Re: [PATCH] MAINTAINERS: add more people to the MTD maintainer team
From: Boris Brezillon
Date: Fri Oct 28 2016 - 05:24:07 EST
Hi Brian,
On Thu, 27 Oct 2016 13:57:32 -0700
Brian Norris <computersforpeace@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On Mon, Oct 24, 2016 at 02:35:26PM +0200, Boris Brezillon wrote:
> > Brian has been maintaining the MTD subsystem alone for several years
> > now, and maintaining such a subsystem can really be time consuming.
> >
> > Create a maintainer team formed of the most active MTD contributors
> > to help Brian with this task, which will hopefully improve the
> > subsystem reactivity.
> >
> > Signed-off-by: Boris Brezillon <boris.brezillon@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
>
> Thanks to all the volunteers! Applied to linux-mtd.git. Will send to
> Linus once we can collect other outstanding fixes.
>
> > ---
> > Hi all,
> >
> > I'm just trying to summarize what I understood the process would be,
> > don't hesitate to correct me if I'm wrong.
> >
> > For each release we will assign a specific MTD maintainer which will be
> > responsible for taking MTD core patches and pulling spi-nor and nand PRs
> > into the MTD tree and eventually send one or several PRs to Linus.
>
> I had imagined that the "release owner" role wouldn't necessarily imply
> exclusive commit rights, but that they'd just the primary one
> responsible. I don't see a problem with other maintainer(s) applying
> patches as long as they've gotten the proper review. Or would that be
> too confusing?
Nope, I'm fine with both solutions.
>
> But that's something not discussed here so far: review requirements. I
> expect we need a minimum of 1 reviewer (where reviewer may be the one
> applying it) that isn't the author. And for bigger things (i.e., not
> trivial and not just a leaf driver) maybe 2. Hopefully in the form of
> explicit Reviewed-by or Acked-by.
Agreed.
> And that means that for NAND or
> SPI-NOR PRs, that may require preempting the "release owner" (e.g., if
> Boris is supposed to be the "owner" for a release, he'll have to find
> someone else to review his NAND PR -- I'm still happy to do so for now,
> but others are welcome).
Cool.
>
> And for PRs to Linus: if y'all don't mind, I'd still like to have a
> last look at things from the brand new maintainers, at least for now.
> (Boris and Richard would probably also be good candidates for the last
> review / PR, as they've proven to maintain things well already.) I'm
> sure that can be relaxed after a release or so (say, after 4.10?).
I'm perfectly fine with that.
>
> Thoughts?
>
> Also, everyone should make their attempts to get their PGP keys into the
> web-of-trust. And we need David to get people infradead.org permissions.
>
> One other point of order: if it isn't clear, I've been using
> l2-mtd.git/master as the -next "branch" and linux-mtd.git/master as the
> -current-release "branch." We should work extra hard to avoid rebasing
> in either of those trees now. In fact, I'll go disable non-ff pushes
> now...
>
> I also currently have a server-side post-receive git hook installed in
> l2-mtd.git that tries to update patchwork. It's not 100% accurate
> because it matches contents (which might be the same across multiple
> revisions of a series). I should probably remove or modify that before
> others start pushing there.
I use git notes to do that: each time I apply a patch using pwclient,
it adds a note containing the patchwork id, then, I have a pre-push
hook that scan all the commits that are being pushed on my nand/next
branch and mark the new ones as Accepted in patchwork.
I can provide those scripts if you want, but this means it has to be
done on the client side, because notes are discarded when you push
things to a remote.
>
> > For fixes that are submitted after -rc1, I usually ask Brian to apply
> > them directly into the MTD tree (I don't think there's a real need to
> > prepare spi-nor and nand PRs for fixes), so we can proceed the same
> > way: ask the maintainer assigned to this release to also take care of
> > applying fixes and sending PRs to Linus before each -rc.
>
> I'm flexible on this. If the "release owner" is attentive enough,
> applying them to the MTD tree works just fine. But if a PR helps (as
> Boris is planning to do right now for 4.9-rc) I don't see a problem with
> that either.
Well, it all depends on the number of fixes we have. But if we all have
permissions to push to the mtd tree, then we can just create a fixes
branch where the sub-subsystem maintainers can easily push their fixes
and the release owner will then send a PR to Linus before the next -rc.
>
> > If you have other ideas, or would like to proceed differently, don't
> > hesitate propose them.
>
> Good luck, and happy MTD hacking :)
Thanks.