[e16e8f2] | 1 | I don't have specific submission guidelines for Syslinux, but the ones |
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| 2 | that appropriate to the Linux kernel are certainly good enough for |
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| 3 | Syslinux. |
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| 4 | |
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| 5 | In particular, however, I appreciate if patches sent follow the |
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| 6 | standard Linux submission format, as I can automatically import them |
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| 7 | into git, retaining description and author information. Thus, this |
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| 8 | file from the Linux kernel might be useful. |
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| 9 | |
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| 10 | |
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| 11 | ----------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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| 12 | |
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| 13 | |
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| 14 | |
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| 15 | How to Get Your Change Into the Linux Kernel |
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| 16 | or |
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| 17 | Care And Operation Of Your Linus Torvalds |
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| 18 | |
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| 19 | |
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| 20 | |
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| 21 | For a person or company who wishes to submit a change to the Linux |
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| 22 | kernel, the process can sometimes be daunting if you're not familiar |
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| 23 | with "the system." This text is a collection of suggestions which |
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| 24 | can greatly increase the chances of your change being accepted. |
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| 25 | |
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| 26 | Read Documentation/SubmitChecklist for a list of items to check |
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| 27 | before submitting code. If you are submitting a driver, also read |
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| 28 | Documentation/SubmittingDrivers. |
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| 29 | |
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| 30 | |
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| 31 | |
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| 32 | -------------------------------------------- |
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| 33 | SECTION 1 - CREATING AND SENDING YOUR CHANGE |
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| 34 | -------------------------------------------- |
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| 35 | |
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| 36 | |
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| 37 | |
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| 38 | 1) "diff -up" |
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| 39 | ------------ |
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| 40 | |
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| 41 | Use "diff -up" or "diff -uprN" to create patches. |
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| 42 | |
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| 43 | All changes to the Linux kernel occur in the form of patches, as |
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| 44 | generated by diff(1). When creating your patch, make sure to create it |
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| 45 | in "unified diff" format, as supplied by the '-u' argument to diff(1). |
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| 46 | Also, please use the '-p' argument which shows which C function each |
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| 47 | change is in - that makes the resultant diff a lot easier to read. |
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| 48 | Patches should be based in the root kernel source directory, |
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| 49 | not in any lower subdirectory. |
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| 50 | |
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| 51 | To create a patch for a single file, it is often sufficient to do: |
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| 52 | |
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| 53 | SRCTREE= linux-2.6 |
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| 54 | MYFILE= drivers/net/mydriver.c |
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| 55 | |
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| 56 | cd $SRCTREE |
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| 57 | cp $MYFILE $MYFILE.orig |
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| 58 | vi $MYFILE # make your change |
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| 59 | cd .. |
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| 60 | diff -up $SRCTREE/$MYFILE{.orig,} > /tmp/patch |
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| 61 | |
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| 62 | To create a patch for multiple files, you should unpack a "vanilla", |
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| 63 | or unmodified kernel source tree, and generate a diff against your |
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| 64 | own source tree. For example: |
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| 65 | |
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| 66 | MYSRC= /devel/linux-2.6 |
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| 67 | |
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| 68 | tar xvfz linux-2.6.12.tar.gz |
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| 69 | mv linux-2.6.12 linux-2.6.12-vanilla |
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| 70 | diff -uprN -X linux-2.6.12-vanilla/Documentation/dontdiff \ |
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| 71 | linux-2.6.12-vanilla $MYSRC > /tmp/patch |
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| 72 | |
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| 73 | "dontdiff" is a list of files which are generated by the kernel during |
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| 74 | the build process, and should be ignored in any diff(1)-generated |
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| 75 | patch. The "dontdiff" file is included in the kernel tree in |
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| 76 | 2.6.12 and later. For earlier kernel versions, you can get it |
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| 77 | from <http://www.xenotime.net/linux/doc/dontdiff>. |
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| 78 | |
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| 79 | Make sure your patch does not include any extra files which do not |
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| 80 | belong in a patch submission. Make sure to review your patch -after- |
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| 81 | generated it with diff(1), to ensure accuracy. |
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| 82 | |
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| 83 | If your changes produce a lot of deltas, you may want to look into |
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| 84 | splitting them into individual patches which modify things in |
