1 .. _submittingpatches: 2 3 Submitting patches: the essential guide to get 4 ============================================== 5 6 For a person or company who wishes to submit a 7 kernel, the process can sometimes be daunting 8 with "the system." This text is a collection 9 can greatly increase the chances of your chang 10 11 This document contains a large number of sugge 12 format. For detailed information on how the k 13 works, see Documentation/process/development-p 14 Documentation/process/submit-checklist.rst 15 for a list of items to check before submitting 16 For device tree binding patches, read 17 Documentation/devicetree/bindings/submitting-p 18 19 This documentation assumes that you're using ` 20 If you're unfamiliar with ``git``, you would b 21 use it, it will make your life as a kernel dev 22 easier. 23 24 Some subsystems and maintainer trees have addi 25 their workflow and expectations, see 26 :ref:`Documentation/process/maintainer-handboo 27 28 Obtain a current source tree 29 ---------------------------- 30 31 If you do not have a repository with the curre 32 ``git`` to obtain one. You'll want to start w 33 which can be grabbed with:: 34 35 git clone git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux 36 37 Note, however, that you may not want to develo 38 directly. Most subsystem maintainers run thei 39 patches prepared against those trees. See the 40 in the MAINTAINERS file to find that tree, or 41 the tree is not listed there. 42 43 .. _describe_changes: 44 45 Describe your changes 46 --------------------- 47 48 Describe your problem. Whether your patch is 49 5000 lines of a new feature, there must be an 50 motivated you to do this work. Convince the r 51 problem worth fixing and that it makes sense f 52 first paragraph. 53 54 Describe user-visible impact. Straight up cra 55 pretty convincing, but not all bugs are that b 56 problem was spotted during code review, descri 57 it can have on users. Keep in mind that the m 58 installations run kernels from secondary stabl 59 vendor/product-specific trees that cherry-pick 60 from upstream, so include anything that could 61 downstream: provoking circumstances, excerpts 62 descriptions, performance regressions, latency 63 64 Quantify optimizations and trade-offs. If you 65 performance, memory consumption, stack footpri 66 include numbers that back them up. But also d 67 costs. Optimizations usually aren't free but 68 memory, and readability; or, when it comes to 69 different workloads. Describe the expected do 70 optimization so that the reviewer can weigh co 71 72 Once the problem is established, describe what 73 about it in technical detail. It's important 74 in plain English for the reviewer to verify th 75 as you intend it to. 76 77 The maintainer will thank you if you write you 78 form which can be easily pulled into Linux's s 79 system, ``git``, as a "commit log". See :ref: 80 81 Solve only one problem per patch. If your des 82 long, that's a sign that you probably need to 83 See :ref:`split_changes`. 84 85 When you submit or resubmit a patch or patch s 86 complete patch description and justification f 87 say that this is version N of the patch (serie 88 subsystem maintainer to refer back to earlier 89 URLs to find the patch description and put tha 90 I.e., the patch (series) and its description s 91 This benefits both the maintainers and reviewe 92 probably didn't even receive earlier versions 93 94 Describe your changes in imperative mood, e.g. 95 instead of "[This patch] makes xyzzy do frotz" 96 to do frotz", as if you are giving orders to t 97 its behaviour. 98 99 If you want to refer to a specific commit, don 100 SHA-1 ID of the commit. Please also include th 101 the commit, to make it easier for reviewers to 102 Example:: 103 104 Commit e21d2170f36602ae2708 ("video: r 105 platform_set_drvdata()") removed the u 106 platform_set_drvdata(), but left the v 107 delete it. 108 109 You should also be sure to use at least the fi 110 SHA-1 ID. The kernel repository holds a *lot* 111 collisions with shorter IDs a real possibility 112 there is no collision with your six-character 113 change five years from now. 114 115 If related discussions or any other background 116 can be found on the web, add 'Link:' tags poin 117 result of some earlier mailing list discussion 118 web, point to it. 119 120 When linking to mailing list archives, prefera 121 message archiver service. To create the link U 122 ``Message-ID`` header of the message without t 123 For example:: 124 125 Link: https://lore.kernel.org/30th.anniver 126 127 Please check the link to make sure that it is 128 to the relevant message. 