~ [ source navigation ] ~ [ diff markup ] ~ [ identifier search ] ~

TOMOYO Linux Cross Reference
Linux/Documentation/process/maintainer-tip.rst

Version: ~ [ linux-6.12-rc7 ] ~ [ linux-6.11.7 ] ~ [ linux-6.10.14 ] ~ [ linux-6.9.12 ] ~ [ linux-6.8.12 ] ~ [ linux-6.7.12 ] ~ [ linux-6.6.60 ] ~ [ linux-6.5.13 ] ~ [ linux-6.4.16 ] ~ [ linux-6.3.13 ] ~ [ linux-6.2.16 ] ~ [ linux-6.1.116 ] ~ [ linux-6.0.19 ] ~ [ linux-5.19.17 ] ~ [ linux-5.18.19 ] ~ [ linux-5.17.15 ] ~ [ linux-5.16.20 ] ~ [ linux-5.15.171 ] ~ [ linux-5.14.21 ] ~ [ linux-5.13.19 ] ~ [ linux-5.12.19 ] ~ [ linux-5.11.22 ] ~ [ linux-5.10.229 ] ~ [ linux-5.9.16 ] ~ [ linux-5.8.18 ] ~ [ linux-5.7.19 ] ~ [ linux-5.6.19 ] ~ [ linux-5.5.19 ] ~ [ linux-5.4.285 ] ~ [ linux-5.3.18 ] ~ [ linux-5.2.21 ] ~ [ linux-5.1.21 ] ~ [ linux-5.0.21 ] ~ [ linux-4.20.17 ] ~ [ linux-4.19.323 ] ~ [ linux-4.18.20 ] ~ [ linux-4.17.19 ] ~ [ linux-4.16.18 ] ~ [ linux-4.15.18 ] ~ [ linux-4.14.336 ] ~ [ linux-4.13.16 ] ~ [ linux-4.12.14 ] ~ [ linux-4.11.12 ] ~ [ linux-4.10.17 ] ~ [ linux-4.9.337 ] ~ [ linux-4.4.302 ] ~ [ linux-3.10.108 ] ~ [ linux-2.6.32.71 ] ~ [ linux-2.6.0 ] ~ [ linux-2.4.37.11 ] ~ [ unix-v6-master ] ~ [ ccs-tools-1.8.12 ] ~ [ policy-sample ] ~
Architecture: ~ [ i386 ] ~ [ alpha ] ~ [ m68k ] ~ [ mips ] ~ [ ppc ] ~ [ sparc ] ~ [ sparc64 ] ~

  1 .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
  2 
  3 The tip tree handbook
  4 =====================
  5 
  6 What is the tip tree?
  7 ---------------------
  8 
  9 The tip tree is a collection of several subsystems and areas of
 10 development. The tip tree is both a direct development tree and a
 11 aggregation tree for several sub-maintainer trees. The tip tree gitweb URL
 12 is: https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip.git
 13 
 14 The tip tree contains the following subsystems:
 15 
 16    - **x86 architecture**
 17 
 18      The x86 architecture development takes place in the tip tree except
 19      for the x86 KVM and XEN specific parts which are maintained in the
 20      corresponding subsystems and routed directly to mainline from
 21      there. It's still good practice to Cc the x86 maintainers on
 22      x86-specific KVM and XEN patches.
 23 
 24      Some x86 subsystems have their own maintainers in addition to the
 25      overall x86 maintainers.  Please Cc the overall x86 maintainers on
 26      patches touching files in arch/x86 even when they are not called out
 27      by the MAINTAINER file.
 28 
 29      Note, that ``x86@kernel.org`` is not a mailing list. It is merely a
 30      mail alias which distributes mails to the x86 top-level maintainer
 31      team. Please always Cc the Linux Kernel mailing list (LKML)
 32      ``linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org``, otherwise your mail ends up only in
 33      the private inboxes of the maintainers.
