| .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 |
| |
| The tip tree handbook |
| ===================== |
| |
| What is the tip tree? |
| --------------------- |
| |
| The tip tree is a collection of several subsystems and areas of |
| development. The tip tree is both a direct development tree and a |
| aggregation tree for several sub-maintainer trees. The tip tree gitweb URL |
| is: https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip.git |
| |
| The tip tree contains the following subsystems: |
| |
| - **x86 architecture** |
| |
| The x86 architecture development takes place in the tip tree except |
| for the x86 KVM and XEN specific parts which are maintained in the |
| corresponding subsystems and routed directly to mainline from |
| there. It's still good practice to Cc the x86 maintainers on |
| x86-specific KVM and XEN patches. |
| |
| Some x86 subsystems have their own maintainers in addition to the |
| overall x86 maintainers. Please Cc the overall x86 maintainers on |
| patches touching files in arch/x86 even when they are not called out |
| by the MAINTAINER file. |
| |
| Note, that ``x86@kernel.org`` is not a mailing list. It is merely a |
| mail alias which distributes mails to the x86 top-level maintainer |
| team. Please always Cc the Linux Kernel mailing list (LKML) |
| ``linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org``, otherwise your mail ends up only in |
| the private inboxes of the maintainers. |
| |
| - **Scheduler** |
| |
| Scheduler development takes place in the -tip tree, in the |
| sched/core branch - with occasional sub-topic trees for |
| work-in-progress patch-sets. |
| |
| - **Locking and atomics** |
| |
| Locking development (including atomics and other synchronization |
| primitives that are connected to locking) takes place in the -tip |
| tree, in the locking/core branch - with occasional sub-topic trees |
| for work-in-progress patch-sets. |
| |
| - **Generic interrupt subsystem and interrupt chip drivers**: |
| |
| - interrupt core development happens in the irq/core branch |
| |
| - interrupt chip driver development also happens in the irq/core |
| branch, but the patches are usually applied in a separate maintainer |
| tree and then aggregated into irq/core |
| |
| - **Time, timers, timekeeping, NOHZ and related chip drivers**: |
| |
| - timekeeping, clocksource core, NTP and alarmtimer development |
| happens in the timers/core branch, but patches are usually applied in |
| a separate maintainer tree and then aggregated into timers/core |
| |
| - clocksource/event driver development happens in the timers/core |
| branch, but patches are mostly applied in a separate maintainer tree |
| and then aggregated into timers/core |
| |
| - **Performance counters core, architecture support and tooling**: |
| |
| - perf core and architecture support development happens in the |
| perf/core branch |
| |
| - perf tooling development happens in the perf tools maintainer |
| tree and is aggregated into the tip tree. |
| |
| - **CPU hotplug core** |
| |
| - **RAS core** |
| |
| Mostly x86-specific RAS patches are collected in the tip ras/core |
| branch. |
| |
| - **EFI core** |
| |
| EFI development in the efi git tree. The collected patches are |
| aggregated in the tip efi/core branch. |
| |
| - **RCU** |
| |
| RCU development happens in the linux-rcu tree. The resulting changes |
| are aggregated into the tip core/rcu branch. |
| |
| - **Various core code components**: |
| |
| - debugobjects |
| |
| - objtool |
| |
| - random bits and pieces |
| |
| |
| Patch submission notes |
| ---------------------- |
| |
| Selecting the tree/branch |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| In general, development against the head of the tip tree master branch is |
| fine, but for the subsystems which are maintained separately, have their |
| own git tree and are only aggregated into the tip tree, development should |
| take place against the relevant subsystem tree or branch. |
| |
| Bug fixes which target mainline should always be applicable against the |
| mainline kernel tree. Potential conflicts against changes which are already |
| queued in the tip tree are handled by the maintainers. |
| |
| Patch subject |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| The tip tree preferred format for patch subject prefixes is |
| 'subsys/component:', e.g. 'x86/apic:', 'x86/mm/fault:', 'sched/fair:', |
| 'genirq/core:'. Please do not use file names or complete file paths as |
| prefix. 'git log path/to/file' should give you a reasonable hint in most |
| cases. |
| |
| The condensed patch description in the subject line should start with a |
