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Move the status page from vger to the same server as mailbot. Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230710174636.1174684-1-kuba@kernel.org Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
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.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
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.. _netdev-FAQ:
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=============================
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Networking subsystem (netdev)
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=============================
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tl;dr
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-----
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- designate your patch to a tree - ``[PATCH net]`` or ``[PATCH net-next]``
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- for fixes the ``Fixes:`` tag is required, regardless of the tree
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- don't post large series (> 15 patches), break them up
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- don't repost your patches within one 24h period
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- reverse xmas tree
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netdev
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------
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netdev is a mailing list for all network-related Linux stuff. This
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includes anything found under net/ (i.e. core code like IPv6) and
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drivers/net (i.e. hardware specific drivers) in the Linux source tree.
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Note that some subsystems (e.g. wireless drivers) which have a high
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volume of traffic have their own specific mailing lists and trees.
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The netdev list is managed (like many other Linux mailing lists) through
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VGER (http://vger.kernel.org/) with archives available at
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https://lore.kernel.org/netdev/
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Aside from subsystems like those mentioned above, all network-related
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Linux development (i.e. RFC, review, comments, etc.) takes place on
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netdev.
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Development cycle
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-----------------
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Here is a bit of background information on
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the cadence of Linux development. Each new release starts off with a
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two week "merge window" where the main maintainers feed their new stuff
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to Linus for merging into the mainline tree. After the two weeks, the
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merge window is closed, and it is called/tagged ``-rc1``. No new
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features get mainlined after this -- only fixes to the rc1 content are
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expected. After roughly a week of collecting fixes to the rc1 content,
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rc2 is released. This repeats on a roughly weekly basis until rc7
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(typically; sometimes rc6 if things are quiet, or rc8 if things are in a
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state of churn), and a week after the last vX.Y-rcN was done, the
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official vX.Y is released.
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To find out where we are now in the cycle - load the mainline (Linus)
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page here:
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https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git
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and note the top of the "tags" section. If it is rc1, it is early in
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the dev cycle. If it was tagged rc7 a week ago, then a release is
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probably imminent. If the most recent tag is a final release tag
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(without an ``-rcN`` suffix) - we are most likely in a merge window
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and ``net-next`` is closed.
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git trees and patch flow
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------------------------
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There are two networking trees (git repositories) in play. Both are
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driven by David Miller, the main network maintainer. There is the
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``net`` tree, and the ``net-next`` tree. As you can probably guess from
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the names, the ``net`` tree is for fixes to existing code already in the
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mainline tree from Linus, and ``net-next`` is where the new code goes
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for the future release. You can find the trees here:
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- https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/netdev/net.git
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- https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/netdev/net-next.git
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Relating that to kernel development: At the beginning of the 2-week
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merge window, the ``net-next`` tree will be closed - no new changes/features.
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The accumulated new content of the past ~10 weeks will be passed onto
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mainline/Linus via a pull request for vX.Y -- at the same time, the
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``net`` tree will start accumulating fixes for this pulled content
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relating to vX.Y
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An announcement indicating when ``net-next`` has been closed is usually
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sent to netdev, but knowing the above, you can predict that in advance.
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.. warning::
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Do not send new ``net-next`` content to netdev during the
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period during which ``net-next`` tree is closed.
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RFC patches sent for review only are obviously welcome at any time
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(use ``--subject-prefix='RFC net-next'`` with ``git format-patch``).
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Shortly after the two weeks have passed (and vX.Y-rc1 is released), the
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tree for ``net-next`` reopens to collect content for the next (vX.Y+1)
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release.
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If you aren't subscribed to netdev and/or are simply unsure if
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``net-next`` has re-opened yet, simply check the ``net-next`` git
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repository link above for any new networking-related commits. You may
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also check the following website for the current status:
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https://patchwork.hopto.org/net-next.html
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The ``net`` tree continues to collect fixes for the vX.Y content, and is
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fed back to Linus at regular (~weekly) intervals. Meaning that the
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focus for ``net`` is on stabilization and bug fixes.
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Finally, the vX.Y gets released, and the whole cycle starts over.
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netdev patch review
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-------------------
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.. _patch_status:
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Patch status
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~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Status of a patch can be checked by looking at the main patchwork
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queue for netdev:
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https://patchwork.kernel.org/project/netdevbpf/list/
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The "State" field will tell you exactly where things are at with your
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patch. Patches are indexed by the ``Message-ID`` header of the emails
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which carried them so if you have trouble finding your patch append
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the value of ``Message-ID`` to the URL above.
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Updating patch status
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Contributors and reviewers do not have the permissions to update patch
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state directly in patchwork. Patchwork doesn't expose much information
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about the history of the state of patches, therefore having multiple
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people update the state leads to confusion.