 34 
 35    - **Scheduler**
 36 
 37      Scheduler development takes place in the -tip tree, in the
 38      sched/core branch - with occasional sub-topic trees for
 39      work-in-progress patch-sets.
 40 
 41    - **Locking and atomics**
 42 
 43      Locking development (including atomics and other synchronization
 44      primitives that are connected to locking) takes place in the -tip
 45      tree, in the locking/core branch - with occasional sub-topic trees
 46      for work-in-progress patch-sets.
 47 
 48    - **Generic interrupt subsystem and interrupt chip drivers**:
 49 
 50      - interrupt core development happens in the irq/core branch
 51 
 52      - interrupt chip driver development also happens in the irq/core
 53        branch, but the patches are usually applied in a separate maintainer
 54        tree and then aggregated into irq/core
 55 
 56    - **Time, timers, timekeeping, NOHZ and related chip drivers**:
 57 
 58      - timekeeping, clocksource core, NTP and alarmtimer development
 59        happens in the timers/core branch, but patches are usually applied in
 60        a separate maintainer tree and then aggregated into timers/core
 61 
 62      - clocksource/event driver development happens in the timers/core
 63        branch, but patches are mostly applied in a separate maintainer tree
 64        and then aggregated into timers/core
 65 
 66    - **Performance counters core, architecture support and tooling**:
 67 
 68      - perf core and architecture support development happens in the
 69        perf/core branch
 70 
 71      - perf tooling development happens in the perf tools maintainer
 72        tree and is aggregated into the tip tree.
 73 
 74    - **CPU hotplug core**
 75 
 76    - **RAS core**
 77 
 78      Mostly x86-specific RAS patches are collected in the tip ras/core
 79      branch.
 80 
 81    - **EFI core**
 82 
 83      EFI development in the efi git tree. The collected patches are
 84      aggregated in the tip efi/core branch.
 85 
 86    - **RCU**
 87 
 88      RCU development happens in the linux-rcu tree. The resulting changes
 89      are aggregated into the tip core/rcu branch.
 90 
 91    - **Various core code components**:
 92 
 93        - debugobjects
 94 
 95        - objtool
 96 
 97        - random bits and pieces
 98 
 99 
100 Patch submission notes
101 ----------------------
102 
103 Selecting the tree/branch
104 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
105 
106 In general, development against the head of the tip tree master branch is
107 fine, but for the subsystems which are maintained separately, have their
108 own git tree and are only aggregated into the tip tree, development should
109 take place against the relevant subsystem tree or branch.
110 
111 Bug fixes which target mainline should always be applicable against the
112 mainline kernel tree. Potential conflicts against changes which are already
113 queued in the tip tree are handled by the maintainers.
114 
115 Patch subject
116 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^
117 
118 The tip tree preferred format for patch subject prefixes is
119 'subsys/component:', e.g. 'x86/apic:', 'x86/mm/fault:', 'sched/fair:',
120 'genirq/core:'. Please do not use file names or complete file paths as
121 prefix. 'git log path/to/file' should give you a reasonable hint in most
122 cases.
123 
124 The condensed patch description in the subject line should start with a
125 uppercase letter and should be written in imperative tone.
126 
127 
128 Changelog
129 ^^^^^^^^^
130 
131 The general rules about changelogs in the :ref:`Submitting patches guide
132 <describe_changes>`, apply.
133 
134 The tip tree maintainers set value on following these rules, especially on
135 the request to write changelogs in imperative mood and not impersonating
136 code or the execution of it. This is not just a whim of the
137 maintainers. Changelogs written in abstract words are more precise and
138 tend to be less confusing than those written in the form of novels.
139 
140 It's also useful to structure the changelog into several paragraphs and not
141 lump everything together into a single one. A good structure is to explain
142 the context, the problem and the solution in separate paragraphs and this
143 order.
