On Mon, Oct 14, 2024 at 08:27:29AM -0700, Jeff Xu wrote:
On Sun, Oct 13, 2024 at 10:54 PM Greg KH gregkh@linuxfoundation.org wrote:
On Sun, Oct 13, 2024 at 10:17:48PM -0700, Jeff Xu wrote:
Hi Greg,
How are you?
What is the process to backport Pedro's recent mseal fixes to 6.10 ?
Please read: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/stable-kernel-rules.html for how all of this works :)
Specifically those 5 commits:
67203f3f2a63d429272f0c80451e5fcc469fdb46 selftests/mm: add mseal test for no-discard madvise
4d1b3416659be70a2251b494e85e25978de06519 mm: move can_modify_vma to mm/vma.h
4a2dd02b09160ee43f96c759fafa7b56dfc33816 mm/mprotect: replace can_modify_mm with can_modify_vma
23c57d1fa2b9530e38f7964b4e457fed5a7a0ae8 mseal: replace can_modify_mm_madv with a vma variant
f28bdd1b17ec187eaa34845814afaaff99832762 selftests/mm: add more mseal traversal tests
There will be merge conflicts, I can backport them to 5.10 and test to help the backporting process.
5.10 or 6.10?
6.10.
And why 6.10? If you look at the front page of kernel.org you will see that 6.10 is now end-of-life, so why does that kernel matter to you anymore?
OK, I didn't know that. Less work is nice :-)
So, now that you don't care about 6.10.y, what about 6.11.y? Are any of these actually bugfixes that people need?
thanks,
greg k-h