| |
| How to Get Your Change Into the Linux Kernel |
| or |
| Care And Operation Of Your Linus Torvalds |
| |
| |
| |
| For a person or company who wishes to submit a change to the Linux |
| kernel, the process can sometimes be daunting if you're not familiar |
| with "the system." This text is a collection of suggestions which |
| can greatly increase the chances of your change being accepted. |
| |
| This document contains a large number of suggestions in a relatively terse |
| format. For detailed information on how the kernel development process |
| works, see Documentation/development-process. Also, read |
| Documentation/SubmitChecklist for a list of items to check before |
| submitting code. If you are submitting a driver, also read |
| Documentation/SubmittingDrivers; for device tree binding patches, read |
| Documentation/devicetree/bindings/submitting-patches.txt. |
| |
| Many of these steps describe the default behavior of the git version |
| control system; if you use git to prepare your patches, you'll find much |
| of the mechanical work done for you, though you'll still need to prepare |
| and document a sensible set of patches. In general, use of git will make |
| your life as a kernel developer easier. |
| |
| -------------------------------------------- |
| SECTION 1 - CREATING AND SENDING YOUR CHANGE |
| -------------------------------------------- |
| |
| |
| 0) Obtain a current source tree |
| ------------------------------- |
| |
| If you do not have a repository with the current kernel source handy, use |
| git to obtain one. You'll want to start with the mainline repository, |
| which can be grabbed with: |
| |
| git clone git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git |
| |
| Note, however, that you may not want to develop against the mainline tree |
| directly. Most subsystem maintainers run their own trees and want to see |
| patches prepared against those trees. See the "T:" entry for the subsystem |
| in the MAINTAINERS file to find that tree, or simply ask the maintainer if |
| the tree is not listed there. |
| |
| It is still possible to download kernel releases via tarballs (as described |
| in the next section), but that is the hard way to do kernel development. |
| |
| 1) "diff -up" |
| ------------ |
| |
| If you must generate your patches by hand, use "diff -up" or "diff -uprN" |
| to create patches. Git generates patches in this form by default; if |
| you're using git, you can skip this section entirely. |
| |
| All changes to the Linux kernel occur in the form of patches, as |
| generated by diff(1). When creating your patch, make sure to create it |
| in "unified diff" format, as supplied by the '-u' argument to diff(1). |
| Also, please use the '-p' argument which shows which C function each |
| change is in - that makes the resultant diff a lot easier to read. |
| Patches should be based in the root kernel source directory, |
| not in any lower subdirectory. |
| |
| To create a patch for a single file, it is often sufficient to do: |
| |
| SRCTREE= linux |
| MYFILE= drivers/net/mydriver.c |
| |
| cd $SRCTREE |
| cp $MYFILE $MYFILE.orig |
| vi $MYFILE # make your change |
| cd .. |
| diff -up $SRCTREE/$MYFILE{.orig,} > /tmp/patch |
| |
| To create a patch for multiple files, you should unpack a "vanilla", |
| or unmodified kernel source tree, and generate a diff against your |
| own source tree. For example: |
| |
| MYSRC= /devel/linux |
| |
| tar xvfz linux-3.19.tar.gz |
| mv linux-3.19 linux-3.19-vanilla |
| diff -uprN -X linux-3.19-vanilla/Documentation/dontdiff \ |
| linux-3.19-vanilla $MYSRC > /tmp/patch |
| |
| "dontdiff" is a list of files which are generated by the kernel during |
| the build process, and should be ignored in any diff(1)-generated |
| patch. |
| |
| Make sure your patch does not include any extra files which do not |
| belong in a patch submission. Make sure to review your patch -after- |
| generating it with diff(1), to ensure accuracy. |
| |
| If your changes produce a lot of deltas, you need to split them into |
| individual patches which modify things in logical stages; see section |
| #3. This will facilitate review by other kernel developers, |
| very important if you want your patch accepted. |
| |
| If you're using git, "git rebase -i" can help you with this process. If |
| you're not using git, quilt <http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/quilt> |
| is another popular alternative. |
| |
| |
| |
| 2) Describe your changes. |
| ------------------------- |
| |
| Describe your problem. Whether your patch is a one-line bug fix or |
| 5000 lines of a new feature, there must be an underlying problem that |
| motivated you to do this work. Convince the reviewer that there is a |
| problem worth fixing and that it makes sense for them to read past the |