144 
145 Examples for illustration:
146 
147   Example 1::
148 
149     x86/intel_rdt/mbm: Fix MBM overflow handler during hot cpu
150 
151     When a CPU is dying, we cancel the worker and schedule a new worker on a
152     different CPU on the same domain. But if the timer is already about to
153     expire (say 0.99s) then we essentially double the interval.
154 
155     We modify the hot cpu handling to cancel the delayed work on the dying
156     cpu and run the worker immediately on a different cpu in same domain. We
157     do not flush the worker because the MBM overflow worker reschedules the
158     worker on same CPU and scans the domain->cpu_mask to get the domain
159     pointer.
160 
161   Improved version::
162 
163     x86/intel_rdt/mbm: Fix MBM overflow handler during CPU hotplug
164 
165     When a CPU is dying, the overflow worker is canceled and rescheduled on a
166     different CPU in the same domain. But if the timer is already about to
167     expire this essentially doubles the interval which might result in a non
168     detected overflow.
169 
170     Cancel the overflow worker and reschedule it immediately on a different CPU
171     in the same domain. The work could be flushed as well, but that would
172     reschedule it on the same CPU.
173 
174   Example 2::
175 
176     time: POSIX CPU timers: Ensure that variable is initialized
177 
178     If cpu_timer_sample_group returns -EINVAL, it will not have written into
179     *sample. Checking for cpu_timer_sample_group's return value precludes the
180     potential use of an uninitialized value of now in the following block.
181     Given an invalid clock_idx, the previous code could otherwise overwrite
182     *oldval in an undefined manner. This is now prevented. We also exploit
183     short-circuiting of && to sample the timer only if the result will
184     actually be used to update *oldval.
185 
186   Improved version::
187 
188     posix-cpu-timers: Make set_process_cpu_timer() more robust
189 
190     Because the return value of cpu_timer_sample_group() is not checked,
191     compilers and static checkers can legitimately warn about a potential use
192     of the uninitialized variable 'now'. This is not a runtime issue as all
193     call sites hand in valid clock ids.
194 
195     Also cpu_timer_sample_group() is invoked unconditionally even when the
196     result is not used because *oldval is NULL.
197 
198     Make the invocation conditional and check the return value.
199 
200   Example 3::
201 
202     The entity can also be used for other purposes.
203 
204     Let's rename it to be more generic.
205 
206   Improved version::
207 
208     The entity can also be used for other purposes.
209 
210     Rename it to be more generic.
211 
212 
213 For complex scenarios, especially race conditions and memory ordering
214 issues, it is valuable to depict the scenario with a table which shows
215 the parallelism and the temporal order of events. Here is an example::
216 
217     CPU0                            CPU1
218     free_irq(X)                     interrupt X
219                                     spin_lock(desc->lock)
220                                     wake irq thread()
221                                     spin_unlock(desc->lock)
222     spin_lock(desc->lock)
223     remove action()
224     shutdown_irq()
225     release_resources()             thread_handler()
226     spin_unlock(desc->lock)           access released resources.
227                                       ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
228     synchronize_irq()
229 
230 Lockdep provides similar useful output to depict a possible deadlock
231 scenario::
232 
233     CPU0                                    CPU1
234     rtmutex_lock(&rcu->rt_mutex)
235       spin_lock(&rcu->rt_mutex.wait_lock)
236                                             local_irq_disable()
237                                             spin_lock(&timer->it_lock)
238                                             spin_lock(&rcu->mutex.wait_lock)
239     --> Interrupt
240         spin_lock(&timer->it_lock)
241 
242 
243 Function references in changelogs
244 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
245 
246 When a function is mentioned in the changelog, either the text body or the
247 subject line, please use the format 'function_name()'. Omitting the
248 brackets after the function name can be ambiguous::
249 
250   Subject: subsys/component: Make reservation_count static
251 
252   reservation_count is only used in reservation_stats. Make it static.
253 
254 The variant with brackets is more precise::
255 
256   Subject: subsys/component: Make reservation_count() static
257 
258   reservation_count() is only called from reservation_stats(). Make it
259   static.