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| 85 | logical stages. This will facilitate easier reviewing by other |
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| 86 | kernel developers, very important if you want your patch accepted. |
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| 87 | There are a number of scripts which can aid in this: |
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| 88 | |
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| 89 | Quilt: |
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| 90 | http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/quilt |
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| 91 | |
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| 92 | Andrew Morton's patch scripts: |
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| 93 | http://www.zip.com.au/~akpm/linux/patches/ |
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| 94 | Instead of these scripts, quilt is the recommended patch management |
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| 95 | tool (see above). |
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| 96 | |
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| 97 | |
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| 98 | |
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| 99 | 2) Describe your changes. |
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| 100 | |
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| 101 | Describe the technical detail of the change(s) your patch includes. |
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| 102 | |
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| 103 | Be as specific as possible. The WORST descriptions possible include |
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| 104 | things like "update driver X", "bug fix for driver X", or "this patch |
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| 105 | includes updates for subsystem X. Please apply." |
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| 106 | |
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| 107 | If your description starts to get long, that's a sign that you probably |
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| 108 | need to split up your patch. See #3, next. |
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| 109 | |
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| 110 | |
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| 111 | |
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| 112 | 3) Separate your changes. |
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| 113 | |
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| 114 | Separate _logical changes_ into a single patch file. |
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| 115 | |
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| 116 | For example, if your changes include both bug fixes and performance |
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| 117 | enhancements for a single driver, separate those changes into two |
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| 118 | or more patches. If your changes include an API update, and a new |
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| 119 | driver which uses that new API, separate those into two patches. |
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| 120 | |
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| 121 | On the other hand, if you make a single change to numerous files, |
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| 122 | group those changes into a single patch. Thus a single logical change |
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| 123 | is contained within a single patch. |
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| 124 | |
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| 125 | If one patch depends on another patch in order for a change to be |
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| 126 | complete, that is OK. Simply note "this patch depends on patch X" |
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| 127 | in your patch description. |
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| 128 | |
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| 129 | If you cannot condense your patch set into a smaller set of patches, |
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| 130 | then only post say 15 or so at a time and wait for review and integration. |
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| 131 | |
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| 132 | |
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| 133 | |
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| 134 | 4) Style check your changes. |
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| 135 | |
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| 136 | Check your patch for basic style violations, details of which can be |
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| 137 | found in Documentation/CodingStyle. Failure to do so simply wastes |
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| 138 | the reviewers time and will get your patch rejected, probably |
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| 139 | without even being read. |
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| 140 | |
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| 141 | At a minimum you should check your patches with the patch style |
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| 142 | checker prior to submission (scripts/checkpatch.pl). You should |
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| 143 | be able to justify all violations that remain in your patch. |
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| 144 | |
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| 145 | |
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| 146 | |
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| 147 | 5) Select e-mail destination. |
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| 148 | |
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| 149 | Look through the MAINTAINERS file and the source code, and determine |
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| 150 | if your change applies to a specific subsystem of the kernel, with |
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| 151 | an assigned maintainer. If so, e-mail that person. |
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| 152 | |
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| 153 | If no maintainer is listed, or the maintainer does not respond, send |
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| 154 | your patch to the primary Linux kernel developer's mailing list, |
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| 155 | linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org. Most kernel developers monitor this |
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| 156 | e-mail list, and can comment on your changes. |
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| 157 | |
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| 158 | |
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| 159 | Do not send more than 15 patches at once to the vger mailing lists!!! |
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| 160 | |
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| 161 | |
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| 162 | Linus Torvalds is the final arbiter of all changes accepted into the |
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| 163 | Linux kernel. His e-mail address is <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>. |
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| 164 | He gets a lot of e-mail, so typically you should do your best to -avoid- |
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| 165 | sending him e-mail. |
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| 166 | |