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Instead of delegating patchwork permissions netdev uses a simple mail
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bot which looks for special commands/lines within the emails sent to
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the mailing list. For example to mark a series as Changes Requested
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one needs to send the following line anywhere in the email thread::
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pw-bot: changes-requested
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As a result the bot will set the entire series to Changes Requested.
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This may be useful when author discovers a bug in their own series
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and wants to prevent it from getting applied.
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The use of the bot is entirely optional, if in doubt ignore its existence
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completely. Maintainers will classify and update the state of the patches
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themselves. No email should ever be sent to the list with the main purpose
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of communicating with the bot, the bot commands should be seen as metadata.
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The use of the bot is restricted to authors of the patches (the ``From:``
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header on patch submission and command must match!), maintainers of
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the modified code according to the MAINTAINERS file (again, ``From:``
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must match the MAINTAINERS entry) and a handful of senior reviewers.
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Bot records its activity here:
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https://patchwork.hopto.org/pw-bot.html
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Review timelines
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Generally speaking, the patches get triaged quickly (in less than
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48h). But be patient, if your patch is active in patchwork (i.e. it's
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listed on the project's patch list) the chances it was missed are close to zero.
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Asking the maintainer for status updates on your
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patch is a good way to ensure your patch is ignored or pushed to the
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bottom of the priority list.
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Changes requested
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Patches :ref:`marked<patch_status>` as ``Changes Requested`` need
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to be revised. The new version should come with a change log,
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preferably including links to previous postings, for example::
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[PATCH net-next v3] net: make cows go moo
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Even users who don't drink milk appreciate hearing the cows go "moo".
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The amount of mooing will depend on packet rate so should match
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the diurnal cycle quite well.
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Signed-of-by: Joe Defarmer <joe@barn.org>
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---
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v3:
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- add a note about time-of-day mooing fluctuation to the commit message
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v2: https://lore.kernel.org/netdev/123themessageid@barn.org/
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- fix missing argument in kernel doc for netif_is_bovine()
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- fix memory leak in netdev_register_cow()
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v1: https://lore.kernel.org/netdev/456getstheclicks@barn.org/
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The commit message should be revised to answer any questions reviewers
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had to ask in previous discussions. Occasionally the update of
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the commit message will be the only change in the new version.
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Partial resends
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Please always resend the entire patch series and make sure you do number your
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patches such that it is clear this is the latest and greatest set of patches
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that can be applied. Do not try to resend just the patches which changed.
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Handling misapplied patches
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Occasionally a patch series gets applied before receiving critical feedback,
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or the wrong version of a series gets applied.
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Making the patch disappear once it is pushed out is not possible, the commit
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history in netdev trees is immutable.
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Please send incremental versions on top of what has been merged in order to fix
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the patches the way they would look like if your latest patch series was to be
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merged.
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In cases where full revert is needed the revert has to be submitted
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as a patch to the list with a commit message explaining the technical
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problems with the reverted commit. Reverts should be used as a last resort,
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when original change is completely wrong; incremental fixes are preferred.
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Stable tree
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~~~~~~~~~~~
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While it used to be the case that netdev submissions were not supposed
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to carry explicit ``CC: stable@vger.kernel.org`` tags that is no longer
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the case today. Please follow the standard stable rules in
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:ref:`Documentation/process/stable-kernel-rules.rst <stable_kernel_rules>`,
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and make sure you include appropriate Fixes tags!
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Security fixes
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Do not email netdev maintainers directly if you think you discovered
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a bug that might have possible security implications.
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The current netdev maintainer has consistently requested that
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people use the mailing lists and not reach out directly. If you aren't
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OK with that, then perhaps consider mailing security@kernel.org or
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reading about http://oss-security.openwall.org/wiki/mailing-lists/distros
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as possible alternative mechanisms.
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Co-posting changes to user space components
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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User space code exercising kernel features should be posted
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alongside kernel patches. This gives reviewers a chance to see
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how any new interface is used and how well it works.
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When user space tools reside in the kernel repo itself all changes
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should generally come as one series. If series becomes too large
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or the user space project is not reviewed on netdev include a link
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to a public repo where user space patches can be seen.
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In case user space tooling lives in a separate repository but is
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reviewed on netdev (e.g. patches to ``iproute2`` tools) kernel and
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user space patches should form separate series (threads) when posted
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to the mailing list, e.g.::
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[PATCH net-next 0/3] net: some feature cover letter
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└─ [PATCH net-next 1/3] net: some feature prep
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└─ [PATCH net-next 2/3] net: some feature do it
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└─ [PATCH net-next 3/3] selftest: net: some feature
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[PATCH iproute2-next] ip: add support for some feature
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Posting as one thread is discouraged because it confuses patchwork
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(as of patchwork 2.2.2).