129 130 However, try to make your explanation understa 131 resources. In addition to giving a URL to a ma 132 summarize the relevant points of the discussio 133 patch as submitted. 134 135 In case your patch fixes a bug, use the 'Close 136 the report in the mailing list archives or a p 137 138 Closes: https://example.com/issues/123 139 140 Some bug trackers have the ability to close is 141 commit with such a tag is applied. Some bots m 142 also track such tags and take certain actions. 143 invalid URLs are forbidden. 144 145 If your patch fixes a bug in a specific commit 146 ``git bisect``, please use the 'Fixes:' tag wi 147 the SHA-1 ID, and the one line summary. Do no 148 lines, tags are exempt from the "wrap at 75 co 149 parsing scripts. For example:: 150 151 Fixes: 54a4f0239f2e ("KVM: MMU: make k 152 153 The following ``git config`` settings can be u 154 outputting the above style in the ``git log`` 155 156 [core] 157 abbrev = 12 158 [pretty] 159 fixes = Fixes: %h (\"%s\") 160 161 An example call:: 162 163 $ git log -1 --pretty=fixes 54a4f0239f 164 Fixes: 54a4f0239f2e ("KVM: MMU: make k 165 166 .. _split_changes: 167 168 Separate your changes 169 --------------------- 170 171 Separate each **logical change** into a separa 172 173 For example, if your changes include both bug 174 enhancements for a single driver, separate tho 175 or more patches. If your changes include an A 176 driver which uses that new API, separate those 177 178 On the other hand, if you make a single change 179 group those changes into a single patch. Thus 180 is contained within a single patch. 181 182 The point to remember is that each patch shoul 183 change that can be verified by reviewers. Eac 184 on its own merits. 185 186 If one patch depends on another patch in order 187 complete, that is OK. Simply note **"this pat 188 in your patch description. 189 190 When dividing your change into a series of pat 191 ensure that the kernel builds and runs properl 192 series. Developers using ``git bisect`` to tr 193 splitting your patch series at any point; they 194 introduce bugs in the middle. 195 196 If you cannot condense your patch set into a s 197 then only post say 15 or so at a time and wait 198 199 200 201 Style-check your changes 202 ------------------------ 203 204 Check your patch for basic style violations, d 205 found in Documentation/process/coding-style.rs 206 Failure to do so simply wastes 207 the reviewers time and will get your patch rej 208 without even being read. 209 210 One significant exception is when moving code 211 another -- in this case you should not modify 212 the same patch which moves it. This clearly d 213 moving the code and your changes. This greatl 214 actual differences and allows tools to better 215 the code itself. 216 217 Check your patches with the patch style checke 218 (scripts/checkpatch.pl). Note, though, that t 219 viewed as a guide, not as a replacement for hu 220 looks better with a violation then its probabl 221 222 The checker reports at three levels: 223 - ERROR: things that are very likely to be wr 224 - WARNING: things requiring careful review 225 - CHECK: things requiring thought 226 227 You should be able to justify all violations t 228 patch. 229 230 231 Select the recipients for your patch 232 ------------------------------------ 233 234 You should always copy the appropriate subsyst 235 any patch to code that they maintain; look thr 236 source code revision history to see who those 237 scripts/get_maintainer.pl can be very useful a 238 patches as arguments to scripts/get_maintainer 239 maintainer for the subsystem you are working o 240 (akpm@linux-foundation.org) serves as a mainta 241 242 linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org should be used by 243 volume on that list has caused a number of dev 244 do not spam unrelated lists and unrelated peop 245 246 Many kernel-related lists are hosted at kernel 247 of them at https://subspace.kernel.org. There 248 hosted elsewhere as well, though. 