260 
261 
262 Backtraces in changelogs
263 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
264 
265 See :ref:`backtraces`.
266 
267 Ordering of commit tags
268 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
269 
270 To have a uniform view of the commit tags, the tip maintainers use the
271 following tag ordering scheme:
272 
273  - Fixes: 12char-SHA1 ("sub/sys: Original subject line")
274 
275    A Fixes tag should be added even for changes which do not need to be
276    backported to stable kernels, i.e. when addressing a recently introduced
277    issue which only affects tip or the current head of mainline. These tags
278    are helpful to identify the original commit and are much more valuable
279    than prominently mentioning the commit which introduced a problem in the
280    text of the changelog itself because they can be automatically
281    extracted.
282 
283    The following example illustrates the difference::
284 
285      Commit
286 
287        abcdef012345678 ("x86/xxx: Replace foo with bar")
288 
289      left an unused instance of variable foo around. Remove it.
290 
291      Signed-off-by: J.Dev <j.dev@mail>
292 
293    Please say instead::
294 
295      The recent replacement of foo with bar left an unused instance of
296      variable foo around. Remove it.
297 
298      Fixes: abcdef012345678 ("x86/xxx: Replace foo with bar")
299      Signed-off-by: J.Dev <j.dev@mail>
300 
301    The latter puts the information about the patch into the focus and
302    amends it with the reference to the commit which introduced the issue
303    rather than putting the focus on the original commit in the first place.
304 
305  - Reported-by: ``Reporter <reporter@mail>``
306 
307  - Closes: ``URL or Message-ID of the bug report this is fixing``
308 
309  - Originally-by: ``Original author <original-author@mail>``
310 
311  - Suggested-by: ``Suggester <suggester@mail>``
312 
313  - Co-developed-by: ``Co-author <co-author@mail>``
314 
315    Signed-off-by: ``Co-author <co-author@mail>``
316 
317    Note, that Co-developed-by and Signed-off-by of the co-author(s) must
318    come in pairs.
319 
320  - Signed-off-by: ``Author <author@mail>``
321 
322    The first Signed-off-by (SOB) after the last Co-developed-by/SOB pair is the
323    author SOB, i.e. the person flagged as author by git.
324 
325  - Signed-off-by: ``Patch handler <handler@mail>``
326 
327    SOBs after the author SOB are from people handling and transporting
328    the patch, but were not involved in development. SOB chains should
329    reflect the **real** route a patch took as it was propagated to us,
330    with the first SOB entry signalling primary authorship of a single
331    author. Acks should be given as Acked-by lines and review approvals
332    as Reviewed-by lines.
333 
334    If the handler made modifications to the patch or the changelog, then
335    this should be mentioned **after** the changelog text and **above**
336    all commit tags in the following format::
337 
338      ... changelog text ends.
339 
340      [ handler: Replaced foo by bar and updated changelog ]
341 
342      First-tag: .....
343 
344    Note the two empty new lines which separate the changelog text and the
345    commit tags from that notice.
346 
347    If a patch is sent to the mailing list by a handler then the author has
348    to be noted in the first line of the changelog with::
349 
350      From: Author <author@mail>
351 
352      Changelog text starts here....
353 
354    so the authorship is preserved. The 'From:' line has to be followed
355    by a empty newline. If that 'From:' line is missing, then the patch
356    would be attributed to the person who sent (transported, handled) it.
357    The 'From:' line is automatically removed when the patch is applied
358    and does not show up in the final git changelog. It merely affects
359    the authorship information of the resulting Git commit.
360 
361  - Tested-by: ``Tester <tester@mail>``
362 
363  - Reviewed-by: ``Reviewer <reviewer@mail>``
364 
365  - Acked-by: ``Acker <acker@mail>``
366 
367  - Cc: ``cc-ed-person <person@mail>``
368 
369    If the patch should be backported to stable, then please add a '``Cc:
370    stable@vger.kernel.org``' tag, but do not Cc stable when sending your
371    mail.