| uppercase letter and should be written in imperative tone. |
| |
| |
| Changelog |
| ^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| The general rules about changelogs in the :ref:`Submitting patches guide |
| <describe_changes>`, apply. |
| |
| The tip tree maintainers set value on following these rules, especially on |
| the request to write changelogs in imperative mood and not impersonating |
| code or the execution of it. This is not just a whim of the |
| maintainers. Changelogs written in abstract words are more precise and |
| tend to be less confusing than those written in the form of novels. |
| |
| It's also useful to structure the changelog into several paragraphs and not |
| lump everything together into a single one. A good structure is to explain |
| the context, the problem and the solution in separate paragraphs and this |
| order. |
| |
| Examples for illustration: |
| |
| Example 1:: |
| |
| x86/intel_rdt/mbm: Fix MBM overflow handler during hot cpu |
| |
| When a CPU is dying, we cancel the worker and schedule a new worker on a |
| different CPU on the same domain. But if the timer is already about to |
| expire (say 0.99s) then we essentially double the interval. |
| |
| We modify the hot cpu handling to cancel the delayed work on the dying |
| cpu and run the worker immediately on a different cpu in same domain. We |
| donot flush the worker because the MBM overflow worker reschedules the |
| worker on same CPU and scans the domain->cpu_mask to get the domain |
| pointer. |
| |
| Improved version:: |
| |
| x86/intel_rdt/mbm: Fix MBM overflow handler during CPU hotplug |
| |
| When a CPU is dying, the overflow worker is canceled and rescheduled on a |
| different CPU in the same domain. But if the timer is already about to |
| expire this essentially doubles the interval which might result in a non |
| detected overflow. |
| |
| Cancel the overflow worker and reschedule it immediately on a different CPU |
| in the same domain. The work could be flushed as well, but that would |
| reschedule it on the same CPU. |
| |
| Example 2:: |
| |
| time: POSIX CPU timers: Ensure that variable is initialized |
| |
| If cpu_timer_sample_group returns -EINVAL, it will not have written into |
| *sample. Checking for cpu_timer_sample_group's return value precludes the |
| potential use of an uninitialized value of now in the following block. |
| Given an invalid clock_idx, the previous code could otherwise overwrite |
| *oldval in an undefined manner. This is now prevented. We also exploit |
| short-circuiting of && to sample the timer only if the result will |
| actually be used to update *oldval. |
| |
| Improved version:: |
| |
| posix-cpu-timers: Make set_process_cpu_timer() more robust |
| |
| Because the return value of cpu_timer_sample_group() is not checked, |
| compilers and static checkers can legitimately warn about a potential use |
| of the uninitialized variable 'now'. This is not a runtime issue as all |
| call sites hand in valid clock ids. |
| |
| Also cpu_timer_sample_group() is invoked unconditionally even when the |
| result is not used because *oldval is NULL. |
| |
| Make the invocation conditional and check the return value. |
| |
| Example 3:: |
| |
| The entity can also be used for other purposes. |
| |
| Let's rename it to be more generic. |
| |
| Improved version:: |
| |
| The entity can also be used for other purposes. |
| |
| Rename it to be more generic. |
| |
| |
| For complex scenarios, especially race conditions and memory ordering |
| issues, it is valuable to depict the scenario with a table which shows |
| the parallelism and the temporal order of events. Here is an example:: |
| |
| CPU0 CPU1 |
| free_irq(X) interrupt X |
| spin_lock(desc->lock) |
| wake irq thread() |
| spin_unlock(desc->lock) |
| spin_lock(desc->lock) |
| remove action() |
| shutdown_irq() |
| release_resources() thread_handler() |
| spin_unlock(desc->lock) access released resources. |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| synchronize_irq() |
| |
| Lockdep provides similar useful output to depict a possible deadlock |
| scenario:: |
| |
| CPU0 CPU1 |
| rtmutex_lock(&rcu->rt_mutex) |
| spin_lock(&rcu->rt_mutex.wait_lock) |
| local_irq_disable() |
| spin_lock(&timer->it_lock) |
| spin_lock(&rcu->mutex.wait_lock) |
| --> Interrupt |
| spin_lock(&timer->it_lock) |
| |
| |
| Function references in changelogs |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| When a function is mentioned in the changelog, either the text body or the |
| subject line, please use the format 'function_name()'. Omitting the |
