Prioritize build/test infrastructure to eliminate reactive engineering interrupts

May 8, 2026 at 5:15 PMstrategyhigh

Situation

After Dirty Frag CVE took Linux engineering offline for 24 hours, Peter committed to prioritize building robust build/test infrastructure as the proactive response. Told Brady/Brian this requires Product leadership to de-prioritize other work to make room. Surfaced publicly in #department-heads thread asking how to structure infra for the new normal of AI-assisted exploit cadence.

Reasoning

The Dirty Frag exhaustion is the diagnostic — without proper build/test automation, every CVE wave forces engineering into heroics mode and zero new value ships. Same structural lever as paved-paths Jira (5/7), strategy/tactics coaching (5/5), and the 3-tier board hierarchy (5/6): replace heroics with process. The time to build it is BEFORE the next fire, not during one. Forcing the trade-off upstream to Product (Brady to coordinate with Bjorn on what gives) makes the cost visible and accountable rather than absorbed silently inside engineering.

Additional Context

Dirty Frag came on the heels of copy.fail — Brady raised the question of whether weekly criticals are now the new normal. Peter assumed yes and used that framing to justify the proactive investment. TPS reports show existing slip pile (Citadel OOM 8d overdue, Kernel CI Auto M2 8d, RLC Pro Hardened 9.7 11d) is already evidence the team cannot absorb both incident response AND forward work without infrastructure.

Observed Evidence

Slack #department-heads 8:31 AM Mythos framing, 8:45 AM proactive timing statement; Fathom Brady/Brian sync 9:30 AM key takeaway captures the commitment with the Product de-prioritization requirement

Matching Patterns

25%
Protect Engineering Focus Through Process(same category, process protection from disruption)
22%
Systemic Investment Over Short-Term Metrics(infrastructure over throughput, 2 keyword matches)

Confidence Breakdown

33/35
Evidence
28/30
Pattern
20/20
Source
13/15
Corroboration

Reasoning Depth Analysis

Org Signal:Engineering will not absorb infinite CVE response capacity; Product must trade off other work to fund infrastructure
Who Affected:Brady + Bjorn must own the de-prioritization; Nathan/Justin teams gain capacity protection; Justin paved-paths ticket becomes load-bearing
Precedent:Adds incident-response layer to the 5-layer structural lever set (board hierarchy / Jira-as-record / paved-paths / Owen experiment / Icicle gate)
Consequences:Real — Linux team capacity reallocation in flight; existing TPS slip pile already shows the problem; if not invested, next CVE wave repeats the 24h exhaustion
Timing:Now while things arent critical — proactive choice not reactive; Dirty Frag fresh enough to be the forcing function

Related Context

🎥
Brian / Brady Peter Weekly Sync

fathom

Peter will prioritize build/test infrastructure to eliminate reactive engineering interrupts (e.g., this weeks Linux team pause for patches). This requires product leadership to proactively de-prioritize other work.

💬
#department-heads — structural response to Dirty Frag

slack

in the age of Mythos and whatever the child-of-Mythos looks like, we are thinking about how to structure ourselves, and what infrastructure we need in place if vulnerabilities like this one become the new normal

💬
#department-heads — proactive timing rationale

slack

this took Linux engineering down, for 24 hours, and now theyre exhausted. The time to build the infra to handle this without it killing us is while things arent critical.

Outcome

No outcome recorded yet.

Decision ID: e57a48f7-77ce-4010-973c-313c9ba08944