372 
373  - Link: ``https://link/to/information``
374 
375    For referring to an email posted to the kernel mailing lists, please
376    use the lore.kernel.org redirector URL::
377 
378      Link: https://lore.kernel.org/email-message-id@here
379 
380    This URL should be used when referring to relevant mailing list
381    topics, related patch sets, or other notable discussion threads.
382    A convenient way to associate ``Link:`` trailers with the commit
383    message is to use markdown-like bracketed notation, for example::
384 
385      A similar approach was attempted before as part of a different
386      effort [1], but the initial implementation caused too many
387      regressions [2], so it was backed out and reimplemented.
388 
389      Link: https://lore.kernel.org/some-msgid@here # [1]
390      Link: https://bugzilla.example.org/bug/12345  # [2]
391 
392    You can also use ``Link:`` trailers to indicate the origin of the
393    patch when applying it to your git tree. In that case, please use the
394    dedicated ``patch.msgid.link`` domain instead of ``lore.kernel.org``.
395    This practice makes it possible for automated tooling to identify
396    which link to use to retrieve the original patch submission. For
397    example::
398 
399      Link: https://patch.msgid.link/patch-source-message-id@here
400 
401 Please do not use combined tags, e.g. ``Reported-and-tested-by``, as
402 they just complicate automated extraction of tags.
403 
404 
405 Links to documentation
406 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
407 
408 Providing links to documentation in the changelog is a great help to later
409 debugging and analysis.  Unfortunately, URLs often break very quickly
410 because companies restructure their websites frequently.  Non-'volatile'
411 exceptions include the Intel SDM and the AMD APM.
412 
413 Therefore, for 'volatile' documents, please create an entry in the kernel
414 bugzilla https://bugzilla.kernel.org and attach a copy of these documents
415 to the bugzilla entry. Finally, provide the URL of the bugzilla entry in
416 the changelog.
417 
418 Patch resend or reminders
419 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
420 
421 See :ref:`resend_reminders`.
422 
423 Merge window
424 ^^^^^^^^^^^^
425 
426 Please do not expect patches to be reviewed or merged by tip
427 maintainers around or during the merge window.  The trees are closed
428 to all but urgent fixes during this time.  They reopen once the merge
429 window closes and a new -rc1 kernel has been released.
430 
431 Large series should be submitted in mergeable state *at* *least* a week
432 before the merge window opens.  Exceptions are made for bug fixes and
433 *sometimes* for small standalone drivers for new hardware or minimally
434 invasive patches for hardware enablement.
435 
436 During the merge window, the maintainers instead focus on following the
437 upstream changes, fixing merge window fallout, collecting bug fixes, and
438 allowing themselves a breath. Please respect that.
439 
440 So called _urgent_ branches will be merged into mainline during the
441 stabilization phase of each release.
442 
443 
444 Git
445 ^^^
446 
447 The tip maintainers accept git pull requests from maintainers who provide
448 subsystem changes for aggregation in the tip tree.
449 
450 Pull requests for new patch submissions are usually not accepted and do not
451 replace proper patch submission to the mailing list. The main reason for
452 this is that the review workflow is email based.
453 
454 If you submit a larger patch series it is helpful to provide a git branch
455 in a private repository which allows interested people to easily pull the
456 series for testing. The usual way to offer this is a git URL in the cover
457 letter of the patch series.
458 
459 Testing
460 ^^^^^^^
461 
462 Code should be tested before submitting to the tip maintainers.  Anything
463 other than minor changes should be built, booted and tested with
464 comprehensive (and heavyweight) kernel debugging options enabled.
465 
466 These debugging options can be found in kernel/configs/x86_debug.config
467 and can be added to an existing kernel config by running:
468 
469         make x86_debug.config
470 
471 Some of these options are x86-specific and can be left out when testing
472 on other architectures.