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| 167 | Patches which are bug fixes, are "obvious" changes, or similarly |
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| 168 | require little discussion should be sent or CC'd to Linus. Patches |
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| 169 | which require discussion or do not have a clear advantage should |
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| 170 | usually be sent first to linux-kernel. Only after the patch is |
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| 171 | discussed should the patch then be submitted to Linus. |
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| 172 | |
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| 173 | |
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| 174 | |
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| 175 | 6) Select your CC (e-mail carbon copy) list. |
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| 176 | |
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| 177 | Unless you have a reason NOT to do so, CC linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org. |
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| 178 | |
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| 179 | Other kernel developers besides Linus need to be aware of your change, |
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| 180 | so that they may comment on it and offer code review and suggestions. |
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| 181 | linux-kernel is the primary Linux kernel developer mailing list. |
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| 182 | Other mailing lists are available for specific subsystems, such as |
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| 183 | USB, framebuffer devices, the VFS, the SCSI subsystem, etc. See the |
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| 184 | MAINTAINERS file for a mailing list that relates specifically to |
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| 185 | your change. |
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| 186 | |
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| 187 | Majordomo lists of VGER.KERNEL.ORG at: |
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| 188 | <http://vger.kernel.org/vger-lists.html> |
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| 189 | |
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| 190 | If changes affect userland-kernel interfaces, please send |
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| 191 | the MAN-PAGES maintainer (as listed in the MAINTAINERS file) |
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| 192 | a man-pages patch, or at least a notification of the change, |
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| 193 | so that some information makes its way into the manual pages. |
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| 194 | |
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| 195 | Even if the maintainer did not respond in step #4, make sure to ALWAYS |
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| 196 | copy the maintainer when you change their code. |
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| 197 | |
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| 198 | For small patches you may want to CC the Trivial Patch Monkey |
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| 199 | trivial@kernel.org managed by Adrian Bunk; which collects "trivial" |
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| 200 | patches. Trivial patches must qualify for one of the following rules: |
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| 201 | Spelling fixes in documentation |
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| 202 | Spelling fixes which could break grep(1) |
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| 203 | Warning fixes (cluttering with useless warnings is bad) |
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| 204 | Compilation fixes (only if they are actually correct) |
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| 205 | Runtime fixes (only if they actually fix things) |
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| 206 | Removing use of deprecated functions/macros (eg. check_region) |
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| 207 | Contact detail and documentation fixes |
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| 208 | Non-portable code replaced by portable code (even in arch-specific, |
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| 209 | since people copy, as long as it's trivial) |
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| 210 | Any fix by the author/maintainer of the file (ie. patch monkey |
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| 211 | in re-transmission mode) |
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| 212 | URL: <http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/bunk/trivial/> |
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| 213 | |
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| 214 | |
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| 215 | |
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| 216 | 7) No MIME, no links, no compression, no attachments. Just plain text. |
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| 217 | |
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| 218 | Linus and other kernel developers need to be able to read and comment |
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| 219 | on the changes you are submitting. It is important for a kernel |
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| 220 | developer to be able to "quote" your changes, using standard e-mail |
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| 221 | tools, so that they may comment on specific portions of your code. |
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| 222 | |
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| 223 | For this reason, all patches should be submitting e-mail "inline". |
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| 224 | WARNING: Be wary of your editor's word-wrap corrupting your patch, |
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| 225 | if you choose to cut-n-paste your patch. |
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| 226 | |
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| 227 | Do not attach the patch as a MIME attachment, compressed or not. |
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| 228 | Many popular e-mail applications will not always transmit a MIME |
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| 229 | attachment as plain text, making it impossible to comment on your |
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| 230 | code. A MIME attachment also takes Linus a bit more time to process, |
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| 231 | decreasing the likelihood of your MIME-attached change being accepted. |
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| 232 | |
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| 233 | Exception: If your mailer is mangling patches then someone may ask |
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| 234 | you to re-send them using MIME. |
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| 235 | |
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| 236 | See Documentation/email-clients.txt for hints about configuring |
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| 237 | your e-mail client so that it sends your patches untouched. |
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| 238 | |
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| 239 | 8) E-mail size. |
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| 240 | |
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| 241 | When sending patches to Linus, always follow step #7. |
