Hi Greg,

Nice try, but please read the file I pointed you at and resend it with
the needed information...


I've read through that file, but am having trouble seeing what the problem is. Here's what I've checked:

 - It must be obviously correct and tested.

>  - It cannot be bigger than 100 lines, with context.

 - It must fix only one thing.


Check.

 - It must fix a real bug that bothers people (not a, "This could be a
   problem..." type thing).


Yep, we've seen this in the wild, as mentioned in the second changelog.

 - It must fix a problem that causes a build error (but not for things
   marked CONFIG_BROKEN), an oops, a hang, data corruption, a real
   security issue, or some "oh, that's not good" issue.  In short, something
   critical.


It's a hang on boot.

 - New device IDs and quirks are also accepted.

 - No "theoretical race condition" issues, unless an explanation of how the
   race can be exploited is also provided.


Nope, neither of these.

 - It cannot contain any "trivial" fixes in it (spelling changes,
   whitespace cleanups, etc).


Just the addition of a NULL check, as required to fix the issue.

 - It must follow the Documentation/SubmittingPatches rules.


I believe it's all ok here...

 - It or an equivalent fix must already exist in Linus' tree (upstream).

Yep, 78c5c68a.

And as for the process:

 - Send the patch, after verifying that it follows the above rules, to
   [email protected].  You must note the upstream commit ID in the
   changelog of your submission.


Done, upstream commit is there.

 - To have the patch automatically included in the stable tree, add the tag
     Cc: [email protected]
   in the sign-off area. Once the patch is merged it will be applied to
   the stable tree without anything else needing to be done by the author
   or subsystem maintainer.
 - If the patch requires other patches as prerequisites which can be
   cherry-picked than this can be specified in the following format in
   the sign-off area:

     Cc: <[email protected]> # .32.x: a1f84a3: sched: Check for idle
     Cc: <[email protected]> # .32.x: 1b9508f: sched: Rate-limit newidle
     Cc: <[email protected]> # .32.x: fd21073: sched: Fix affinity logic
     Cc: <[email protected]> # .32.x
    Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <[email protected]>

   The tag sequence has the meaning of:
     git cherry-pick a1f84a3
     git cherry-pick 1b9508f
     git cherry-pick fd21073
     git cherry-pick <this commit>



This isn't a mainline submission for automatic inclusion in stable, so this doesn't apply.

 - The sender will receive an ACK when the patch has been accepted into the
   queue, or a NAK if the patch is rejected.  This response might take a few
   days, according to the developer's schedules.
 - If accepted, the patch will be added to the -stable queue, for review by
   other developers and by the relevant subsystem maintainer.
 - Security patches should not be sent to this alias, but instead to the
   documented [email protected] address.

.. and these bits are about process.

Or have I missed something? I'm about to have a brown-paper-bag moment, right? :)

Cheers,


Jeremy


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