From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: Scott Wood Date: Thu, 11 Oct 2012 13:13:33 -0500 Subject: [U-Boot] U-Boot git usage model In-Reply-To: <20121011191658.43a0df72@lilith> (from albert.u.boot@aribaud.net on Thu Oct 11 12:16:58 2012) Message-ID: <1349979213.6903.11@snotra> List-Id: MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit To: u-boot@lists.denx.de On 10/11/2012 12:16:58 PM, Albert ARIBAUD wrote: > Hi Scott, > > On Thu, 11 Oct 2012 11:54:46 -0500, Scott Wood > wrote: > > > On 10/10/2012 01:40:54 PM, Albert ARIBAUD wrote: > > > > > Re committer identity, I don't see the relationship with "by" > > > tags, and > > > > > especially with Singed-off-by, since the sign-off is not and > must > > > not > > > > > be related to the committer of the patch, but to its > author(s). > > > > > > > > At least the way the Linux kernel uses the tag, both the > original > > > author > > > > of the patch /and/ anyone who applies the patch, cherry-picks > the > > > patch, > > > > ... must add their S-o-b line. I think U-Boot isn't using that > part > > > of > > > > the model. > > > > > > No, it isn't. IIUC, U-Boot's "Signed-off-by" is supposed to mean > "I > > > am (one of) the autor(s) of this patch". > > > > Is this documented anywhere? > > > > http://www.denx.de/wiki/U-Boot/DevelopmentProcess says, "U-Boot has > > adopted the Linux kernel signoff policy". > > Please do read the Linux kernel signoff policy as laid out in > Documentation/SubmittingPatches. You want me to read the Linux policy for documentation of how U-Boot deviates from Linux policy? > Branch or subsystem maintainers should > add their Signed-off-by only if they made modifications to the > original > patch in the process of applying it. That's not what it says. > Then read http://www.denx.de/wiki/U-Boot/Patches: "the Signed-off-by: > is a line at the end of the commit message by which the signer > certifies that he was involved in the development of the patch and > that > he accepts the Developer's Certificate of Origin (see > SubmittingPatches). > > In U-Boot, we typically do not add a Signed-off-by: if we just pass on > a patch without any changes". Thanks. FWIW I think putting policy documents in a wiki, without any guidance on who's supposed to edit it or how changes get approved, is a bad idea. Why not put policy documents in the git-managed source tree? And changes would be proposed, discussed, and accepted/rejected like any other change. Plus there'd be at least a chance of a commit message showing rationale. In any case, if this is the policy, we should not be saying that we follow the Linux policy. > (the "Certificate of Origin" is laid out in the "SubmittingPatches" > documentation file from Linux) > > > Actual behavior is probably inconsistent between custodians. > > I haven't seen such inconsistency and certainly don't want to see any, > at least in ARM trees from which I have to pull. I've been signing off patches I apply to the NAND tree. I recall stopping at one point in the past because someone complained, and then starting again -- not sure if someone else complained about doing it *that* way, or if I just noticed others doing it. Looking through the history I see others that seems to be doing the same (outside ARMland), though I can't say for sure without investigating whether the patch was "passed on without any changes" in each instance. -Scott