Vladimir Oltean <olte...@gmail.com> writes: > On Mon, Jul 06, 2020 at 09:33:30PM +0300, Sergey Organov wrote:
[...] > >> I'll then make these 2 changes separate in v2 indeed, though I'm not >> aware about Fixes: tag and if I should do something about it. Any clues? >> > > Add these 2 lines to your .gitconfig file: > > [pretty] > fixes = Fixes: %h (\"%s\") > > Then use $(git blame) to find the commit which introduced the bad > behavior. I was able to go down back to this commit, which I then tagged > as follows: > > git show 6605b730c061f67c44113391e5af5125d0672e99 --pretty=fixes > > Then you copy the first line of the generated output to the patch, right > above your Signed-off-by: tag. Like this: > > Fixes: 6605b730c061 ("FEC: Add time stamping code and a PTP hardware clock") > > Note that the offending commit has been obscured, in the meantime, by > refactoring commit ff43da86c69d ("NET: FEC: dynamtic check DMA desc buff > type"). That doesn't mean that the Fixes: tag should point to the newest > commit touching the code though. In case where the refactoring is recent > though (not this case), Greg will send an email that backporting failed, > and you can send him a follow-up with a patch adjusted for each > individual stable tree where adjustments need to be made. You can also > ignore Greg's email, if you don't care about old stable trees. > > In this particular case, the original offending commit and the one > obscuring it were included first in the following kernel tags: > > $(git tag --contains 6605b730c061): v3.8 > $(git tag --contains ff43da86c69d): v3.9 > > But, if you look at https://www.kernel.org/, the oldest stable tree > being actively maintained should be 3.16, so v3.8 vs v3.9 shouldn't make > any difference because nobody will try to apply your fix patch to a tree > older than 3.9 anyway. > > When sending a bugfix patch, there are 2 options: > > - You send the patch to the linux-stable mailing list directly. For > networking fixes, however, David doesn't prefer this. See below. > > - You send the patch to the netdev list (the same list where you sent > this one), but with --subject-prefix "PATCH net" so that it gets > applied to a different tree (this one: > https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/netdev/net.git as > opposed to this one: > https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/netdev/net-next.git). > The "net" tree is periodically merged into "net-next". Because your > patch series will have to be split, there are 2 options: either you > send your bugfix patches first, wait for them to be merged, and then > for "net" to be merged into "net-next", or try somehow to make sure > that the patches for "net" and for "net-next" can be applied in > parallel without interfering and creating merge conflicts. I think you > can do the latter. > > Whatever you do, however, please be sure to copy Richard Cochran to > PTP-related patches, he tends to have a broader picture of the 1588 work > that is being done throughout the kernel, and can provide more > feedback. Thanks a lot for thorough explanations and for finding the offensive commit for me! I'll then start with sending that separate patch as bug-fix with "PATCH net" subject prefix, and then will re-send v2 of the series to net-next (with just "PATCH v2") later, as soon as I collect all the feedback. I expect no merge conflicts indeed. Sounds like a plan! Thanks again, -- Sergey