Re: [PATCH] Sony-laptop: fix sparse warning
From: Darren Hart
Date: Sat Feb 07 2015 - 15:07:27 EST
On Sat, Feb 07, 2015 at 12:33:16PM +0100, Bjørn Mork wrote:
> Darren Hart <dvhart@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes:
> > On Thu, Feb 05, 2015 at 04:00:32PM +0000, Lad, Prabhakar wrote:
> >
> >> Lad, Prabhakar <prabhakar.lad@xxxxxx>
> >> Lad, Prabhakar <prabhakar.csengg@xxxxxxxxx>
> >
> > I think there may be a problem with this in an unquoted email address. The
> > unquoted local part, per RFC 2822 3.4.1, can only contain !#$%'*+-/=?^_`{|}~
> > and . separators.
>
> Yes, but that is not applicable to the git commit tags. They are not
> RFC2822 header fields. Nothing will ever parse "Lad" as an unqualified
> local destination in a SOB, and therefore there is no problem using the
> comma there.
Also, my reading was incorrect as "local part" refers to the text preceeding
the @ character, not the text outside the <>. So, while the name should probably
be quoted to avoid problems with MUAs interpretting the , as a list separator, I
don't have anything definitive to reference to prevent it. So at least for now,
I'll be accepting Lad's contributions as is, comma and all :-)
I really dislike this aspect of our tooling. Being so free form, it's
inevitiable for even seasoned contributors to trip over these sort of implicit
rules. It seems to me that a very significant, perhaps not the majority, of the
time I spend as maintainer is dealing with things like coding style, commit
message formatting, and similar issues. I can sympathize with those who
criticize our mechanisms as archaic :-/
>
> Note that names using non-ascii characters are often written without
> quotes i SOBs (wonder how I know this? :-). In practice I believe the
> character set is only limited by what you will allow in your git log.
> The only characters with a special meaning are :<>#, and the latter is
> somewhat dubious. But it's often used as a comment separator in stable
> CCs, so I guess it should be avoided for other uses.
>
> Scripts etc trying to parse these tags into email headers must be
> prepared to do the necessary stripping and quoting of any text outside
> the <> brackets.
>
> Requiring a full name is of course good for accountability, but do let
> people format their names as they want them to appear in the log.
> Different cultures have different traditions. Wookey has collected a few
> links on this subject if anyone is interested:
> http://wookware.org/name.html
>
Thanks Bjørn :-)
>
> Bjørn
>
--
Darren Hart
Intel Open Source Technology Center
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