute wherever that is, and 
the rules applies to all main parties. Imagine there's a new feature to 
be added which doesn't exist in the codebase in any form so there's no 
status quo. Member A submits a patch using design pattern X. Member B 
objects and wants design pattern Y. Now let's say if only A was on the 
TC, then as per the arguments of some here, A should recuse themselves 
but if only B was on the TC, B gets to vote. That asymmetry is not 
supported in the wording nor would it be fair.


> Also consider that even in a vote recusal, the member's
> arguments will still be read and by all likelihood taken into consideration
> by the TC, so yours seems to be a literal interpretation of the rule,
> instead of the spirit of the rule, which in my opinion matters more.

Of course. There's no mind-reading or mind-control machine here. Humans 
aren't automatons either. The judges on any Supreme Court are older 
human beings with all the deep convictions that one acquires during a 
long lifetime but that's the best we can do. The rules are meant to be 
the most that is practically feasible within mutually observable 
reality, not ideally efficient within an omniscient universe.

Regards,
Gyan



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