249 250 Linus Torvalds is the final arbiter of all cha 251 Linux kernel. His e-mail address is <torvalds@ 252 He gets a lot of e-mail, and, at this point, v 253 Linus directly, so typically you should do you 254 sending him e-mail. 255 256 If you have a patch that fixes an exploitable 257 to security@kernel.org. For severe bugs, a sh 258 to allow distributors to get the patch out to 259 obviously, the patch should not be sent to any 260 Documentation/process/security-bugs.rst. 261 262 Patches that fix a severe bug in a released ke 263 toward the stable maintainers by putting a lin 264 265 Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org 266 267 into the sign-off area of your patch (note, NO 268 should also read Documentation/process/stable- 269 in addition to this document. 270 271 If changes affect userland-kernel interfaces, 272 maintainer (as listed in the MAINTAINERS file) 273 least a notification of the change, so that so 274 into the manual pages. User-space API changes 275 linux-api@vger.kernel.org. 276 277 278 No MIME, no links, no compression, no attachme 279 ---------------------------------------------- 280 281 Linus and other kernel developers need to be a 282 on the changes you are submitting. It is impo 283 developer to be able to "quote" your changes, 284 tools, so that they may comment on specific po 285 286 For this reason, all patches should be submitt 287 easiest way to do this is with ``git send-emai 288 recommended. An interactive tutorial for ``gi 289 https://git-send-email.io. 290 291 If you choose not to use ``git send-email``: 292 293 .. warning:: 294 295 Be wary of your editor's word-wrap corruptin 296 if you choose to cut-n-paste your patch. 297 298 Do not attach the patch as a MIME attachment, 299 Many popular e-mail applications will not alwa 300 attachment as plain text, making it impossible 301 code. A MIME attachment also takes Linus a bi 302 decreasing the likelihood of your MIME-attache 303 304 Exception: If your mailer is mangling patches 305 you to re-send them using MIME. 306 307 See Documentation/process/email-clients.rst fo 308 your e-mail client so that it sends your patch 309 310 Respond to review comments 311 -------------------------- 312 313 Your patch will almost certainly get comments 314 which the patch can be improved, in the form o 315 respond to those comments; ignoring reviewers 316 return. You can simply reply to their emails t 317 comments or questions that do not lead to a co 318 bring about a comment or changelog entry so th 319 understands what is going on. 320 321 Be sure to tell the reviewers what changes you 322 for their time. Code review is a tiring and t 323 reviewers sometimes get grumpy. Even in that 324 politely and address the problems they have po 325 version, add a ``patch changelog`` to the cove 326 explaining difference against previous submiss 327 :ref:`the_canonical_patch_format`). 328 Notify people that commented on your patch abo 329 the patches CC list. 330 331 See Documentation/process/email-clients.rst fo 332 clients and mailing list etiquette. 333 334 .. _interleaved_replies: 335 336 Use trimmed interleaved replies in email discu 337 ---------------------------------------------- 338 Top-posting is strongly discouraged in Linux k 339 discussions. Interleaved (or "inline") replies 340 easier to follow. For more details see: 341 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posting_style#In 342 343 As is frequently quoted on the mailing list:: 344 345 A: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Top_post 346 Q: Were do I find info about this thing call 347 A: Because it messes up the order in which p 348 Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing? 349 A: Top-posting. 350 Q: What is the most annoying thing in e-mail 351 352 Similarly, please trim all unneeded quotations 353 to your reply. This makes responses easier to 354 space. For more details see: http://daringfire 355 356 A: No. 357 Q: Should I include quotations after my repl 358 359 .. _resend_reminders: 360 361 Don't get discouraged - or impatient 362 ------------------------------------ 363 364 After you have submitted your change, be patie 365 busy people and may not get to your patch righ 366 367 Once upon a time, patches used to disappear in 368 but the development process works more smoothl 369 receive comments within a few weeks (typically 370 happen, make sure that you have sent your patc 371 Wait for a minimum of one week before resubmit 372 - possibly longer during busy times like merge 373 374 It's also ok to resend the patch or the patch 375 weeks with the word "RESEND" added to the subj 376 377 [PATCH Vx RESEND] sub/sys: Condensed patch 378 379 Don't add "RESEND" when you are submitting a m 380 patch or patch series - "RESEND" only applies 381 patch or patch series which have not been modi 382 previous submission. 