diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/process/researcher-guidelines.rst')
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/process/researcher-guidelines.rst | 27 |
1 files changed, 27 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/process/researcher-guidelines.rst b/Documentation/process/researcher-guidelines.rst index 9fcfed3c350b..d159cd4f5e5b 100644 --- a/Documentation/process/researcher-guidelines.rst +++ b/Documentation/process/researcher-guidelines.rst @@ -44,6 +44,33 @@ explicit agreement of, and full disclosure to, the individual developers involved. Developers cannot be interacted with/experimented on without consent; this, too, is standard research ethics. +Surveys +======= + +Research often takes the form of surveys sent to maintainers or +contributors. As a general rule, though, the kernel community derives +little value from these surveys. The kernel development process works +because every developer benefits from their participation, even working +with others who have different goals. Responding to a survey, though, is a +one-way demand placed on busy developers with no corresponding benefit to +themselves or to the kernel community as a whole. For this reason, this +method of research is discouraged. + +Kernel community members already receive far too much email and are likely +to perceive survey requests as just another demand on their time. Sending +such requests deprives the community of valuable contributor time and is +unlikely to yield a statistically useful response. + +As an alternative, researchers should consider attending developer events, +hosting sessions where the research project and its benefits to the +participants can be explained, and interacting directly with the community +there. The information received will be far richer than that obtained from +an email survey, and the community will gain from the ability to learn from +your insights as well. + +Patches +======= + To help clarify: sending patches to developers *is* interacting with them, but they have already consented to receiving *good faith contributions*. Sending intentionally flawed/vulnerable patches or |