Google Engineers Launch "Sashiko" for Agentic AI Code Review of the Linux Kernel (phoronix.com)
54 points by speckx 3 hours ago
rwmj 2 hours ago
Better to link to the site itself, or one of the reviews?
For an example of a review (picked pretty much at random) see: https://sashiko.dev/#/patchset/20260318151256.2590375-1-andr...
The original patch series corresponding to that is: https://lkml.org/lkml/2026/3/18/1600
Edit: Here's a simpler and better example of a review: https://sashiko.dev/#/patchset/20260318110848.2779003-1-liju...
I'm very glad they're not spamming the mailing list.
jeffbee 2 hours ago
That is both really useful and a great example of why they should have stopped writing code in C decades ago. So many kernel bugs have arisen from people adding early returns without thinking about the cleanup functions, a problem that many other language platforms handle automatically on scope exit.
overfeed an hour ago
Must we do this on every thread about the Linux kernel?
richwater 26 minutes ago
withinrafael 25 minutes ago
Looks cool, but this site is a bit difficult for me to grok.
I think the table might be slightly inside-out? The Status column appears to show internal pipeline states ("Pending", "In Review") that really only matter to the system, while Findings are buried in the column on the far right. For example, one reviewed patchset with a critical and a high finding is just causally hanging out below the fold. I couldn't immediately find a way to filter or search for severe findings.
It might help to separate unreviewed patches from reviewed ones, and somehow wire the findings into the visual hierarchy better. Or perhaps I'm just off base and this is targeting a very specific Linux kernel community workflow/mindset.
Just my 1c.
tonfa 9 minutes ago
I think it's just a dashboard, not meant to be used as is.
Reviewers are more likely to instead subscribe to get the review inline, and then potentially incorporate that with their feedback.
monksy 2 hours ago
I think this is a great and interesting project. However, I hope that they're not doing this to submit patches to the kernel. It would be much better to layer in additional tests to exploit bugs and defects for verification of existance/fixes.
(Also tests can be focused per defect.. which prevents overload)
From some of the changes I'm seeing: This looks like it's doing style and structure changes, which for a codebase this size is going to add drag to existing development. (I'm supportive of cleanups.. but done on an automated basis is a bad idea)
I.e. https://sashiko.dev/#/message/20260318170604.10254-1-erdemhu...
bjackman 2 hours ago
Style and structure is not the goal here, the reason people are interested in it is to find bugs.
Having said that, if it can save maintainers time it could be useful. It's worth slowing contribution down if it lets maintainers get more reviews done, since the kernel is bottlenecked much more on maintainer time than on contributor energy.
My experience with using the prototype is that it very rarely comments with "opinions" it only identifies functional issues. So when you get false positives it's usually of the form "the model doesn't understand the code" or "the model doesn't understand the context" rather than "I'm getting spammed with pointless advice about C programming preferences". This may be a subsystem-specific thing, as different areas of the codebase have different prompts. (May also be that my coding style happens to align with its "preferences").
rwmj 2 hours ago
No, it's reviewing patches posted on LKML and offering suggestions. The original patch posted corresponding to your link was this, which was (presumably!) written by a human:
ChrisArchitect an hour ago
4fterd4rk 2 hours ago
oh god can we not
smlacy 2 hours ago
What's your concern?
htx80nerd 2 hours ago
Have you ever programmed with AI? It needs a lot of hand holding for even simple things sometimes. Forgets basic input, does all kinds of brain dead stuff it should know not to do.
>"good catch - thanks for pointing that out"
lame-robot-hoax 2 hours ago
jamesnorden 2 hours ago
asadm 2 hours ago
__tidu 2 hours ago
well tbf code review is probably the most useful part of "AI coding", if it catches even a single bug you missed its worth it, plus false positives would waste dev time but not pollute the kernel
shevy-java 2 hours ago
Now they want to kill the Linux kernel. :(
We've already seen how bug bounty projects were closed by AI spam; I think it was curl? Or some other project I don't remember right now.
I think AI tools should be required, by law, to verify that what they report is actually a true bug rather than some hypothetical, hallucinated context-dependent not-quite-a-real-bug bug.
tonfa 8 minutes ago
It's not forced upon anyone, it's a tool that patch authors or reviewers can use if they want to.
quantium1628 an hour ago
b2b or b2c? feels like it could go either way