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Preparing changes
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-----------------
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Attention to detail is important. Re-read your own work as if you were the
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reviewer. You can start with using ``checkpatch.pl``, perhaps even with
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the ``--strict`` flag. But do not be mindlessly robotic in doing so.
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If your change is a bug fix, make sure your commit log indicates the
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end-user visible symptom, the underlying reason as to why it happens,
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and then if necessary, explain why the fix proposed is the best way to
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get things done. Don't mangle whitespace, and as is common, don't
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mis-indent function arguments that span multiple lines. If it is your
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first patch, mail it to yourself so you can test apply it to an
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unpatched tree to confirm infrastructure didn't mangle it.
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Finally, go back and read
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:ref:`Documentation/process/submitting-patches.rst <submittingpatches>`
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to be sure you are not repeating some common mistake documented there.
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Indicating target tree
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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To help maintainers and CI bots you should explicitly mark which tree
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your patch is targeting. Assuming that you use git, use the prefix
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flag::
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git format-patch --subject-prefix='PATCH net-next' start..finish
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Use ``net`` instead of ``net-next`` (always lower case) in the above for
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bug-fix ``net`` content.
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Dividing work into patches
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Put yourself in the shoes of the reviewer. Each patch is read separately
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and therefore should constitute a comprehensible step towards your stated
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goal.
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Avoid sending series longer than 15 patches. Larger series takes longer
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to review as reviewers will defer looking at it until they find a large
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chunk of time. A small series can be reviewed in a short time, so Maintainers
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just do it. As a result, a sequence of smaller series gets merged quicker and
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with better review coverage. Re-posting large series also increases the mailing
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list traffic.
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Multi-line comments
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Comment style convention is slightly different for networking and most of
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the tree. Instead of this::
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/*
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* foobar blah blah blah
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* another line of text
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*/
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it is requested that you make it look like this::
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/* foobar blah blah blah
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* another line of text
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*/
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Local variable ordering ("reverse xmas tree", "RCS")
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Netdev has a convention for ordering local variables in functions.
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Order the variable declaration lines longest to shortest, e.g.::
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struct scatterlist *sg;
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struct sk_buff *skb;
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int err, i;
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If there are dependencies between the variables preventing the ordering
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move the initialization out of line.
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Format precedence
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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When working in existing code which uses nonstandard formatting make
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your code follow the most recent guidelines, so that eventually all code
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in the domain of netdev is in the preferred format.
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Resending after review
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Allow at least 24 hours to pass between postings. This will ensure reviewers
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from all geographical locations have a chance to chime in. Do not wait
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too long (weeks) between postings either as it will make it harder for reviewers
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to recall all the context.
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Make sure you address all the feedback in your new posting. Do not post a new
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version of the code if the discussion about the previous version is still
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ongoing, unless directly instructed by a reviewer.
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Testing
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-------
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Expected level of testing
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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At the very minimum your changes must survive an ``allyesconfig`` and an
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``allmodconfig`` build with ``W=1`` set without new warnings or failures.
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Ideally you will have done run-time testing specific to your change,
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and the patch series contains a set of kernel selftest for
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``tools/testing/selftests/net`` or using the KUnit framework.
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You are expected to test your changes on top of the relevant networking
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tree (``net`` or ``net-next``) and not e.g. a stable tree or ``linux-next``.
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patchwork checks
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Checks in patchwork are mostly simple wrappers around existing kernel
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scripts, the sources are available at:
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https://github.com/kuba-moo/nipa/tree/master/tests
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**Do not** post your patches just to run them through the checks.
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You must ensure that your patches are ready by testing them locally
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before posting to the mailing list. The patchwork build bot instance
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gets overloaded very easily and netdev@vger really doesn't need more
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traffic if we can help it.
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netdevsim
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~~~~~~~~~
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``netdevsim`` is a test driver which can be used to exercise driver
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configuration APIs without requiring capable hardware.
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Mock-ups and tests based on ``netdevsim`` are strongly encouraged when
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adding new APIs, but ``netdevsim`` in itself is **not** considered
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a use case/user. You must also implement the new APIs in a real driver.
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We give no guarantees that ``netdevsim`` won't change in the future
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in a way which would break what would normally be considered uAPI.
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``netdevsim`` is reserved for use by upstream tests only, so any
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new ``netdevsim`` features must be accompanied by selftests under
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``tools/testing/selftests/``.
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Testimonials / feedback
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-----------------------
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Some companies use peer feedback in employee performance reviews.
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Please feel free to request feedback from netdev maintainers,
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especially if you spend significant amount of time reviewing code
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and go out of your way to improve shared infrastructure.
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The feedback must be requested by you, the contributor, and will always
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be shared with you (even if you request for it to be submitted to your
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manager).
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