383 384 385 Include PATCH in the subject 386 ----------------------------- 387 388 Due to high e-mail traffic to Linus, and to li 389 convention to prefix your subject line with [P 390 and other kernel developers more easily distin 391 e-mail discussions. 392 393 ``git send-email`` will do this for you automa 394 395 396 Sign your work - the Developer's Certificate o 397 ---------------------------------------------- 398 399 To improve tracking of who did what, especiall 400 percolate to their final resting place in the 401 layers of maintainers, we've introduced a "sig 402 patches that are being emailed around. 403 404 The sign-off is a simple line at the end of th 405 patch, which certifies that you wrote it or ot 406 pass it on as an open-source patch. The rules 407 can certify the below: 408 409 Developer's Certificate of Origin 1.1 410 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 411 412 By making a contribution to this project, I ce 413 414 (a) The contribution was created in wh 415 have the right to submit it under 416 indicated in the file; or 417 418 (b) The contribution is based upon pre 419 of my knowledge, is covered under 420 license and I have the right under 421 work with modifications, whether c 422 by me, under the same open source 423 permitted to submit under a differ 424 in the file; or 425 426 (c) The contribution was provided dire 427 person who certified (a), (b) or ( 428 it. 429 430 (d) I understand and agree that this p 431 are public and that a record of th 432 personal information I submit with 433 maintained indefinitely and may be 434 this project or the open source li 435 436 then you just add a line saying:: 437 438 Signed-off-by: Random J Developer <rand 439 440 using a known identity (sorry, no anonymous co 441 This will be done for you automatically if you 442 Reverts should also include "Signed-off-by". ` 443 for you. 444 445 Some people also put extra tags at the end. T 446 now, but you can do this to mark internal comp 447 point out some special detail about the sign-o 448 449 Any further SoBs (Signed-off-by:'s) following 450 people handling and transporting the patch, bu 451 development. SoB chains should reflect the **r 452 as it was propagated to the maintainers and ul 453 the first SoB entry signalling primary authors 454 455 456 When to use Acked-by:, Cc:, and Co-developed-b 457 ---------------------------------------------- 458 459 The Signed-off-by: tag indicates that the sign 460 development of the patch, or that he/she was i 461 462 If a person was not directly involved in the p 463 patch but wishes to signify and record their a 464 ask to have an Acked-by: line added to the pat 465 466 Acked-by: is often used by the maintainer of t 467 maintainer neither contributed to nor forwarde 468 469 Acked-by: is not as formal as Signed-off-by:. 470 has at least reviewed the patch and has indica 471 mergers will sometimes manually convert an ack 472 into an Acked-by: (but note that it is usually 473 explicit ack). 474 475 Acked-by: does not necessarily indicate acknow 476 For example, if a patch affects multiple subsy 477 one subsystem maintainer then this usually ind 478 the part which affects that maintainer's code. 479 When in doubt people should refer to the origi 480 list archives. 481 482 If a person has had the opportunity to comment 483 provided such comments, you may optionally add 484 This is the only tag which might be added with 485 person it names - but it should indicate that 486 patch. This tag documents that potentially in 487 have been included in the discussion. 488 489 Co-developed-by: states that the patch was co- 490 it is used to give attribution to co-authors ( 491 attributed by the From: tag) when several peop 492 Co-developed-by: denotes authorship, every Co- 493 followed by a Signed-off-by: of the associated 494 procedure applies, i.e. the ordering of Signed 495 chronological history of the patch insofar as 496 the author is attributed via From: or Co-devel 497 Signed-off-by: must always be that of the deve 498 499 Note, the From: tag is optional when the From: 500 email) listed in the From: line of the email h 501 502 Example of a patch submitted by the From: auth 503 504 <changelog> 505 506 Co-developed-by: First Co-Author <first 507 Signed-off-by: First Co-Author <first@c 508 Co-developed-by: Second Co-Author <seco 509 Signed-off-by: Second Co-Author <second 510 Signed-off-by: From Author <from@author 511 512 Example of a patch submitted by a Co-developed 513 514 From: From Author <from@author.example. 