| brackets after the function name can be ambiguous:: |
| |
| Subject: subsys/component: Make reservation_count static |
| |
| reservation_count is only used in reservation_stats. Make it static. |
| |
| The variant with brackets is more precise:: |
| |
| Subject: subsys/component: Make reservation_count() static |
| |
| reservation_count() is only called from reservation_stats(). Make it |
| static. |
| |
| |
| Backtraces in changelogs |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| See :ref:`backtraces`. |
| |
| Ordering of commit tags |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| To have a uniform view of the commit tags, the tip maintainers use the |
| following tag ordering scheme: |
| |
| - Fixes: 12char-SHA1 ("sub/sys: Original subject line") |
| |
| A Fixes tag should be added even for changes which do not need to be |
| backported to stable kernels, i.e. when addressing a recently introduced |
| issue which only affects tip or the current head of mainline. These tags |
| are helpful to identify the original commit and are much more valuable |
| than prominently mentioning the commit which introduced a problem in the |
| text of the changelog itself because they can be automatically |
| extracted. |
| |
| The following example illustrates the difference:: |
| |
| Commit |
| |
| abcdef012345678 ("x86/xxx: Replace foo with bar") |
| |
| left an unused instance of variable foo around. Remove it. |
| |
| Signed-off-by: J.Dev <j.dev@mail> |
| |
| Please say instead:: |
| |
| The recent replacement of foo with bar left an unused instance of |
| variable foo around. Remove it. |
| |
| Fixes: abcdef012345678 ("x86/xxx: Replace foo with bar") |
| Signed-off-by: J.Dev <j.dev@mail> |
| |
| The latter puts the information about the patch into the focus and |
| amends it with the reference to the commit which introduced the issue |
| rather than putting the focus on the original commit in the first place. |
| |
| - Reported-by: ``Reporter <reporter@mail>`` |
| |
| - Originally-by: ``Original author <original-author@mail>`` |
| |
| - Suggested-by: ``Suggester <suggester@mail>`` |
| |
| - Co-developed-by: ``Co-author <co-author@mail>`` |
| |
| Signed-off: ``Co-author <co-author@mail>`` |
| |
| Note, that Co-developed-by and Signed-off-by of the co-author(s) must |
| come in pairs. |
| |
| - Signed-off-by: ``Author <author@mail>`` |
| |
| The first Signed-off-by (SOB) after the last Co-developed-by/SOB pair is the |
| author SOB, i.e. the person flagged as author by git. |
| |
| - Signed-off-by: ``Patch handler <handler@mail>`` |
| |
| SOBs after the author SOB are from people handling and transporting |
| the patch, but were not involved in development. SOB chains should |
| reflect the **real** route a patch took as it was propagated to us, |
| with the first SOB entry signalling primary authorship of a single |
| author. Acks should be given as Acked-by lines and review approvals |
| as Reviewed-by lines. |
| |
| If the handler made modifications to the patch or the changelog, then |
| this should be mentioned **after** the changelog text and **above** |
| all commit tags in the following format:: |
| |
| ... changelog text ends. |
| |
| [ handler: Replaced foo by bar and updated changelog ] |
| |
| First-tag: ..... |
| |
| Note the two empty new lines which separate the changelog text and the |
| commit tags from that notice. |
| |
| If a patch is sent to the mailing list by a handler then the author has |
| to be noted in the first line of the changelog with:: |
| |
| From: Author <author@mail> |
| |
| Changelog text starts here.... |
| |
| so the authorship is preserved. The 'From:' line has to be followed |
| by a empty newline. If that 'From:' line is missing, then the patch |
| would be attributed to the person who sent (transported, handled) it. |
| The 'From:' line is automatically removed when the patch is applied |
| and does not show up in the final git changelog. It merely affects |
| the authorship information of the resulting Git commit. |
| |
| - Tested-by: ``Tester <tester@mail>`` |
| |
| - Reviewed-by: ``Reviewer <reviewer@mail>`` |
| |
| - Acked-by: ``Acker <acker@mail>`` |
| |
| - Cc: ``cc-ed-person <person@mail>`` |
| |
| If the patch should be backported to stable, then please add a '``Cc: |
| stable@vger.kernel.org``' tag, but do not Cc stable when sending your |
| mail. |
| |
| - Link: ``https://link/to/information`` |
| |
| For referring to an email on LKML or other kernel mailing lists, |
| please use the lore.kernel.org redirector URL:: |
| |
| https://lore.kernel.org/r/email-message@id |
| |
| The kernel.org redirector is considered a stable URL, unlike other email |
