On 14/10/2024 17:01, Mark Brown wrote:
> On Mon, Oct 14, 2024 at 01:24:02PM +0100, Ryan Roberts wrote:
>> On 14/10/2024 12:38, Mark Brown wrote:
>>> On Mon, Oct 14, 2024 at 11:58:29AM +0100, Ryan Roberts wrote:
>
>>>> ***NOTE***
>>>> Any confused maintainers may want to read the cover note here for context:
>>>> https://lore.kernel.org/all/20241014105514.3206191-1-ryan.roberts@xxxxxxx/
>
>>> As documented in submitting-patches.rst please send patches to the
>>> maintainers for the code you would like to change. The normal kernel
>>> workflow is that people apply patches from their inboxes, if they aren't
>>> copied they are likely to not see the patch at all and it is much more
>>> difficult to apply patches.
>
>> Sure. I think you're implying that you would have liked to be in To: for this
>> patch? I went to quite a lot of trouble to ensure all maintainers were at least
>> in the To: field for patches touching their code. But get_maintainer.pl lists
>> you as a supporter, not a maintainer when I ran this patch through. Could you
>> clarify what would have been the correct thing to do? I could include all
>> reviewers and supporters as well as maintainers but then I'd be banging up
>> against the limits for some of the patches.
>
> The entry in MAINTAINERS for me is a M:, supporter is just the usual
> get_maintainers noise. Supported is exactly equivalent to a maintainer.
Ugh, In my head I always thought "supporter" was somebody who engaged with the
subsystem but did not have an official role (like a football supporter). But now
that I've gone and read the MAINTAINERS file, I see it's actually referring to
status (supported vs maintained). Sorry about this. Due to this buggy filtering,
I've missed a few others off other patches in this series. I'll fix that by
forwarding to them.
> Generally if you're going to filter people you should be filtering less
> specific matches out rather than more and if you're looking to filter
> very aggressively look at who actually commits changes to whatever
> you're trying to change, less specific maintainers will generally
> delegate down to the more specific ones.
>
>>> It's probably better to just use PAGE_SIZE_MAX here and avoid the
>>> deferred patching, like the comment says we don't particularly care what
>>> the value actually is here given that it's a dummy.
>
>> OK, so would that be:
>
>> .buffer_bytes_max = 128*1024,
>> .period_bytes_min = PAGE_SIZE_MAX, <<<<<
>> .period_bytes_max = PAGE_SIZE_MAX*2, <<<<<
>> .periods_min = 2,
>> .periods_max = 128,
>
>> It's not really clear to me how all the parameters interact; the buffer size
>> 128K, which, if PAGE_SIZE_MAX is 64K, would hold 1 period of the maximum size.
>> But periods_min is 2. So not sure that works? Or perhaps I'm trying to apply too
>> much meaning to the param names...
>
> Like Takashi says just using absolute numbers here is probably just as
> sensible, the numbers are there to stop userspace tripping over itself
> but like I say it shouldn't ever get as far as actually using them for
> anything. So long as we end up with some numbers that don't need any
> late init patching the specifics aren't super important, the use of
> PAGE_SIZE was kind of random.
OK, I'll post a respin of this patch independently of the rest of the series,
given it no longer has a dependency.
Thanks,
Ryan
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