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| 242 | |
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| 243 | Large changes are not appropriate for mailing lists, and some |
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| 244 | maintainers. If your patch, uncompressed, exceeds 40 kB in size, |
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| 245 | it is preferred that you store your patch on an Internet-accessible |
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| 246 | server, and provide instead a URL (link) pointing to your patch. |
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| 247 | |
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| 248 | |
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| 249 | |
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| 250 | 9) Name your kernel version. |
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| 251 | |
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| 252 | It is important to note, either in the subject line or in the patch |
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| 253 | description, the kernel version to which this patch applies. |
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| 254 | |
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| 255 | If the patch does not apply cleanly to the latest kernel version, |
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| 256 | Linus will not apply it. |
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| 257 | |
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| 258 | |
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| 259 | |
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| 260 | 10) Don't get discouraged. Re-submit. |
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| 261 | |
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| 262 | After you have submitted your change, be patient and wait. If Linus |
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| 263 | likes your change and applies it, it will appear in the next version |
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| 264 | of the kernel that he releases. |
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| 265 | |
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| 266 | However, if your change doesn't appear in the next version of the |
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| 267 | kernel, there could be any number of reasons. It's YOUR job to |
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| 268 | narrow down those reasons, correct what was wrong, and submit your |
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| 269 | updated change. |
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| 270 | |
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| 271 | It is quite common for Linus to "drop" your patch without comment. |
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| 272 | That's the nature of the system. If he drops your patch, it could be |
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| 273 | due to |
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| 274 | * Your patch did not apply cleanly to the latest kernel version. |
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| 275 | * Your patch was not sufficiently discussed on linux-kernel. |
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| 276 | * A style issue (see section 2). |
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| 277 | * An e-mail formatting issue (re-read this section). |
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| 278 | * A technical problem with your change. |
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| 279 | * He gets tons of e-mail, and yours got lost in the shuffle. |
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| 280 | * You are being annoying. |
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| 281 | |
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| 282 | When in doubt, solicit comments on linux-kernel mailing list. |
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| 283 | |
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| 284 | |
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| 285 | |
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| 286 | 11) Include PATCH in the subject |
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| 287 | |
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| 288 | Due to high e-mail traffic to Linus, and to linux-kernel, it is common |
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| 289 | convention to prefix your subject line with [PATCH]. This lets Linus |
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| 290 | and other kernel developers more easily distinguish patches from other |
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| 291 | e-mail discussions. |
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| 292 | |
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| 293 | |
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| 294 | |
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| 295 | 12) Sign your work |
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| 296 | |
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| 297 | To improve tracking of who did what, especially with patches that can |
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| 298 | percolate to their final resting place in the kernel through several |
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| 299 | layers of maintainers, we've introduced a "sign-off" procedure on |
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| 300 | patches that are being emailed around. |
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| 301 | |
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| 302 | The sign-off is a simple line at the end of the explanation for the |
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| 303 | patch, which certifies that you wrote it or otherwise have the right to |
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| 304 | pass it on as a open-source patch. The rules are pretty simple: if you |
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| 305 | can certify the below: |
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| 306 | |
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| 307 | Developer's Certificate of Origin 1.1 |
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| 308 | |
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| 309 | By making a contribution to this project, I certify that: |
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| 310 | |
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| 311 | (a) The contribution was created in whole or in part by me and I |
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| 312 | have the right to submit it under the open source license |
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| 313 | indicated in the file; or |
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| 314 | |
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| 315 | (b) The contribution is based upon previous work that, to the best |
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| 316 | of my knowledge, is covered under an appropriate open source |
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| 317 | license and I have the right under that license to submit that |
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| 318 | work with modifications, whether created in whole or in part |
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| 319 | by me, under the same open source license (unless I am |
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| 320 | permitted to submit under a different license), as indicated |
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| 321 | in the file; or |
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| 322 | |
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| 323 | (c) The contribution was provided directly to me by some other |
