On Wed, Sep 02, 2015 at 10:06:36AM +0800, Yakir Yang wrote: > 在 09/02/2015 05:00 AM, Heiko Stuebner 写道: > >Am Dienstag, 1. September 2015, 14:01:48 schrieb Yakir Yang: [...] > >>diff --git a/drivers/gpu/drm/rockchip/rockchip_drm_vop.c > >>b/drivers/gpu/drm/rockchip/rockchip_drm_vop.c index 34b78e7..5d7f9b6 100644 > >>--- a/drivers/gpu/drm/rockchip/rockchip_drm_vop.c > >>+++ b/drivers/gpu/drm/rockchip/rockchip_drm_vop.c > >>@@ -811,14 +811,41 @@ static const struct drm_plane_funcs vop_plane_funcs = > >>{ > >> > >> int rockchip_drm_crtc_mode_config(struct drm_crtc *crtc, > >> int connector_type, > >>- int out_mode) > >>+ int bpc, int color) > >> { > >> struct vop *vop = to_vop(crtc); > >>- > >> vop->connector_type = connector_type; > >> vop->connector_out_mode = out_mode; > >this line should probably go away, as the source var "out_mode" does not exist > >in the function params any more, making the compilation break, and is set > >below anyway. > > Sorry for the failed, there are must be a problem when I backport those code > to chrome-3.14 to verify. > > Thanks a lot, I would update next version soon. *sigh* I get the feeling that you're going about upstreaming the wrong way. If you post patches to upstream mailing lists and you expect people to apply those patches, then your target is the upstream kernel. So you should be basing all of your work on top of a recent release candidate directly from Linus or some recent version of linux-next. Your current approach is already making people waste time trying to build the patches and fail because you've been testing on something other than mainline or linux-next. At the very least your code must compile when applied against a recent upstream tree. I would also expect you to make sure the code works at runtime, though, contrary to build testing, not everybody will be able to verify that you've actually done so. It is ultimately your platform maintainer's (i.e. Heiko's) responsibility to ensure that because they will get to deal with user complaints if people can't run an upstream kernel on the devices. I realize that the upstream kernel isn't what's going to end up in products later on, but that doesn't change the fact that you're submitting code for inclusion in the mainline tree. If you need to backport code to some ChromeOS tree, then that should be done after you've verified that things build and run upstream. Doing so makes life a lot easier for your upstream maintainers, and that in turn makes it more likely to get your code merged. Thierry
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