On Wed, 18 Jun 2014, Nikita Yushchenko wrote: > >>Hmm... probably it was too early to apply this? I was just going > >>to prepare v2, based on discussion... > > > >Which discussion? > > One you are replying in? > > https://lkml.org/lkml/2014/6/4/136 I only see what's in my mailbox. If you didn't send me any other patches, which were subsequently commented on, I wouldn't have seen said comments/discussion. > >>Also, applying only 11/21, without 01/21, will just cause build errors ... > > > >CC'ing me on this patch alone when you know you have build > >dependencies on other patches in the set is a bad idea. Failing to > >mention that you wanted the patch to be handled in a special and/or > >unconventional way is an even worse idea. > > > >How are you expecting this patch(-set) to be handled? > > Sorry but I did not CC you this patch. > > I sent entire patchset to mailing lists and to maintainers of IRQ > and device tree subsystems. > I used git send-email, and all mails went out to the same recipients. > Recipient addresses extracted using scripts/get_maintainer.pl > applied to the "main" patch of the patchset. > I did not sent entire patchset to maintainers of individual changed > drivers because this makes recipient address too big and too much > looks like spamming. > I did not send individual patches to individual addresses to avoid > cases of partially-applied patchset that will just break things > (actually this is what happened with 11/21) > > I'm quite sorry if I did things wrong, it was my first attempt to > sent patchset with tree-wide fixes. However, I don't see what I've > done wrong... any hints on that will be appreciated. This is quite tricky due to the size of the set and the number of subsystems it touches. The optimum method is to have the smallest patch-set and touch only the very least amount of subsystems as possible. This is almost always feasible, however in the small cases that it's not, the alternative is to let the maintainers know what your plans are i.e. if you're only looking for Acks and that you (or another maintainer) will send out a pull-request to all of the other maintainers to suck into their trees. This is required to prevent conflicts during the merge-window. If you want to send such messages to all of the parties without spamming them with the rest of the set, you can do so in the commit message (which you can then keep in Git for subsequent revisions). For example: > From: Nikita Yushchenko <nyushchenko@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > > This avoids leak of IRQ mapping on error paths, and makes it possible > to use devm_request_irq() without facing unmap-while-handler-installed > issues. > > Signed-off-by: Nikita Yushchenko <nyushchenko@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > --- > My intention is to take this entire set through the <SUBSYSTEM> tree. > To facilitate this I'm collecting maintainer Acks. Once applied to > the <SUBSYSTEM> tree a pull-request will be sent out in order to avoid > merge conflicts at pull-time. > --- > drivers/mfd/max8997.c | 4 +++- > drivers/mfd/max8998.c | 4 +++- > 2 files changed, 6 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) > diff --git a/drivers/mfd/max8997.c b/drivers/mfd/max8997.c > index 8cf7a01..6ae0786 100644 > --- a/drivers/mfd/max8997.c > +++ b/drivers/mfd/max8997.c > [...] -- Lee Jones Linaro STMicroelectronics Landing Team Lead Linaro.org │ Open source software for ARM SoCs Follow Linaro: Facebook | Twitter | Blog -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe devicetree" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html