On 11/13/2013 08:10 PM, Daniel Borkmann wrote:On 11/13/2013 08:06 PM, Chang wrote:Thank you for your quick response. I'm quite green on kernel programmingOn 11/13/2013 09:44 AM, Daniel Borkmann wrote:On 11/13/2013 03:54 AM, Chang wrote:Yeah, sure, I'll elaborate that more specifically.On 11/13/2013 03:37 AM, Vlad Yasevich wrote:On 11/12/2013 08:34 PM, Chang Xiangzhong wrote:Look for the __two__ most recently used path/transport and set to
active_path
and retran_path respectively
Please also for the log, elaborate a bit more, explaining what
currently
happens, and what the effects of this bug are, so that later when
people
are looking through the Git log they can easily get what problem you
are
trying to fix; and if possible, add:
Fixes: <12 digits SHA1> ("<commit title>")
Thanks !
I assume the 12-digit SHA1 is the revision number. But may I ask
where and how shall I add the tag "Fixes" tag? The revision number is
generated after "git commit", how can I know that in advance?
Nope, it's the affected commit id from the current git log that
your patch fixes.
Have a look for example at commit:
98bbc06aabac5a2 ("net: x86: bpf: don't forget to free sk_filter (v2)")
and git. So here's one question:
To find the the revision that **caused** the bug, I could use gitk to
trace the changing of the file(s) history. Is that correct?