On Tue, Nov 20, 2018 at 02:02:49PM -0700, Andy Lutomirski wrote:
On Nov 20, 2018, at 1:47 PM, Joel Fernandes joel@joelfernandes.org wrote:
On Tue, Nov 20, 2018 at 01:33:18PM -0700, Andy Lutomirski wrote:
On Nov 20, 2018, at 1:07 PM, Stephen Rothwell sfr@canb.auug.org.au wrote:
Hi Joel,
On Tue, 20 Nov 2018 10:39:26 -0800 Joel Fernandes joel@joelfernandes.org wrote:
On Tue, Nov 20, 2018 at 07:13:17AM -0800, Andy Lutomirski wrote: On Mon, Nov 19, 2018 at 9:21 PM Joel Fernandes (Google) joel@joelfernandes.org wrote: > > A better way to do F_SEAL_FUTURE_WRITE seal was discussed [1] last week > where we don't need to modify core VFS structures to get the same > behavior of the seal. This solves several side-effects pointed out by > Andy [2]. > > [1] https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20181111173650.GA256781@google.com/ > [2] https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/69CE06CC-E47C-4992-848A-66EB23EE6C74@amacapital... > > Suggested-by: Andy Lutomirski luto@kernel.org > Fixes: 5e653c2923fd ("mm: Add an F_SEAL_FUTURE_WRITE seal to memfd")
What tree is that commit in? Can we not just fold this in?
It is in linux-next. Could we keep both commits so we have the history?
Well, its in Andrew's mmotm, so its up to him.
Unless mmotm is more magical than I think, the commit hash in your fixed tag is already nonsense. mmotm gets rebased all the time, and is only barely a git tree.
I wouldn't go so far to call it nonsense. It was a working patch, it just did things differently. Your help with improving the patch is much appreciated.
I’m not saying the patch is nonsense — I’m saying the *hash* may be nonsense. akpm uses a bunch of .patch files and all kinds of crazy scripts, and the mmotm.git tree is not stable at all.
Oh, ok. Sorry for misunderstanding and thanks for clarification. :-)
I am Ok with whatever Andrew wants to do, if it is better to squash it with the original, then I can do that and send another patch.
From experience, Andrew will food in fixups on request :)
Andrew, could you squash this patch into the one titled ("mm: Add an F_SEAL_FUTURE_WRITE seal to memfd")? That one was already picked up by -next but I imagine you might have a crazy script as Andy pointed out for exactly these situations. ;-)
thanks,
- Joel