| archives. |
| |
| Maintainers will add a Link tag referencing the email of the patch |
| submission when they apply a patch to the tip tree. This tag is useful |
| for later reference and is also used for commit notifications. |
| |
| Please do not use combined tags, e.g. ``Reported-and-tested-by``, as |
| they just complicate automated extraction of tags. |
| |
| |
| Links to documentation |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Providing links to documentation in the changelog is a great help to later |
| debugging and analysis. Unfortunately, URLs often break very quickly |
| because companies restructure their websites frequently. Non-'volatile' |
| exceptions include the Intel SDM and the AMD APM. |
| |
| Therefore, for 'volatile' documents, please create an entry in the kernel |
| bugzilla https://bugzilla.kernel.org and attach a copy of these documents |
| to the bugzilla entry. Finally, provide the URL of the bugzilla entry in |
| the changelog. |
| |
| Patch resend or reminders |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| See :ref:`resend_reminders`. |
| |
| Merge window |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Please do not expect large patch series to be handled during the merge |
| window or even during the week before. Such patches should be submitted in |
| mergeable state *at* *least* a week before the merge window opens. |
| Exceptions are made for bug fixes and *sometimes* for small standalone |
| drivers for new hardware or minimally invasive patches for hardware |
| enablement. |
| |
| During the merge window, the maintainers instead focus on following the |
| upstream changes, fixing merge window fallout, collecting bug fixes, and |
| allowing themselves a breath. Please respect that. |
| |
| The release candidate -rc1 is the starting point for new patches to be |
| applied which are targeted for the next merge window. |
| |
| |
| Git |
| ^^^ |
| |
| The tip maintainers accept git pull requests from maintainers who provide |
| subsystem changes for aggregation in the tip tree. |
| |
| Pull requests for new patch submissions are usually not accepted and do not |
| replace proper patch submission to the mailing list. The main reason for |
| this is that the review workflow is email based. |
| |
| If you submit a larger patch series it is helpful to provide a git branch |
| in a private repository which allows interested people to easily pull the |
| series for testing. The usual way to offer this is a git URL in the cover |
| letter of the patch series. |
| |
| Testing |
| ^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Code should be tested before submitting to the tip maintainers. Anything |
| other than minor changes should be built, booted and tested with |
| comprehensive (and heavyweight) kernel debugging options enabled. |
| |
| These debugging options can be found in kernel/configs/x86_debug.config |
| and can be added to an existing kernel config by running: |
| |
| make x86_debug.config |
| |
| Some of these options are x86-specific and can be left out when testing |
| on other architectures. |
| |
| Coding style notes |
| ------------------ |
| |
| Comment style |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Sentences in comments start with an uppercase letter. |
| |
| Single line comments:: |
| |
| /* This is a single line comment */ |
| |
| Multi-line comments:: |
| |
| /* |
| * This is a properly formatted |
| * multi-line comment. |
| * |
| * Larger multi-line comments should be split into paragraphs. |
| */ |
| |
| No tail comments: |
| |
| Please refrain from using tail comments. Tail comments disturb the |
| reading flow in almost all contexts, but especially in code:: |
| |
| if (somecondition_is_true) /* Don't put a comment here */ |
| dostuff(); /* Neither here */ |
| |
| seed = MAGIC_CONSTANT; /* Nor here */ |
| |
| Use freestanding comments instead:: |
| |
| /* This condition is not obvious without a comment */ |
| if (somecondition_is_true) { |
| /* This really needs to be documented */ |
| dostuff(); |
| } |
| |
| /* This magic initialization needs a comment. Maybe not? */ |
| seed = MAGIC_CONSTANT; |
| |
| Comment the important things: |
| |
| Comments should be added where the operation is not obvious. Documenting |
| the obvious is just a distraction:: |
| |
| /* Decrement refcount and check for zero */ |
| if (refcount_dec_and_test(&p->refcnt)) { |
| do; |
| lots; |
| of; |
| magic; |
| things; |
| } |
| |
| Instead, comments should explain the non-obvious details and document |
| constraints:: |
| |
| if (refcount_dec_and_test(&p->refcnt)) { |
| /* |
| * Really good explanation why the magic things below |
