Re: [PATCH v2] arm64: dts: rockchip: add rfkill node for M.2 E wifi on orangepi-5-plus

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On 2024-08-07 20:14, Florian Klink wrote:
On Wed, Aug 07, 2024 at 07:24:27PM GMT, Dragan Simic wrote:
On 2024-08-07 19:00, Florian Klink wrote:
This follows the same logic as 82d40b141a4c ("arm64: dts: rockchip: add
rfkill node for M.2 Key E WiFi on rock-5b").

On the orangepi-5-plus, there's also a GPIO pin connecting the WiFi
enable signal inside the M.2 Key E slot.

The exact GPIO PIN can be validated in the Armbian rk-5.10-rkr4 kernel
rk3588-orangepi-5-plus.dtsi file [1], which contains a `wifi_disable`
node referencing RK_PC4 on &gpio0.

Signed-off-by: Florian Klink <flokli@xxxxxxxxx>
Tested-by: Florian Klink <flokli@xxxxxxxxx>

I forgot to mention that providing a Tested-by tag is redundant when
there's already a Signed-off-by tag, because the latter already implies
the former.

This came after I sent the v3. Generally I wish people would test things
- though too often it's not. I explicitly tested this to work (with a
wifi module added to that slot being unblock-able afterwards), and
wanted to point that out, thus adding the Tested-by.

In general, some time should be allowed between sending consecutive
versions of the same patch, so people can provide their feedback.

When it comes to testing the submitted patches, please note that signing
off a patch implies that the signer has already, to the best of their
abilities, made sure that the patch works as described and expected.

With all that in mind, please allow me to repeat that a Tested-by tag
should not be provided from the same person that the Signed-off-by tag
is already coming from.  It's simply redundant.

DCO 1.1 doesn't say anything about Tested-by, it's mostly legalese about
being allowed to send out the patch, and understanding the consequences
regarding licensing. It doesn't require the person adding their
Signed-Off-By to have tested it.

Well, not all rules are to be followed blindly, and some documentation
perhaps needs updating or expanding to be more precise.  On top of that,
having something absent from the documentation doesn't necessarily mean
that some additional rules don't apply.  It's many times simply about
applying common sense.




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