| first paragraph. |
| |
| Describe user-visible impact. Straight up crashes and lockups are |
| pretty convincing, but not all bugs are that blatant. Even if the |
| problem was spotted during code review, describe the impact you think |
| it can have on users. Keep in mind that the majority of Linux |
| installations run kernels from secondary stable trees or |
| vendor/product-specific trees that cherry-pick only specific patches |
| from upstream, so include anything that could help route your change |
| downstream: provoking circumstances, excerpts from dmesg, crash |
| descriptions, performance regressions, latency spikes, lockups, etc. |
| |
| Quantify optimizations and trade-offs. If you claim improvements in |
| performance, memory consumption, stack footprint, or binary size, |
| include numbers that back them up. But also describe non-obvious |
| costs. Optimizations usually aren't free but trade-offs between CPU, |
| memory, and readability; or, when it comes to heuristics, between |
| different workloads. Describe the expected downsides of your |
| optimization so that the reviewer can weigh costs against benefits. |
| |
| Once the problem is established, describe what you are actually doing |
| about it in technical detail. It's important to describe the change |
| in plain English for the reviewer to verify that the code is behaving |
| as you intend it to. |
| |
| The maintainer will thank you if you write your patch description in a |
| form which can be easily pulled into Linux's source code management |
| system, git, as a "commit log". See #15, below. |
| |
| Solve only one problem per patch. If your description starts to get |
| long, that's a sign that you probably need to split up your patch. |
| See #3, next. |
| |
| When you submit or resubmit a patch or patch series, include the |
| complete patch description and justification for it. Don't just |
| say that this is version N of the patch (series). Don't expect the |
| subsystem maintainer to refer back to earlier patch versions or referenced |
| URLs to find the patch description and put that into the patch. |
| I.e., the patch (series) and its description should be self-contained. |
| This benefits both the maintainers and reviewers. Some reviewers |
| probably didn't even receive earlier versions of the patch. |
| |
| Describe your changes in imperative mood, e.g. "make xyzzy do frotz" |
| instead of "[This patch] makes xyzzy do frotz" or "[I] changed xyzzy |
| to do frotz", as if you are giving orders to the codebase to change |
| its behaviour. |
| |
| If the patch fixes a logged bug entry, refer to that bug entry by |
| number and URL. If the patch follows from a mailing list discussion, |
| give a URL to the mailing list archive; use the https://lkml.kernel.org/ |
| redirector with a Message-Id, to ensure that the links cannot become |
| stale. |
| |
| However, try to make your explanation understandable without external |
| resources. In addition to giving a URL to a mailing list archive or |
| bug, summarize the relevant points of the discussion that led to the |
| patch as submitted. |
| |
| If you want to refer to a specific commit, don't just refer to the |
| SHA-1 ID of the commit. Please also include the oneline summary of |
| the commit, to make it easier for reviewers to know what it is about. |
| Example: |
| |
| Commit e21d2170f36602ae2708 ("video: remove unnecessary |
| platform_set_drvdata()") removed the unnecessary |
| platform_set_drvdata(), but left the variable "dev" unused, |
| delete it. |
| |
| You should also be sure to use at least the first twelve characters of the |
| SHA-1 ID. The kernel repository holds a *lot* of objects, making |
| collisions with shorter IDs a real possibility. Bear in mind that, even if |
| there is no collision with your six-character ID now, that condition may |
| change five years from now. |
| |
| If your patch fixes a bug in a specific commit, e.g. you found an issue using |
| git-bisect, please use the 'Fixes:' tag with the first 12 characters of the |
| SHA-1 ID, and the one line summary. For example: |
| |
| Fixes: e21d2170f366 ("video: remove unnecessary platform_set_drvdata()") |
| |
| The following git-config settings can be used to add a pretty format for |
| outputting the above style in the git log or git show commands |
| |
| [core] |
| abbrev = 12 |
| [pretty] |
| fixes = Fixes: %h (\"%s\") |
| |
| 3) Separate your changes. |
| ------------------------- |
| |
| Separate each _logical change_ into a separate patch. |
| |
| For example, if your changes include both bug fixes and performance |
| enhancements for a single driver, separate those changes into two |
| or more patches. If your changes include an API update, and a new |