473 
474 .. _maintainer-tip-coding-style:
475 
476 Coding style notes
477 ------------------
478 
479 Comment style
480 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^
481 
482 Sentences in comments start with an uppercase letter.
483 
484 Single line comments::
485 
486         /* This is a single line comment */
487 
488 Multi-line comments::
489 
490         /*
491          * This is a properly formatted
492          * multi-line comment.
493          *
494          * Larger multi-line comments should be split into paragraphs.
495          */
496 
497 No tail comments (see below):
498 
499   Please refrain from using tail comments. Tail comments disturb the
500   reading flow in almost all contexts, but especially in code::
501 
502         if (somecondition_is_true) /* Don't put a comment here */
503                 dostuff(); /* Neither here */
504 
505         seed = MAGIC_CONSTANT; /* Nor here */
506 
507   Use freestanding comments instead::
508 
509         /* This condition is not obvious without a comment */
510         if (somecondition_is_true) {
511                 /* This really needs to be documented */
512                 dostuff();
513         }
514 
515         /* This magic initialization needs a comment. Maybe not? */
516         seed = MAGIC_CONSTANT;
517 
518   Use C++ style, tail comments when documenting structs in headers to
519   achieve a more compact layout and better readability::
520 
521         // eax
522         u32     x2apic_shift    :  5, // Number of bits to shift APIC ID right
523                                       // for the topology ID at the next level
524                                 : 27; // Reserved
525         // ebx
526         u32     num_processors  : 16, // Number of processors at current level
527                                 : 16; // Reserved
528 
529   versus::
530 
531         /* eax */
532                 /*
533                  * Number of bits to shift APIC ID right for the topology ID
534                  * at the next level
535                  */
536          u32     x2apic_shift    :  5,
537                  /* Reserved */
538                                  : 27;
539 
540         /* ebx */
541                 /* Number of processors at current level */
542         u32     num_processors  : 16,
543                 /* Reserved */
544                                 : 16;
545 
546 Comment the important things:
547 
548   Comments should be added where the operation is not obvious. Documenting
549   the obvious is just a distraction::
550 
551         /* Decrement refcount and check for zero */
552         if (refcount_dec_and_test(&p->refcnt)) {
553                 do;
554                 lots;
555                 of;
556                 magic;
557                 things;
558         }
559 
560   Instead, comments should explain the non-obvious details and document
561   constraints::
562 
563         if (refcount_dec_and_test(&p->refcnt)) {
564                 /*
565                  * Really good explanation why the magic things below
566                  * need to be done, ordering and locking constraints,
567                  * etc..
568                  */
569                 do;
570                 lots;
571                 of;
572                 magic;
573                 /* Needs to be the last operation because ... */
574                 things;
575         }
576 
577 Function documentation comments:
578 
579   To document functions and their arguments please use kernel-doc format
580   and not free form comments::
581 
582         /**
583          * magic_function - Do lots of magic stuff
584          * @magic:      Pointer to the magic data to operate on
585          * @offset:     Offset in the data array of @magic
586          *
587          * Deep explanation of mysterious things done with @magic along
588          * with documentation of the return values.
589          *
590          * Note, that the argument descriptors above are arranged
591          * in a tabular fashion.
592          */
593 
594   This applies especially to globally visible functions and inline
595   functions in public header files. It might be overkill to use kernel-doc
596   format for every (static) function which needs a tiny explanation. The
597   usage of descriptive function names often replaces these tiny comments.
598   Apply common sense as always.
599 
600 
601 Documenting locking requirements
602 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
603   Documenting locking requirements is a good thing, but comments are not
604   necessarily the best choice. Instead of writing::
605 
606         /* Caller must hold foo->lock */
607         void func(struct foo *foo)
608         {
609                 ...
610         }
611 
612   Please use::
613 
614         void func(struct foo *foo)
615         {
616                 lockdep_assert_held(&foo->lock);
617                 ...
