On Thu, Nov 21 2024 at 05:22, Len Brown wrote:
On Wed, Nov 20, 2024 at 3:21 PM Dave Hansen dave.hansen@intel.com wrote:
I'm not going to lose sleep over it, but as a policy, I think we should backport CPU fixes to all the stable kernels. I don't feel like I have a good enough handle on what kernels folks run on new systems to make a prediction.
FWIW, I sent a backport of a slightly earlier version of this patch, but all I got back was vitriol about violating the kernel Documentation on sending to stable.
Maybe a native english speaker could re-write that Documentation, so that a native english speaker can understand it?
What's so hard to understand?
There are three options to submit a change to -stable trees:
1. Add a'stable tag' to the description of a patch you then submit for mainline inclusion.
2. Ask the stable team to pick up a patch already mainlined.
3. Submit a patch to the stable team that is equivalent to a change already mainlined.
Is very clear and understandable english, no?
#1 is the preferred one and only requires a "stable tag"
#2/#3 can only be done once the fix is upstream as they require the upstream commit id.
It's clearly spelled out in the detailed descriptions of the three options.
Thanks,
tglx