| driver which uses that new API, separate those into two patches. |
| |
| On the other hand, if you make a single change to numerous files, |
| group those changes into a single patch. Thus a single logical change |
| is contained within a single patch. |
| |
| The point to remember is that each patch should make an easily understood |
| change that can be verified by reviewers. Each patch should be justifiable |
| on its own merits. |
| |
| If one patch depends on another patch in order for a change to be |
| complete, that is OK. Simply note "this patch depends on patch X" |
| in your patch description. |
| |
| When dividing your change into a series of patches, take special care to |
| ensure that the kernel builds and runs properly after each patch in the |
| series. Developers using "git bisect" to track down a problem can end up |
| splitting your patch series at any point; they will not thank you if you |
| introduce bugs in the middle. |
| |
| If you cannot condense your patch set into a smaller set of patches, |
| then only post say 15 or so at a time and wait for review and integration. |
| |
| |
| |
| 4) Style-check your changes. |
| ---------------------------- |
| |
| Check your patch for basic style violations, details of which can be |
| found in Documentation/CodingStyle. Failure to do so simply wastes |
| the reviewers time and will get your patch rejected, probably |
| without even being read. |
| |
| One significant exception is when moving code from one file to |
| another -- in this case you should not modify the moved code at all in |
| the same patch which moves it. This clearly delineates the act of |
| moving the code and your changes. This greatly aids review of the |
| actual differences and allows tools to better track the history of |
| the code itself. |
| |
| Check your patches with the patch style checker prior to submission |
| (scripts/checkpatch.pl). Note, though, that the style checker should be |
| viewed as a guide, not as a replacement for human judgment. If your code |
| looks better with a violation then its probably best left alone. |
| |
| The checker reports at three levels: |
| - ERROR: things that are very likely to be wrong |
| - WARNING: things requiring careful review |
| - CHECK: things requiring thought |
| |
| You should be able to justify all violations that remain in your |
| patch. |
| |
| |
| 5) Select the recipients for your patch. |
| ---------------------------------------- |
| |
| You should always copy the appropriate subsystem maintainer(s) on any patch |
| to code that they maintain; look through the MAINTAINERS file and the |
| source code revision history to see who those maintainers are. The |
| script scripts/get_maintainer.pl can be very useful at this step. If you |
| cannot find a maintainer for the subsystem you are working on, Andrew |
| Morton (akpm@linux-foundation.org) serves as a maintainer of last resort. |
| |
| You should also normally choose at least one mailing list to receive a copy |
| of your patch set. linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org functions as a list of |
| last resort, but the volume on that list has caused a number of developers |
| to tune it out. Look in the MAINTAINERS file for a subsystem-specific |
| list; your patch will probably get more attention there. Please do not |
| spam unrelated lists, though. |
| |
| Many kernel-related lists are hosted on vger.kernel.org; you can find a |
| list of them at http://vger.kernel.org/vger-lists.html. There are |
| kernel-related lists hosted elsewhere as well, though. |
| |
| Do not send more than 15 patches at once to the vger mailing lists!!! |
| |
| Linus Torvalds is the final arbiter of all changes accepted into the |
| Linux kernel. His e-mail address is <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>. |
| He gets a lot of e-mail, and, at this point, very few patches go through |
| Linus directly, so typically you should do your best to -avoid- |
| sending him e-mail. |
| |
| If you have a patch that fixes an exploitable security bug, send that patch |
| to security@kernel.org. For severe bugs, a short embargo may be considered |
| to allow distributors to get the patch out to users; in such cases, |
| obviously, the patch should not be sent to any public lists. |
| |
| Patches that fix a severe bug in a released kernel should be directed |
| toward the stable maintainers by putting a line like this: |
| |
| Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org |
| |
| into the sign-off area of your patch (note, NOT an email recipient). You |
| should also read Documentation/stable_kernel_rules.txt in addition to this |
| file. |
| |
| Note, however, that some subsystem maintainers want to come to their own |
| conclusions on which patches should go to the stable trees. The networking |