| * need to be done, ordering and locking constraints, |
| * etc.. |
| */ |
| do; |
| lots; |
| of; |
| magic; |
| /* Needs to be the last operation because ... */ |
| things; |
| } |
| |
| Function documentation comments: |
| |
| To document functions and their arguments please use kernel-doc format |
| and not free form comments:: |
| |
| /** |
| * magic_function - Do lots of magic stuff |
| * @magic: Pointer to the magic data to operate on |
| * @offset: Offset in the data array of @magic |
| * |
| * Deep explanation of mysterious things done with @magic along |
| * with documentation of the return values. |
| * |
| * Note, that the argument descriptors above are arranged |
| * in a tabular fashion. |
| */ |
| |
| This applies especially to globally visible functions and inline |
| functions in public header files. It might be overkill to use kernel-doc |
| format for every (static) function which needs a tiny explanation. The |
| usage of descriptive function names often replaces these tiny comments. |
| Apply common sense as always. |
| |
| |
| Documenting locking requirements |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| Documenting locking requirements is a good thing, but comments are not |
| necessarily the best choice. Instead of writing:: |
| |
| /* Caller must hold foo->lock */ |
| void func(struct foo *foo) |
| { |
| ... |
| } |
| |
| Please use:: |
| |
| void func(struct foo *foo) |
| { |
| lockdep_assert_held(&foo->lock); |
| ... |
| } |
| |
| In PROVE_LOCKING kernels, lockdep_assert_held() emits a warning |
| if the caller doesn't hold the lock. Comments can't do that. |
| |
| Bracket rules |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Brackets should be omitted only if the statement which follows 'if', 'for', |
| 'while' etc. is truly a single line:: |
| |
| if (foo) |
| do_something(); |
| |
| The following is not considered to be a single line statement even |
| though C does not require brackets:: |
| |
| for (i = 0; i < end; i++) |
| if (foo[i]) |
| do_something(foo[i]); |
| |
| Adding brackets around the outer loop enhances the reading flow:: |
| |
| for (i = 0; i < end; i++) { |
| if (foo[i]) |
| do_something(foo[i]); |
| } |
| |
| |
| Variable declarations |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| The preferred ordering of variable declarations at the beginning of a |
| function is reverse fir tree order:: |
| |
| struct long_struct_name *descriptive_name; |
| unsigned long foo, bar; |
| unsigned int tmp; |
| int ret; |
| |
| The above is faster to parse than the reverse ordering:: |
| |
| int ret; |
| unsigned int tmp; |
| unsigned long foo, bar; |
| struct long_struct_name *descriptive_name; |
| |
| And even more so than random ordering:: |
| |
| unsigned long foo, bar; |
| int ret; |
| struct long_struct_name *descriptive_name; |
| unsigned int tmp; |
| |
| Also please try to aggregate variables of the same type into a single |
| line. There is no point in wasting screen space:: |
| |
| unsigned long a; |
| unsigned long b; |
| unsigned long c; |
| unsigned long d; |
| |
| It's really sufficient to do:: |
| |
| unsigned long a, b, c, d; |
| |
| Please also refrain from introducing line splits in variable declarations:: |
| |
| struct long_struct_name *descriptive_name = container_of(bar, |
| struct long_struct_name, |
| member); |
| struct foobar foo; |
| |
| It's way better to move the initialization to a separate line after the |
| declarations:: |
| |
| struct long_struct_name *descriptive_name; |
| struct foobar foo; |
| |
| descriptive_name = container_of(bar, struct long_struct_name, member); |
| |
| |
| Variable types |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Please use the proper u8, u16, u32, u64 types for variables which are meant |
| to describe hardware or are used as arguments for functions which access |
| hardware. These types are clearly defining the bit width and avoid |
| truncation, expansion and 32/64-bit confusion. |
| |
| u64 is also recommended in code which would become ambiguous for 32-bit |
| kernels when 'unsigned long' would be used instead. While in such |
| situations 'unsigned long long' could be used as well, u64 is shorter |
| and also clearly shows that the operation is required to be 64 bits wide |
| independent of the target CPU. |
| |
| Please use 'unsigned int' instead of 'unsigned'. |
| |
| |
| Constants |
| ^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Please do not use literal (hexa)decimal numbers in code or initializers. |
| Either use proper defines which have descriptive names or consider using |
| an enum. |
| |
| |