618         }
619 
620   In PROVE_LOCKING kernels, lockdep_assert_held() emits a warning
621   if the caller doesn't hold the lock.  Comments can't do that.
622 
623 Bracket rules
624 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^
625 
626 Brackets should be omitted only if the statement which follows 'if', 'for',
627 'while' etc. is truly a single line::
628 
629         if (foo)
630                 do_something();
631 
632 The following is not considered to be a single line statement even
633 though C does not require brackets::
634 
635         for (i = 0; i < end; i++)
636                 if (foo[i])
637                         do_something(foo[i]);
638 
639 Adding brackets around the outer loop enhances the reading flow::
640 
641         for (i = 0; i < end; i++) {
642                 if (foo[i])
643                         do_something(foo[i]);
644         }
645 
646 
647 Variable declarations
648 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
649 
650 The preferred ordering of variable declarations at the beginning of a
651 function is reverse fir tree order::
652 
653         struct long_struct_name *descriptive_name;
654         unsigned long foo, bar;
655         unsigned int tmp;
656         int ret;
657 
658 The above is faster to parse than the reverse ordering::
659 
660         int ret;
661         unsigned int tmp;
662         unsigned long foo, bar;
663         struct long_struct_name *descriptive_name;
664 
665 And even more so than random ordering::
666 
667         unsigned long foo, bar;
668         int ret;
669         struct long_struct_name *descriptive_name;
670         unsigned int tmp;
671 
672 Also please try to aggregate variables of the same type into a single
673 line. There is no point in wasting screen space::
674 
675         unsigned long a;
676         unsigned long b;
677         unsigned long c;
678         unsigned long d;
679 
680 It's really sufficient to do::
681 
682         unsigned long a, b, c, d;
683 
684 Please also refrain from introducing line splits in variable declarations::
685 
686         struct long_struct_name *descriptive_name = container_of(bar,
687                                                       struct long_struct_name,
688                                                       member);
689         struct foobar foo;
690 
691 It's way better to move the initialization to a separate line after the
692 declarations::
693 
694         struct long_struct_name *descriptive_name;
695         struct foobar foo;
696 
697         descriptive_name = container_of(bar, struct long_struct_name, member);
698 
699 
700 Variable types
701 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
702 
703 Please use the proper u8, u16, u32, u64 types for variables which are meant
704 to describe hardware or are used as arguments for functions which access
705 hardware. These types are clearly defining the bit width and avoid
706 truncation, expansion and 32/64-bit confusion.
707 
708 u64 is also recommended in code which would become ambiguous for 32-bit
709 kernels when 'unsigned long' would be used instead. While in such
710 situations 'unsigned long long' could be used as well, u64 is shorter
711 and also clearly shows that the operation is required to be 64 bits wide
712 independent of the target CPU.
713 
714 Please use 'unsigned int' instead of 'unsigned'.
715 
716 
717 Constants
718 ^^^^^^^^^
719 
720 Please do not use literal (hexa)decimal numbers in code or initializers.
721 Either use proper defines which have descriptive names or consider using
722 an enum.
723 
724 
725 Struct declarations and initializers
726 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
727 
728 Struct declarations should align the struct member names in a tabular
729 fashion::
730 
731         struct bar_order {
732                 unsigned int    guest_id;
733                 int             ordered_item;
734                 struct menu     *menu;
735         };
736 
737 Please avoid documenting struct members within the declaration, because
738 this often results in strangely formatted comments and the struct members
739 become obfuscated::
740 
741         struct bar_order {
742                 unsigned int    guest_id; /* Unique guest id */
743                 int             ordered_item;
744                 /* Pointer to a menu instance which contains all the drinks */
745                 struct menu     *menu;
746         };
747 
748 Instead, please consider using the kernel-doc format in a comment preceding
749 the struct declaration, which is easier to read and has the added advantage
750 of including the information in the kernel documentation, for example, as
751 follows::
752 
753 
754         /**
755          * struct bar_order - Description of a bar order
756          * @guest_id:           Unique guest id
757          * @ordered_item:       The item number from the menu
758          * @menu:               Pointer to the menu from which the item
759          *                      was ordered
760          *
761          * Supplementary information for using the struct.