| maintainer, in particular, would rather not see individual developers |
| adding lines like the above to their patches. |
| |
| If changes affect userland-kernel interfaces, please send the MAN-PAGES |
| maintainer (as listed in the MAINTAINERS file) a man-pages patch, or at |
| least a notification of the change, so that some information makes its way |
| into the manual pages. User-space API changes should also be copied to |
| linux-api@vger.kernel.org. |
| |
| For small patches you may want to CC the Trivial Patch Monkey |
| trivial@kernel.org which collects "trivial" patches. Have a look |
| into the MAINTAINERS file for its current manager. |
| Trivial patches must qualify for one of the following rules: |
| Spelling fixes in documentation |
| Spelling fixes for errors which could break grep(1) |
| Warning fixes (cluttering with useless warnings is bad) |
| Compilation fixes (only if they are actually correct) |
| Runtime fixes (only if they actually fix things) |
| Removing use of deprecated functions/macros |
| Contact detail and documentation fixes |
| Non-portable code replaced by portable code (even in arch-specific, |
| since people copy, as long as it's trivial) |
| Any fix by the author/maintainer of the file (ie. patch monkey |
| in re-transmission mode) |
| |
| |
| |
| 6) No MIME, no links, no compression, no attachments. Just plain text. |
| ----------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| Linus and other kernel developers need to be able to read and comment |
| on the changes you are submitting. It is important for a kernel |
| developer to be able to "quote" your changes, using standard e-mail |
| tools, so that they may comment on specific portions of your code. |
| |
| For this reason, all patches should be submitted by e-mail "inline". |
| WARNING: Be wary of your editor's word-wrap corrupting your patch, |
| if you choose to cut-n-paste your patch. |
| |
| Do not attach the patch as a MIME attachment, compressed or not. |
| Many popular e-mail applications will not always transmit a MIME |
| attachment as plain text, making it impossible to comment on your |
| code. A MIME attachment also takes Linus a bit more time to process, |
| decreasing the likelihood of your MIME-attached change being accepted. |
| |
| Exception: If your mailer is mangling patches then someone may ask |
| you to re-send them using MIME. |
| |
| See Documentation/email-clients.txt for hints about configuring |
| your e-mail client so that it sends your patches untouched. |
| |
| 7) E-mail size. |
| --------------- |
| |
| Large changes are not appropriate for mailing lists, and some |
| maintainers. If your patch, uncompressed, exceeds 300 kB in size, |
| it is preferred that you store your patch on an Internet-accessible |
| server, and provide instead a URL (link) pointing to your patch. But note |
| that if your patch exceeds 300 kB, it almost certainly needs to be broken up |
| anyway. |
| |
| 8) Respond to review comments. |
| ------------------------------ |
| |
| Your patch will almost certainly get comments from reviewers on ways in |
| which the patch can be improved. You must respond to those comments; |
| ignoring reviewers is a good way to get ignored in return. Review comments |
| or questions that do not lead to a code change should almost certainly |
| bring about a comment or changelog entry so that the next reviewer better |
| understands what is going on. |
| |
| Be sure to tell the reviewers what changes you are making and to thank them |
| for their time. Code review is a tiring and time-consuming process, and |
| reviewers sometimes get grumpy. Even in that case, though, respond |
| politely and address the problems they have pointed out. |
| |
| |
| 9) Don't get discouraged - or impatient. |
| ---------------------------------------- |
| |
| After you have submitted your change, be patient and wait. Reviewers are |
| busy people and may not get to your patch right away. |
| |
| Once upon a time, patches used to disappear into the void without comment, |
| but the development process works more smoothly than that now. You should |
| receive comments within a week or so; if that does not happen, make sure |
| that you have sent your patches to the right place. Wait for a minimum of |
| one week before resubmitting or pinging reviewers - possibly longer during |
| busy times like merge windows. |
| |
| |
| 10) Include PATCH in the subject |
| -------------------------------- |
| |
| Due to high e-mail traffic to Linus, and to linux-kernel, it is common |
| convention to prefix your subject line with [PATCH]. This lets Linus |
| and other kernel developers more easily distinguish patches from other |
| e-mail discussions. |
| |
| |
| |
| 11) Sign your work |