515 516 <changelog> 517 518 Co-developed-by: Random Co-Author <rand 519 Signed-off-by: Random Co-Author <random 520 Signed-off-by: From Author <from@author 521 Co-developed-by: Submitting Co-Author < 522 Signed-off-by: Submitting Co-Author <su 523 524 525 Using Reported-by:, Tested-by:, Reviewed-by:, 526 ---------------------------------------------- 527 528 The Reported-by tag gives credit to people who 529 hopefully inspires them to help us again in th 530 bugs; please do not use it to credit feature r 531 followed by a Closes: tag pointing to the repo 532 available on the web. The Link: tag can be use 533 fixes a part of the issue(s) being reported. P 534 reported in private, then ask for permission f 535 tag. 536 537 A Tested-by: tag indicates that the patch has 538 some environment) by the person named. This t 539 some testing has been performed, provides a me 540 future patches, and ensures credit for the tes 541 542 Reviewed-by:, instead, indicates that the patc 543 acceptable according to the Reviewer's Stateme 544 545 Reviewer's statement of oversight 546 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 547 548 By offering my Reviewed-by: tag, I state that: 549 550 (a) I have carried out a technical re 551 evaluate its appropriateness and 552 the mainline kernel. 553 554 (b) Any problems, concerns, or questi 555 have been communicated back to th 556 with the submitter's response to 557 558 (c) While there may be things that co 559 submission, I believe that it is, 560 worthwhile modification to the ke 561 issues which would argue against 562 563 (d) While I have reviewed the patch a 564 do not (unless explicitly stated 565 warranties or guarantees that it 566 purpose or function properly in a 567 568 A Reviewed-by tag is a statement of opinion th 569 appropriate modification of the kernel without 570 technical issues. Any interested reviewer (wh 571 offer a Reviewed-by tag for a patch. This tag 572 reviewers and to inform maintainers of the deg 573 done on the patch. Reviewed-by: tags, when su 574 understand the subject area and to perform tho 575 increase the likelihood of your patch getting 576 577 Both Tested-by and Reviewed-by tags, once rece 578 or reviewer, should be added by author to the 579 next versions. However if the patch has chang 580 version, these tags might not be applicable an 581 Usually removal of someone's Tested-by or Revi 582 in the patch changelog (after the '---' separa 583 584 A Suggested-by: tag indicates that the patch i 585 named and ensures credit to the person for the 586 tag should not be added without the reporter's 587 idea was not posted in a public forum. That sa 588 idea reporters, they will, hopefully, be inspi 589 future. 590 591 A Fixes: tag indicates that the patch fixes an 592 is used to make it easy to determine where a b 593 review a bug fix. This tag also assists the st 594 which stable kernel versions should receive yo 595 method for indicating a bug fixed by the patch 596 for more details. 597 598 Note: Attaching a Fixes: tag does not subvert 599 process nor the requirement to Cc: stable@vger 600 patch candidates. For more information, please 601 Documentation/process/stable-kernel-rules.rst. 602 603 .. _the_canonical_patch_format: 604 605 The canonical patch format 606 -------------------------- 607 608 This section describes how the patch itself sh 609 that, if you have your patches stored in a ``g 610 formatting can be had with ``git format-patch` 611 the necessary text, though, so read the instru 612 613 The canonical patch subject line is:: 614 615 Subject: [PATCH 001/123] subsystem: summar 616 617 The canonical patch message body contains the 618 619 - A ``from`` line specifying the patch autho 620 line (only needed if the person sending th 621 622 - The body of the explanation, line wrapped 623 be copied to the permanent changelog to de 624 625 - An empty line. 626 627 - The ``Signed-off-by:`` lines, described ab 628 also go in the changelog. 