762          *
763          * Note, that the struct member descriptors above are arranged
764          * in a tabular fashion.
765          */
766         struct bar_order {
767                 unsigned int    guest_id;
768                 int             ordered_item;
769                 struct menu     *menu;
770         };
771 
772 Static struct initializers must use C99 initializers and should also be
773 aligned in a tabular fashion::
774 
775         static struct foo statfoo = {
776                 .a              = 0,
777                 .plain_integer  = CONSTANT_DEFINE_OR_ENUM,
778                 .bar            = &statbar,
779         };
780 
781 Note that while C99 syntax allows the omission of the final comma,
782 we recommend the use of a comma on the last line because it makes
783 reordering and addition of new lines easier, and makes such future
784 patches slightly easier to read as well.
785 
786 Line breaks
787 ^^^^^^^^^^^
788 
789 Restricting line length to 80 characters makes deeply indented code hard to
790 read.  Consider breaking out code into helper functions to avoid excessive
791 line breaking.
792 
793 The 80 character rule is not a strict rule, so please use common sense when
794 breaking lines. Especially format strings should never be broken up.
795 
796 When splitting function declarations or function calls, then please align
797 the first argument in the second line with the first argument in the first
798 line::
799 
800   static int long_function_name(struct foobar *barfoo, unsigned int id,
801                                 unsigned int offset)
802   {
803 
804         if (!id) {
805                 ret = longer_function_name(barfoo, DEFAULT_BARFOO_ID,
806                                            offset);
807         ...
808 
809 Namespaces
810 ^^^^^^^^^^
811 
812 Function/variable namespaces improve readability and allow easy
813 grepping. These namespaces are string prefixes for globally visible
814 function and variable names, including inlines. These prefixes should
815 combine the subsystem and the component name such as 'x86_comp\_',
816 'sched\_', 'irq\_', and 'mutex\_'.
817 
818 This also includes static file scope functions that are immediately put
819 into globally visible driver templates - it's useful for those symbols
820 to carry a good prefix as well, for backtrace readability.
821 
822 Namespace prefixes may be omitted for local static functions and
823 variables. Truly local functions, only called by other local functions,
824 can have shorter descriptive names - our primary concern is greppability
825 and backtrace readability.
826 
827 Please note that 'xxx_vendor\_' and 'vendor_xxx_` prefixes are not
828 helpful for static functions in vendor-specific files. After all, it
829 is already clear that the code is vendor-specific. In addition, vendor
830 names should only be for truly vendor-specific functionality.
831 
832 As always apply common sense and aim for consistency and readability.
833 
834 
835 Commit notifications
836 --------------------
837 
838 The tip tree is monitored by a bot for new commits. The bot sends an email
839 for each new commit to a dedicated mailing list
840 (``linux-tip-commits@vger.kernel.org``) and Cc's all people who are
841 mentioned in one of the commit tags. It uses the email message ID from the
842 Link tag at the end of the tag list to set the In-Reply-To email header so
843 the message is properly threaded with the patch submission email.
844 
845 The tip maintainers and submaintainers try to reply to the submitter
846 when merging a patch, but they sometimes forget or it does not fit the
847 workflow of the moment. While the bot message is purely mechanical, it
848 also implies a 'Thank you! Applied.'.

~ [ source navigation ] ~ [ diff markup ] ~ [ identifier search ] ~

kernel.org | git.kernel.org | LWN.net | Project Home | SVN repository | Mail admin

Linux® is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds in the United States and other countries.
TOMOYO® is a registered trademark of NTT DATA CORPORATION.

sflogo.php