| ------------------ |
| |
| To improve tracking of who did what, especially with patches that can |
| percolate to their final resting place in the kernel through several |
| layers of maintainers, we've introduced a "sign-off" procedure on |
| patches that are being emailed around. |
| |
| The sign-off is a simple line at the end of the explanation for the |
| patch, which certifies that you wrote it or otherwise have the right to |
| pass it on as an open-source patch. The rules are pretty simple: if you |
| can certify the below: |
| |
| Developer's Certificate of Origin 1.1 |
| |
| By making a contribution to this project, I certify that: |
| |
| (a) The contribution was created in whole or in part by me and I |
| have the right to submit it under the open source license |
| indicated in the file; or |
| |
| (b) The contribution is based upon previous work that, to the best |
| of my knowledge, is covered under an appropriate open source |
| license and I have the right under that license to submit that |
| work with modifications, whether created in whole or in part |
| by me, under the same open source license (unless I am |
| permitted to submit under a different license), as indicated |
| in the file; or |
| |
| (c) The contribution was provided directly to me by some other |
| person who certified (a), (b) or (c) and I have not modified |
| it. |
| |
| (d) I understand and agree that this project and the contribution |
| are public and that a record of the contribution (including all |
| personal information I submit with it, including my sign-off) is |
| maintained indefinitely and may be redistributed consistent with |
| this project or the open source license(s) involved. |
| |
| then you just add a line saying |
| |
| Signed-off-by: Random J Developer <random@developer.example.org> |
| |
| using your real name (sorry, no pseudonyms or anonymous contributions.) |
| |
| Some people also put extra tags at the end. They'll just be ignored for |
| now, but you can do this to mark internal company procedures or just |
| point out some special detail about the sign-off. |
| |
| If you are a subsystem or branch maintainer, sometimes you need to slightly |
| modify patches you receive in order to merge them, because the code is not |
| exactly the same in your tree and the submitters'. If you stick strictly to |
| rule (c), you should ask the submitter to rediff, but this is a totally |
| counter-productive waste of time and energy. Rule (b) allows you to adjust |
| the code, but then it is very impolite to change one submitter's code and |
| make him endorse your bugs. To solve this problem, it is recommended that |
| you add a line between the last Signed-off-by header and yours, indicating |
| the nature of your changes. While there is nothing mandatory about this, it |
| seems like prepending the description with your mail and/or name, all |
| enclosed in square brackets, is noticeable enough to make it obvious that |
| you are responsible for last-minute changes. Example : |
| |
| Signed-off-by: Random J Developer <random@developer.example.org> |
| [lucky@maintainer.example.org: struct foo moved from foo.c to foo.h] |
| Signed-off-by: Lucky K Maintainer <lucky@maintainer.example.org> |
| |
| This practice is particularly helpful if you maintain a stable branch and |
| want at the same time to credit the author, track changes, merge the fix, |
| and protect the submitter from complaints. Note that under no circumstances |
| can you change the author's identity (the From header), as it is the one |
| which appears in the changelog. |
| |
| Special note to back-porters: It seems to be a common and useful practice |
| to insert an indication of the origin of a patch at the top of the commit |
| message (just after the subject line) to facilitate tracking. For instance, |
| here's what we see in a 3.x-stable release: |
| |
| Date: Tue Oct 7 07:26:38 2014 -0400 |
| |
| libata: Un-break ATA blacklist |
| |
| commit 1c40279960bcd7d52dbdf1d466b20d24b99176c8 upstream. |
| |
| And here's what might appear in an older kernel once a patch is backported: |
| |
| Date: Tue May 13 22:12:27 2008 +0200 |
| |
| wireless, airo: waitbusy() won't delay |
| |
| [backport of 2.6 commit b7acbdfbd1f277c1eb23f344f899cfa4cd0bf36a] |
| |
| Whatever the format, this information provides a valuable help to people |
| tracking your trees, and to people trying to troubleshoot bugs in your |
| tree. |
| |
| |
| 12) When to use Acked-by: and Cc: |
| --------------------------------- |
| |
| The Signed-off-by: tag indicates that the signer was involved in the |
| development of the patch, or that he/she was in the patch's delivery path. |
| |
| If a person was not directly involved in the preparation or handling of a |
