On Tue, Apr 14, 2020 at 4:56 AM Sasha Levin sashal@kernel.org wrote:
On Sun, Apr 12, 2020 at 10:59:35AM -0700, Jakub Kicinski wrote:
On Sun, 12 Apr 2020 10:10:22 +0300 Or Gerlitz wrote:
On Sun, Apr 12, 2020 at 2:16 AM Sasha Levin sashal@kernel.org wrote:
[ Upstream commit 6783e8b29f636383af293a55336f036bc7ad5619 ]
Sasha,
This was pushed to net-next without a fixes tag, and there're probably reasons for that. As you can see the possible null deref is not even reproducible without another patch which for itself was also net-next and not net one.
If a team is not pushing patch to net nor putting a fixes that, I don't think it's correct
While it's great that you're putting the effort into adding a fixes tag to your commits, I'm not sure what a fixes tag has to do with inclusion in a stable tree.
It's a great help when we look into queueing something up, but on it's own it doesn't imply anything.
to go and pick that into stable and from there to customer production kernels.
This mail is your two week warning that this patch might get queued to stable, nothing was actually queued just yet.
Alsom, I am not sure what's the idea behind the auto-selection concept, e.g for mlx5 the maintainer is specifically pointing which patches should go to stable and
I'm curious, how does this process work? Is it on a mailing list somewhere?
to what releases there and this is done with care and thinking ahead, why do we want to add on that? and why this can be something which is just automatic selection?
We have customers running production system with LTS 4.4.x and 4.9.y (along with 4.14.z and 4.19.w) kernels, we put lots of care thinking if/what should go there, I don't see a benefit from adding auto-selection, the converse.
FWIW I had the same thoughts about the nfp driver, and I indicated to Sasha to skip it in the auto selection, which AFAICT worked nicely.
Maybe we should communicate more clearly that maintainers who carefully select patches for stable should opt out of auto-selection?
I've added drivers/net/ethernet/mellanox/ to my blacklist for auto selection. It's very easy to opt out, just ask... I've never argued with anyone around this - the maintainers of any given subsystem know about it way better than me.
Just to make sure, does this excluding of mlx5 happens immediately, that is, applies also to all non committed patches that you already posted?
IMHO - I think it should be the other way around, you should get approval from sub-system maintainers to put their code in charge into auto-selection, unless there's kernel summit decision that says otherwise, is this documented anywhere?