629 630 - A marker line containing simply ``---``. 631 632 - Any additional comments not suitable for t 633 634 - The actual patch (``diff`` output). 635 636 The Subject line format makes it very easy to 637 alphabetically by subject line - pretty much a 638 support that - since because the sequence numb 639 the numerical and alphabetic sort is the same. 640 641 The ``subsystem`` in the email's Subject shoul 642 area or subsystem of the kernel is being patch 643 644 The ``summary phrase`` in the email's Subject 645 describe the patch which that email contains. 646 phrase`` should not be a filename. Do not use 647 phrase`` for every patch in a whole patch seri 648 series`` is an ordered sequence of multiple, r 649 650 Bear in mind that the ``summary phrase`` of yo 651 globally-unique identifier for that patch. It 652 into the ``git`` changelog. The ``summary phr 653 developer discussions which refer to the patch 654 google for the ``summary phrase`` to read disc 655 patch. It will also be the only thing that pe 656 when, two or three months later, they are goin 657 thousands of patches using tools such as ``git 658 --oneline``. 659 660 For these reasons, the ``summary`` must be no 661 characters, and it must describe both what the 662 as why the patch might be necessary. It is ch 663 succinct and descriptive, but that is what a w 664 should do. 665 666 The ``summary phrase`` may be prefixed by tags 667 brackets: "Subject: [PATCH <tag>...] <summary 668 not considered part of the summary phrase, but 669 should be treated. Common tags might include 670 the multiple versions of the patch have been s 671 comments (i.e., "v1, v2, v3"), or "RFC" to ind 672 comments. 673 674 If there are four patches in a patch series th 675 be numbered like this: 1/4, 2/4, 3/4, 4/4. Thi 676 understand the order in which the patches shou 677 they have reviewed or applied all of the patch 678 679 Here are some good example Subjects:: 680 681 Subject: [PATCH 2/5] ext2: improve scalabi 682 Subject: [PATCH v2 01/27] x86: fix eflags 683 Subject: [PATCH v2] sub/sys: Condensed pat 684 Subject: [PATCH v2 M/N] sub/sys: Condensed 685 686 The ``from`` line must be the very first line 687 and has the form: 688 689 From: Patch Author <author@example.com> 690 691 The ``from`` line specifies who will be credit 692 patch in the permanent changelog. If the ``fr 693 then the ``From:`` line from the email header 694 the patch author in the changelog. 695 696 The explanation body will be committed to the 697 changelog, so should make sense to a competent 698 forgotten the immediate details of the discuss 699 this patch. Including symptoms of the failure 700 (kernel log messages, oops messages, etc.) are 701 people who might be searching the commit logs 702 patch. The text should be written in such deta 703 weeks, months or even years later, it can give 704 details to grasp the reasoning for **why** the 705 706 If a patch fixes a compile failure, it may not 707 _all_ of the compile failures; just enough tha 708 someone searching for the patch can find it. A 709 phrase``, it is important to be both succinct 710 711 The ``---`` marker line serves the essential p 712 patch handling tools where the changelog messa 713 714 One good use for the additional comments after 715 for a ``diffstat``, to show what files have ch 716 inserted and deleted lines per file. A ``diffs 717 on bigger patches. If you are going to include 718 ``---`` marker, please use ``diffstat`` option 719 filenames are listed from the top of the kerne 720 use too much horizontal space (easily fit in 8 721 indentation). (``git`` generates appropriate d 722 723 Other comments relevant only to the moment or 724 suitable for the permanent changelog, should a 725 example of such comments might be ``patch chan 726 what has changed between the v1 and v2 version 727 728 Please put this information **after** the ``-- 729 the changelog from the rest of the patch. The 730 not part of the changelog which gets committed 731 additional information for the reviewers. If i 732 commit tags, it needs manual interaction to re 733 the separator line, it gets automatically stri 734 patch:: 735 736 <commit message> 737 ... 738 Signed-off-by: Author <author@mail> 739 --- 740 V2 -> V3: Removed redundant helper function 741 V1 -> V2: Cleaned up coding style and addres 742 743 path/to/file | 5+++-- 744 ... 745 746 See more details on the proper patch format in 747 references. 