Hi Arnd, On Sat, Feb 6, 2021 at 3:36 PM Arnd Bergmann <arnd@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > That said, I'm still not happy about the patch we discussed in the > other email thread[1] and I'd like to handle it a little more strictly in > the future, but I agree this wasn't obvious and we have been rather > inconsistent about it in the past, with some platform maintainers > handling it way more strictly than others. > > I've added the devicetree maintainers and a few other platform > maintainers to Cc here, maybe they can provide some further > opinions on the topic so we can come to an approach that > works for everyone. > > My summary of the thread in [1] is there was a driver bug that > required a DT binding change. Krzysztof and the other involved > parties made sure the driver handles it in a backward-compatible > way (an old dtb file will still run into the bug but keep working > with new kernels), but decided that they did not need to worry > about the opposite case (running an old kernel with an updated > dtb). I noticed the compatibility break and said that I would > prefer this to be done in a way that is compatible both ways, > or at the minimum be alerted about the binding break in the > pull request, with an explanation about why this had to be done, > even when we don't think anyone is going to be affected. > > What do others think about this? Should we generally assume > that breaking old kernels with new dtbs is acceptable, or should > we try to avoid it if possible, the same way we try to avoid > breaking new kernels with old dtbs? Should this be a platform > specific policy or should we try to handle all platforms the same > way? For Renesas SoCs, we typically only consider compatibility of new kernels with old DTBs, not the other way around. However, most DTB updates are due to new hardware support, so using the new DTB with an old kernel usually just means no newly documented hardware, or new feature, is being used by the old kernel. In case there was a real issue fixed, and using the new DTB with the old kernel would cause a regression, and we're aware of it, we do make sure the DTS update is postponed until the corresponding driver update has hit upstream. Gr{oetje,eeting}s, Geert -- Geert Uytterhoeven -- There's lots of Linux beyond ia32 -- geert@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx In personal conversations with technical people, I call myself a hacker. But when I'm talking to journalists I just say "programmer" or something like that. -- Linus Torvalds