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| 324 | person who certified (a), (b) or (c) and I have not modified |
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| 325 | it. |
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| 326 | |
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| 327 | (d) I understand and agree that this project and the contribution |
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| 328 | are public and that a record of the contribution (including all |
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| 329 | personal information I submit with it, including my sign-off) is |
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| 330 | maintained indefinitely and may be redistributed consistent with |
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| 331 | this project or the open source license(s) involved. |
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| 332 | |
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| 333 | then you just add a line saying |
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| 334 | |
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| 335 | Signed-off-by: Random J Developer <random@developer.example.org> |
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| 336 | |
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| 337 | using your real name (sorry, no pseudonyms or anonymous contributions.) |
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| 338 | |
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| 339 | Some people also put extra tags at the end. They'll just be ignored for |
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| 340 | now, but you can do this to mark internal company procedures or just |
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| 341 | point out some special detail about the sign-off. |
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| 342 | |
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| 343 | |
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| 344 | 13) When to use Acked-by: |
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| 345 | |
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| 346 | The Signed-off-by: tag indicates that the signer was involved in the |
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| 347 | development of the patch, or that he/she was in the patch's delivery path. |
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| 348 | |
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| 349 | If a person was not directly involved in the preparation or handling of a |
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| 350 | patch but wishes to signify and record their approval of it then they can |
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| 351 | arrange to have an Acked-by: line added to the patch's changelog. |
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| 352 | |
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| 353 | Acked-by: is often used by the maintainer of the affected code when that |
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| 354 | maintainer neither contributed to nor forwarded the patch. |
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| 355 | |
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| 356 | Acked-by: is not as formal as Signed-off-by:. It is a record that the acker |
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| 357 | has at least reviewed the patch and has indicated acceptance. Hence patch |
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| 358 | mergers will sometimes manually convert an acker's "yep, looks good to me" |
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| 359 | into an Acked-by:. |
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| 360 | |
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| 361 | Acked-by: does not necessarily indicate acknowledgement of the entire patch. |
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| 362 | For example, if a patch affects multiple subsystems and has an Acked-by: from |
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| 363 | one subsystem maintainer then this usually indicates acknowledgement of just |
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| 364 | the part which affects that maintainer's code. Judgement should be used here. |
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| 365 | When in doubt people should refer to the original discussion in the mailing |
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| 366 | list archives. |
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| 367 | |
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| 368 | |
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| 369 | 14) The canonical patch format |
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| 370 | |
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| 371 | The canonical patch subject line is: |
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| 372 | |
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| 373 | Subject: [PATCH 001/123] subsystem: summary phrase |
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| 374 | |
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| 375 | The canonical patch message body contains the following: |
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| 376 | |
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| 377 | - A "from" line specifying the patch author. |
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| 378 | |
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| 379 | - An empty line. |
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| 380 | |
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| 381 | - The body of the explanation, which will be copied to the |
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| 382 | permanent changelog to describe this patch. |
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| 383 | |
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| 384 | - The "Signed-off-by:" lines, described above, which will |
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| 385 | also go in the changelog. |
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| 386 | |
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| 387 | - A marker line containing simply "---". |
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| 388 | |
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| 389 | - Any additional comments not suitable for the changelog. |
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| 390 | |
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| 391 | - The actual patch (diff output). |
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| 392 | |
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| 393 | The Subject line format makes it very easy to sort the emails |
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| 394 | alphabetically by subject line - pretty much any email reader will |
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| 395 | support that - since because the sequence number is zero-padded, |
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| 396 | the numerical and alphabetic sort is the same. |
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| 397 | |
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| 398 | The "subsystem" in the email's Subject should identify which |
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| 399 | area or subsystem of the kernel is being patched. |
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| 400 | |
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| 401 | The "summary phrase" in the email's Subject should concisely |
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| 402 | describe the patch which that email contains. The "summary |