748 749 .. _backtraces: 750 751 Backtraces in commit messages 752 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 753 754 Backtraces help document the call chain leadin 755 not all backtraces are helpful. For example, e 756 unique and obvious. Copying the full dmesg out 757 adds distracting information like timestamps, 758 stack dumps. 759 760 Therefore, the most useful backtraces should d 761 information from the dump, which makes it easi 762 issue. Here is an example of a well-trimmed ba 763 764 unchecked MSR access error: WRMSR to 0xd51 ( 765 at rIP: 0xffffffffae059994 (native_write_msr 766 Call Trace: 767 mba_wrmsr 768 update_domains 769 rdtgroup_mkdir 770 771 .. _explicit_in_reply_to: 772 773 Explicit In-Reply-To headers 774 ---------------------------- 775 776 It can be helpful to manually add In-Reply-To: 777 (e.g., when using ``git send-email``) to assoc 778 previous relevant discussion, e.g. to link a b 779 the bug report. However, for a multi-patch se 780 best to avoid using In-Reply-To: to link to ol 781 series. This way multiple versions of the pat 782 unmanageable forest of references in email cli 783 helpful, you can use the https://lore.kernel.o 784 the cover email text) to link to an earlier ve 785 786 787 Providing base tree information 788 ------------------------------- 789 790 When other developers receive your patches and 791 it is absolutely necessary for them to know wh 792 commit/branch your work applies on, considerin 793 maintainer trees present nowadays. Note again 794 MAINTAINERS file explained above. 795 796 This is even more important for automated CI p 797 run a series of tests in order to establish th 798 submission before the maintainer starts the re 799 800 If you are using ``git format-patch`` to gener 801 automatically include the base tree informatio 802 using the ``--base`` flag. The easiest and mos 803 this option is with topical branches:: 804 805 $ git checkout -t -b my-topical-branch mas 806 Branch 'my-topical-branch' set up to track 807 Switched to a new branch 'my-topical-branc 808 809 [perform your edits and commits] 810 811 $ git format-patch --base=auto --cover-let 812 outgoing/0000-cover-letter.patch 813 outgoing/0001-First-Commit.patch 814 outgoing/... 815 816 When you open ``outgoing/0000-cover-letter.pat 817 notice that it will have the ``base-commit:`` 818 bottom, which provides the reviewer and the CI 819 to properly perform ``git am`` without worryin 820 821 $ git checkout -b patch-review [base-commi 822 Switched to a new branch 'patch-review' 823 $ git am patches.mbox 824 Applying: First Commit 825 Applying: ... 826 827 Please see ``man git-format-patch`` for more i 828 option. 829 830 .. note:: 831 832 The ``--base`` feature was introduced in g 833 834 If you are not using git to format your patche 835 the same ``base-commit`` trailer to indicate t 836 on which your work is based. You should add it 837 letter or in the first patch of the series and 838 either below the ``---`` line or at the very b 839 content, right before your email signature. 840 841 Make sure that base commit is in an official m 842 and not in some internal, accessible only to y 843 would be worthless. 844 845 Tooling 846 ------- 847 848 Many of the technical aspects of this process 849 b4, documented at <https://b4.docs.kernel.org/ 850 help with things like tracking dependencies, r 851 with formatting and sending mails. 852 853 References 854 ---------- 855 856 Andrew Morton, "The perfect patch" (tpp). 857 <https://www.ozlabs.org/~akpm/stuff/tpp.txt> 858 859 Jeff Garzik, "Linux kernel patch submission fo 860 <https://web.archive.org/web/20180829112450/ 861 862 Greg Kroah-Hartman, "How to piss off a kernel 863 <http://www.kroah.com/log/linux/maintainer.h 864 865 <http://www.kroah.com/log/linux/maintainer-0 866 867 <http://www.kroah.com/log/linux/maintainer-0 868 869 <http://www.kroah.com/log/linux/maintainer-0 870 871 <http://www.kroah.com/log/linux/maintainer-0 872 873 <http://www.kroah.com/log/linux/maintainer-0 874 875 Kernel Documentation/process/coding-style.rst 876 877 Linus Torvalds's mail on the canonical patch f 878 <https://lore.kernel.org/r/Pine.LNX.4.58.0504 879 880 Andi Kleen, "On submitting kernel patches" 881 Some strategies to get difficult or controve 882 883 http://halobates.de/on-submitting-patches.pd
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