| Struct declarations and initializers |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Struct declarations should align the struct member names in a tabular |
| fashion:: |
| |
| struct bar_order { |
| unsigned int guest_id; |
| int ordered_item; |
| struct menu *menu; |
| }; |
| |
| Please avoid documenting struct members within the declaration, because |
| this often results in strangely formatted comments and the struct members |
| become obfuscated:: |
| |
| struct bar_order { |
| unsigned int guest_id; /* Unique guest id */ |
| int ordered_item; |
| /* Pointer to a menu instance which contains all the drinks */ |
| struct menu *menu; |
| }; |
| |
| Instead, please consider using the kernel-doc format in a comment preceding |
| the struct declaration, which is easier to read and has the added advantage |
| of including the information in the kernel documentation, for example, as |
| follows:: |
| |
| |
| /** |
| * struct bar_order - Description of a bar order |
| * @guest_id: Unique guest id |
| * @ordered_item: The item number from the menu |
| * @menu: Pointer to the menu from which the item |
| * was ordered |
| * |
| * Supplementary information for using the struct. |
| * |
| * Note, that the struct member descriptors above are arranged |
| * in a tabular fashion. |
| */ |
| struct bar_order { |
| unsigned int guest_id; |
| int ordered_item; |
| struct menu *menu; |
| }; |
| |
| Static struct initializers must use C99 initializers and should also be |
| aligned in a tabular fashion:: |
| |
| static struct foo statfoo = { |
| .a = 0, |
| .plain_integer = CONSTANT_DEFINE_OR_ENUM, |
| .bar = &statbar, |
| }; |
| |
| Note that while C99 syntax allows the omission of the final comma, |
| we recommend the use of a comma on the last line because it makes |
| reordering and addition of new lines easier, and makes such future |
| patches slightly easier to read as well. |
| |
| Line breaks |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Restricting line length to 80 characters makes deeply indented code hard to |
| read. Consider breaking out code into helper functions to avoid excessive |
| line breaking. |
| |
| The 80 character rule is not a strict rule, so please use common sense when |
| breaking lines. Especially format strings should never be broken up. |
| |
| When splitting function declarations or function calls, then please align |
| the first argument in the second line with the first argument in the first |
| line:: |
| |
| static int long_function_name(struct foobar *barfoo, unsigned int id, |
| unsigned int offset) |
| { |
| |
| if (!id) { |
| ret = longer_function_name(barfoo, DEFAULT_BARFOO_ID, |
| offset); |
| ... |
| |
| Namespaces |
| ^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Function/variable namespaces improve readability and allow easy |
| grepping. These namespaces are string prefixes for globally visible |
| function and variable names, including inlines. These prefixes should |
| combine the subsystem and the component name such as 'x86_comp\_', |
| 'sched\_', 'irq\_', and 'mutex\_'. |
| |
| This also includes static file scope functions that are immediately put |
| into globally visible driver templates - it's useful for those symbols |
| to carry a good prefix as well, for backtrace readability. |
| |
| Namespace prefixes may be omitted for local static functions and |
| variables. Truly local functions, only called by other local functions, |
| can have shorter descriptive names - our primary concern is greppability |
| and backtrace readability. |
| |
| Please note that 'xxx_vendor\_' and 'vendor_xxx_` prefixes are not |
| helpful for static functions in vendor-specific files. After all, it |
| is already clear that the code is vendor-specific. In addition, vendor |
| names should only be for truly vendor-specific functionality. |
| |
| As always apply common sense and aim for consistency and readability. |
| |
| |
| Commit notifications |
| -------------------- |
| |
| The tip tree is monitored by a bot for new commits. The bot sends an email |
| for each new commit to a dedicated mailing list |
| (``linux-tip-commits@vger.kernel.org``) and Cc's all people who are |
| mentioned in one of the commit tags. It uses the email message ID from the |
| Link tag at the end of the tag list to set the In-Reply-To email header so |
| the message is properly threaded with the patch submission email. |
| |
| The tip maintainers and submaintainers try to reply to the submitter |
| when merging a patch, but they sometimes forget or it does not fit the |
| workflow of the moment. While the bot message is purely mechanical, it |
| also implies a 'Thank you! Applied.'. |