| patch but wishes to signify and record their approval of it then they can |
| ask to have an Acked-by: line added to the patch's changelog. |
| |
| Acked-by: is often used by the maintainer of the affected code when that |
| maintainer neither contributed to nor forwarded the patch. |
| |
| Acked-by: is not as formal as Signed-off-by:. It is a record that the acker |
| has at least reviewed the patch and has indicated acceptance. Hence patch |
| mergers will sometimes manually convert an acker's "yep, looks good to me" |
| into an Acked-by: (but note that it is usually better to ask for an |
| explicit ack). |
| |
| Acked-by: does not necessarily indicate acknowledgement of the entire patch. |
| For example, if a patch affects multiple subsystems and has an Acked-by: from |
| one subsystem maintainer then this usually indicates acknowledgement of just |
| the part which affects that maintainer's code. Judgement should be used here. |
| When in doubt people should refer to the original discussion in the mailing |
| list archives. |
| |
| If a person has had the opportunity to comment on a patch, but has not |
| provided such comments, you may optionally add a "Cc:" tag to the patch. |
| This is the only tag which might be added without an explicit action by the |
| person it names - but it should indicate that this person was copied on the |
| patch. This tag documents that potentially interested parties |
| have been included in the discussion. |
| |
| |
| 13) Using Reported-by:, Tested-by:, Reviewed-by:, Suggested-by: and Fixes: |
| -------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| The Reported-by tag gives credit to people who find bugs and report them and it |
| hopefully inspires them to help us again in the future. Please note that if |
| the bug was reported in private, then ask for permission first before using the |
| Reported-by tag. |
| |
| A Tested-by: tag indicates that the patch has been successfully tested (in |
| some environment) by the person named. This tag informs maintainers that |
| some testing has been performed, provides a means to locate testers for |
| future patches, and ensures credit for the testers. |
| |
| Reviewed-by:, instead, indicates that the patch has been reviewed and found |
| acceptable according to the Reviewer's Statement: |
| |
| Reviewer's statement of oversight |
| |
| By offering my Reviewed-by: tag, I state that: |
| |
| (a) I have carried out a technical review of this patch to |
| evaluate its appropriateness and readiness for inclusion into |
| the mainline kernel. |
| |
| (b) Any problems, concerns, or questions relating to the patch |
| have been communicated back to the submitter. I am satisfied |
| with the submitter's response to my comments. |
| |
| (c) While there may be things that could be improved with this |
| submission, I believe that it is, at this time, (1) a |
| worthwhile modification to the kernel, and (2) free of known |
| issues which would argue against its inclusion. |
| |
| (d) While I have reviewed the patch and believe it to be sound, I |
| do not (unless explicitly stated elsewhere) make any |
| warranties or guarantees that it will achieve its stated |
| purpose or function properly in any given situation. |
| |
| A Reviewed-by tag is a statement of opinion that the patch is an |
| appropriate modification of the kernel without any remaining serious |
| technical issues. Any interested reviewer (who has done the work) can |
| offer a Reviewed-by tag for a patch. This tag serves to give credit to |
| reviewers and to inform maintainers of the degree of review which has been |
| done on the patch. Reviewed-by: tags, when supplied by reviewers known to |
| understand the subject area and to perform thorough reviews, will normally |
| increase the likelihood of your patch getting into the kernel. |
| |
| A Suggested-by: tag indicates that the patch idea is suggested by the person |
| named and ensures credit to the person for the idea. Please note that this |
| tag should not be added without the reporter's permission, especially if the |
| idea was not posted in a public forum. That said, if we diligently credit our |
| idea reporters, they will, hopefully, be inspired to help us again in the |
| future. |
| |
| A Fixes: tag indicates that the patch fixes an issue in a previous commit. It |
| is used to make it easy to determine where a bug originated, which can help |
| review a bug fix. This tag also assists the stable kernel team in determining |
| which stable kernel versions should receive your fix. This is the preferred |
| method for indicating a bug fixed by the patch. See #2 above for more details. |
| |
| |
| 14) The canonical patch format |
| ------------------------------ |
| |
| This section describes how the patch itself should be formatted. Note |