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| 403 | phrase" should not be a filename. Do not use the same "summary |
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| 404 | phrase" for every patch in a whole patch series (where a "patch |
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| 405 | series" is an ordered sequence of multiple, related patches). |
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| 406 | |
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| 407 | Bear in mind that the "summary phrase" of your email becomes |
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| 408 | a globally-unique identifier for that patch. It propagates |
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| 409 | all the way into the git changelog. The "summary phrase" may |
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| 410 | later be used in developer discussions which refer to the patch. |
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| 411 | People will want to google for the "summary phrase" to read |
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| 412 | discussion regarding that patch. |
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| 413 | |
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| 414 | A couple of example Subjects: |
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| 415 | |
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| 416 | Subject: [patch 2/5] ext2: improve scalability of bitmap searching |
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| 417 | Subject: [PATCHv2 001/207] x86: fix eflags tracking |
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| 418 | |
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| 419 | The "from" line must be the very first line in the message body, |
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| 420 | and has the form: |
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| 421 | |
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| 422 | From: Original Author <author@example.com> |
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| 423 | |
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| 424 | The "from" line specifies who will be credited as the author of the |
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| 425 | patch in the permanent changelog. If the "from" line is missing, |
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| 426 | then the "From:" line from the email header will be used to determine |
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| 427 | the patch author in the changelog. |
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| 428 | |
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| 429 | The explanation body will be committed to the permanent source |
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| 430 | changelog, so should make sense to a competent reader who has long |
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| 431 | since forgotten the immediate details of the discussion that might |
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| 432 | have led to this patch. |
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| 433 | |
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| 434 | The "---" marker line serves the essential purpose of marking for patch |
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| 435 | handling tools where the changelog message ends. |
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| 436 | |
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| 437 | One good use for the additional comments after the "---" marker is for |
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| 438 | a diffstat, to show what files have changed, and the number of inserted |
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| 439 | and deleted lines per file. A diffstat is especially useful on bigger |
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| 440 | patches. Other comments relevant only to the moment or the maintainer, |
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| 441 | not suitable for the permanent changelog, should also go here. |
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| 442 | Use diffstat options "-p 1 -w 70" so that filenames are listed from the |
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| 443 | top of the kernel source tree and don't use too much horizontal space |
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| 444 | (easily fit in 80 columns, maybe with some indentation). |
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| 445 | |
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| 446 | See more details on the proper patch format in the following |
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| 447 | references. |
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| 448 | |
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| 449 | |
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| 450 | |
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| 451 | |
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| 452 | ----------------------------------- |
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| 453 | SECTION 2 - HINTS, TIPS, AND TRICKS |
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| 454 | ----------------------------------- |
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| 455 | |
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| 456 | This section lists many of the common "rules" associated with code |
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| 457 | submitted to the kernel. There are always exceptions... but you must |
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| 458 | have a really good reason for doing so. You could probably call this |
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| 459 | section Linus Computer Science 101. |
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| 460 | |
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| 461 | |
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| 462 | |
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| 463 | 1) Read Documentation/CodingStyle |
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| 464 | |
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| 465 | Nuff said. If your code deviates too much from this, it is likely |
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| 466 | to be rejected without further review, and without comment. |
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| 467 | |
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| 468 | One significant exception is when moving code from one file to |
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| 469 | another -- in this case you should not modify the moved code at all in |
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| 470 | the same patch which moves it. This clearly delineates the act of |
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| 471 | moving the code and your changes. This greatly aids review of the |
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| 472 | actual differences and allows tools to better track the history of |
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| 473 | the code itself. |
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| 474 | |
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| 475 | Check your patches with the patch style checker prior to submission |
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| 476 | (scripts/checkpatch.pl). The style checker should be viewed as |
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| 477 | a guide not as the final word. If your code looks better with |
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| 478 | a violation then its probably best left alone. |
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| 479 | |
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| 480 | The checker reports at three levels: |
