On Sat, Apr 06, 2019 at 12:27:09PM +0200, Ilias Stamatis wrote:
Στις Σάβ, 6 Απρ 2019 στις 10:10 π.μ., ο/η Ján Tomko <jtomko@xxxxxxxxxx> έγραψε:The commit summary could be more specific, for example: Guest Domains: fix code example but more importantly, it is missing a Sign-off. See point 6 at https://libvirt.org/hacking.html#patches Contributors to libvirt projects must assert that they are in compliance with the Developer Certificate of Origin 1.1. This is achieved by adding a "Signed-off-by" line containing the contributor's name and e-mail to every commit message. The presence of this line attests that the contributor has read the above lined DCO and agrees with its statements. (You can just provide the sign-off in an on-list reply to this e-mail and I will add it to the commit message before pushing)Aah, right. Sorry, I forgot to include the sign-off. I fixed my commit message. I'm not sure weather I should send the updated patch as a reply to this e-mail or if I should send a new [PATCH v2] e-mail. For now I'll go ahead and send a v2 mail, but please let know what I am supposed to do in such case in the future.
Patches should be sent using git send-email. That way other developers can use the usual workflow for saving the patch and applying it to git. But if the only thing missing is a sign-off, it can be supplied separately in a non-patch human-readable e-mail. As for threading, another version of a patch or a patch series should be a separate thread, as the command on our HACKING page does.
I'm new to the process and trying to get my first tiny patch accepted.
Welcome! Jano
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