| that, if you have your patches stored in a git repository, proper patch |
| formatting can be had with "git format-patch". The tools cannot create |
| the necessary text, though, so read the instructions below anyway. |
| |
| The canonical patch subject line is: |
| |
| Subject: [PATCH 001/123] subsystem: summary phrase |
| |
| The canonical patch message body contains the following: |
| |
| - A "from" line specifying the patch author (only needed if the person |
| sending the patch is not the author). |
| |
| - An empty line. |
| |
| - The body of the explanation, line wrapped at 75 columns, which will |
| be copied to the permanent changelog to describe this patch. |
| |
| - The "Signed-off-by:" lines, described above, which will |
| also go in the changelog. |
| |
| - A marker line containing simply "---". |
| |
| - Any additional comments not suitable for the changelog. |
| |
| - The actual patch (diff output). |
| |
| The Subject line format makes it very easy to sort the emails |
| alphabetically by subject line - pretty much any email reader will |
| support that - since because the sequence number is zero-padded, |
| the numerical and alphabetic sort is the same. |
| |
| The "subsystem" in the email's Subject should identify which |
| area or subsystem of the kernel is being patched. |
| |
| The "summary phrase" in the email's Subject should concisely |
| describe the patch which that email contains. The "summary |
| phrase" should not be a filename. Do not use the same "summary |
| phrase" for every patch in a whole patch series (where a "patch |
| series" is an ordered sequence of multiple, related patches). |
| |
| Bear in mind that the "summary phrase" of your email becomes a |
| globally-unique identifier for that patch. It propagates all the way |
| into the git changelog. The "summary phrase" may later be used in |
| developer discussions which refer to the patch. People will want to |
| google for the "summary phrase" to read discussion regarding that |
| patch. It will also be the only thing that people may quickly see |
| when, two or three months later, they are going through perhaps |
| thousands of patches using tools such as "gitk" or "git log |
| --oneline". |
| |
| For these reasons, the "summary" must be no more than 70-75 |
| characters, and it must describe both what the patch changes, as well |
| as why the patch might be necessary. It is challenging to be both |
| succinct and descriptive, but that is what a well-written summary |
| should do. |
| |
| The "summary phrase" may be prefixed by tags enclosed in square |
| brackets: "Subject: [PATCH <tag>...] <summary phrase>". The tags are |
| not considered part of the summary phrase, but describe how the patch |
| should be treated. Common tags might include a version descriptor if |
| the multiple versions of the patch have been sent out in response to |
| comments (i.e., "v1, v2, v3"), or "RFC" to indicate a request for |
| comments. If there are four patches in a patch series the individual |
| patches may be numbered like this: 1/4, 2/4, 3/4, 4/4. This assures |
| that developers understand the order in which the patches should be |
| applied and that they have reviewed or applied all of the patches in |
| the patch series. |
| |
| A couple of example Subjects: |
| |
| Subject: [PATCH 2/5] ext2: improve scalability of bitmap searching |
| Subject: [PATCH v2 01/27] x86: fix eflags tracking |
| |
| The "from" line must be the very first line in the message body, |
| and has the form: |
| |
| From: Original Author <author@example.com> |
| |
| The "from" line specifies who will be credited as the author of the |
| patch in the permanent changelog. If the "from" line is missing, |
| then the "From:" line from the email header will be used to determine |
| the patch author in the changelog. |
| |
| The explanation body will be committed to the permanent source |
| changelog, so should make sense to a competent reader who has long |
| since forgotten the immediate details of the discussion that might |
| have led to this patch. Including symptoms of the failure which the |
| patch addresses (kernel log messages, oops messages, etc.) is |
| especially useful for people who might be searching the commit logs |
| looking for the applicable patch. If a patch fixes a compile failure, |
| it may not be necessary to include _all_ of the compile failures; just |
| enough that it is likely that someone searching for the patch can find |
| it. As in the "summary phrase", it is important to be both succinct as |
| well as descriptive. |
| |
| The "---" marker line serves the essential purpose of marking for patch |
| handling tools where the changelog message ends. |
| |
| One good use for the additional comments after the "---" marker is for |