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| 481 | - ERROR: things that are very likely to be wrong |
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| 482 | - WARNING: things requiring careful review |
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| 483 | - CHECK: things requiring thought |
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| 484 | |
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| 485 | You should be able to justify all violations that remain in your |
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| 486 | patch. |
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| 487 | |
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| 488 | |
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| 489 | |
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| 490 | 2) #ifdefs are ugly |
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| 491 | |
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| 492 | Code cluttered with ifdefs is difficult to read and maintain. Don't do |
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| 493 | it. Instead, put your ifdefs in a header, and conditionally define |
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| 494 | 'static inline' functions, or macros, which are used in the code. |
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| 495 | Let the compiler optimize away the "no-op" case. |
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| 496 | |
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| 497 | Simple example, of poor code: |
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| 498 | |
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| 499 | dev = alloc_etherdev (sizeof(struct funky_private)); |
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| 500 | if (!dev) |
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| 501 | return -ENODEV; |
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| 502 | #ifdef CONFIG_NET_FUNKINESS |
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| 503 | init_funky_net(dev); |
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| 504 | #endif |
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| 505 | |
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| 506 | Cleaned-up example: |
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| 507 | |
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| 508 | (in header) |
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| 509 | #ifndef CONFIG_NET_FUNKINESS |
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| 510 | static inline void init_funky_net (struct net_device *d) {} |
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| 511 | #endif |
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| 512 | |
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| 513 | (in the code itself) |
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| 514 | dev = alloc_etherdev (sizeof(struct funky_private)); |
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| 515 | if (!dev) |
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| 516 | return -ENODEV; |
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| 517 | init_funky_net(dev); |
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| 518 | |
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| 519 | |
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| 520 | |
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| 521 | 3) 'static inline' is better than a macro |
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| 522 | |
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| 523 | Static inline functions are greatly preferred over macros. |
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| 524 | They provide type safety, have no length limitations, no formatting |
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| 525 | limitations, and under gcc they are as cheap as macros. |
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| 526 | |
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| 527 | Macros should only be used for cases where a static inline is clearly |
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| 528 | suboptimal [there a few, isolated cases of this in fast paths], |
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| 529 | or where it is impossible to use a static inline function [such as |
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| 530 | string-izing]. |
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| 531 | |
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| 532 | 'static inline' is preferred over 'static __inline__', 'extern inline', |
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| 533 | and 'extern __inline__'. |
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| 534 | |
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| 535 | |
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| 536 | |
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| 537 | 4) Don't over-design. |
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| 538 | |
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| 539 | Don't try to anticipate nebulous future cases which may or may not |
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| 540 | be useful: "Make it as simple as you can, and no simpler." |
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| 541 | |
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| 542 | |
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| 543 | |
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| 544 | ---------------------- |
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| 545 | SECTION 3 - REFERENCES |
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| 546 | ---------------------- |
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| 547 | |
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| 548 | Andrew Morton, "The perfect patch" (tpp). |
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| 549 | <http://www.zip.com.au/~akpm/linux/patches/stuff/tpp.txt> |
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| 550 | |
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| 551 | Jeff Garzik, "Linux kernel patch submission format". |
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| 552 | <http://linux.yyz.us/patch-format.html> |
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| 553 | |
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| 554 | Greg Kroah-Hartman, "How to piss off a kernel subsystem maintainer". |
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| 555 | <http://www.kroah.com/log/2005/03/31/> |
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| 556 | <http://www.kroah.com/log/2005/07/08/> |
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| 557 | <http://www.kroah.com/log/2005/10/19/> |
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| 558 | <http://www.kroah.com/log/2006/01/11/> |
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| 559 | |
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| 560 | NO!!!! No more huge patch bombs to linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org people! |
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| 561 | <http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=linux-kernel&m=112112749912944&w=2> |
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| 562 | |
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| 563 | Kernel Documentation/CodingStyle: |
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| 564 | <http://users.sosdg.org/~qiyong/lxr/source/Documentation/CodingStyle> |
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| 565 | |
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| 566 | Linus Torvalds's mail on the canonical patch format: |
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| 567 | <http://lkml.org/lkml/2005/4/7/183> |
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| 568 | -- |
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