| a diffstat, to show what files have changed, and the number of |
| inserted and deleted lines per file. A diffstat is especially useful |
| on bigger patches. Other comments relevant only to the moment or the |
| maintainer, not suitable for the permanent changelog, should also go |
| here. A good example of such comments might be "patch changelogs" |
| which describe what has changed between the v1 and v2 version of the |
| patch. |
| |
| If you are going to include a diffstat after the "---" marker, please |
| use diffstat options "-p 1 -w 70" so that filenames are listed from |
| the top of the kernel source tree and don't use too much horizontal |
| space (easily fit in 80 columns, maybe with some indentation). (git |
| generates appropriate diffstats by default.) |
| |
| See more details on the proper patch format in the following |
| references. |
| |
| |
| 15) Sending "git pull" requests |
| ------------------------------- |
| |
| If you have a series of patches, it may be most convenient to have the |
| maintainer pull them directly into the subsystem repository with a |
| "git pull" operation. Note, however, that pulling patches from a developer |
| requires a higher degree of trust than taking patches from a mailing list. |
| As a result, many subsystem maintainers are reluctant to take pull |
| requests, especially from new, unknown developers. If in doubt you can use |
| the pull request as the cover letter for a normal posting of the patch |
| series, giving the maintainer the option of using either. |
| |
| A pull request should have [GIT] or [PULL] in the subject line. The |
| request itself should include the repository name and the branch of |
| interest on a single line; it should look something like: |
| |
| Please pull from |
| |
| git://jdelvare.pck.nerim.net/jdelvare-2.6 i2c-for-linus |
| |
| to get these changes: |
| |
| A pull request should also include an overall message saying what will be |
| included in the request, a "git shortlog" listing of the patches |
| themselves, and a diffstat showing the overall effect of the patch series. |
| The easiest way to get all this information together is, of course, to let |
| git do it for you with the "git request-pull" command. |
| |
| Some maintainers (including Linus) want to see pull requests from signed |
| commits; that increases their confidence that the request actually came |
| from you. Linus, in particular, will not pull from public hosting sites |
| like GitHub in the absence of a signed tag. |
| |
| The first step toward creating such tags is to make a GNUPG key and get it |
| signed by one or more core kernel developers. This step can be hard for |
| new developers, but there is no way around it. Attending conferences can |
| be a good way to find developers who can sign your key. |
| |
| Once you have prepared a patch series in git that you wish to have somebody |
| pull, create a signed tag with "git tag -s". This will create a new tag |
| identifying the last commit in the series and containing a signature |
| created with your private key. You will also have the opportunity to add a |
| changelog-style message to the tag; this is an ideal place to describe the |
| effects of the pull request as a whole. |
| |
| If the tree the maintainer will be pulling from is not the repository you |
| are working from, don't forget to push the signed tag explicitly to the |
| public tree. |
| |
| When generating your pull request, use the signed tag as the target. A |
| command like this will do the trick: |
| |
| git request-pull master git://my.public.tree/linux.git my-signed-tag |
| |
| |
| ---------------------- |
| SECTION 2 - REFERENCES |
| ---------------------- |
| |
| Andrew Morton, "The perfect patch" (tpp). |
| <http://www.ozlabs.org/~akpm/stuff/tpp.txt> |
| |
| Jeff Garzik, "Linux kernel patch submission format". |
| <http://linux.yyz.us/patch-format.html> |
| |
| Greg Kroah-Hartman, "How to piss off a kernel subsystem maintainer". |
| <http://www.kroah.com/log/linux/maintainer.html> |
| <http://www.kroah.com/log/linux/maintainer-02.html> |
| <http://www.kroah.com/log/linux/maintainer-03.html> |
| <http://www.kroah.com/log/linux/maintainer-04.html> |
| <http://www.kroah.com/log/linux/maintainer-05.html> |
| <http://www.kroah.com/log/linux/maintainer-06.html> |
| |
| NO!!!! No more huge patch bombs to linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org people! |
| <https://lkml.org/lkml/2005/7/11/336> |
| |
| Kernel Documentation/CodingStyle: |
| <Documentation/CodingStyle> |
| |
| Linus Torvalds's mail on the canonical patch format: |
| <http://lkml.org/lkml/2005/4/7/183> |
| |
| Andi Kleen, "On submitting kernel patches" |
| Some strategies to get difficult or controversial changes in. |
| http://halobates.de/on-submitting-patches.pdf |
| |
| -- |