On Thu, Mar 09, 2023, Oliver Upton wrote: > On Thu, Mar 09, 2023 at 09:37:45AM +0700, Bagas Sanjaya wrote: > > On Wed, Mar 08, 2023 at 05:03:36PM -0800, Sean Christopherson wrote: > > > +As a general guideline, use ``kvm-x86/next`` even if a patch/series touches > > > +multiple architectures, i.e. isn't strictly scoped to x86. Using any of the > > > +branches from the main KVM tree is usually a less good option as they likely > > > +won't have many, if any, changes for the next release, i.e. using the main KVM > > > +tree as a base is more likely to yield conflicts. And if there are non-trivial > > > +conflicts with multiple architectures, coordination between maintainers will be > > > +required no matter what base is used. Note, this is far from a hard rule, i.e. > > > +use a different base for multi-arch series if that makes the most sense. > > I don't think this is the best way to coordinate with other architectures. > Regardless of whether you intended this to be prescriptive, I'm worried most > folks will follow along and just base patches on kvm-x86/next anyway. Probably, but for the target audience (KVM x86 contributors), that's likely the least awful base 99% of the time. > It'd be easier to just have multi-arch series use a stable base (i.e. a > release candidate) by default. That'd avoid the undesirable case where merging > a shared branch brings with it some random point in another arch's /next > history. You're conflating the base of the patch series with the branch it is applied to. I'm most definitely not proposing that multi-arch series from x86 contributors always be routed through kvm-x86. It's ultimately the responsibility of the maintainers, not the contributors, to avoid funky merges and histories. If a series warrants a dedicated topic branch, then we need to create said topic branch off a stable, common base, irrespective of what the contributor based their patches on. If a series from an x86 contributor applies cleanly on kvm-x86/next but not on -rc2 (or whatever), then the reverse would also likely be true (if the contributor used -rc2 as the base). In other words, for series with non-trivial modifications to other architectures and/or common KVM code, IMO the base used for the _initial_ posting doesn't matter all that much for us maintainers since such series will likely require additional attention no matter what base is used. On the flip side, the vast majority of "multi-arch" series in KVM tend to be focused on a single architecture, with only incidental contact to other architectures and/or common KVM code. Those types of series will likely be routed through their "target" arch tree, and so for x86, using kvm-x86/next as the base is preferrable. My goal with suggesting/prescribing kvm-x86/next to contributors is to make the easy things easy. On my end, that means having _predictable_ submissions and minimizing the number of avoidable conflicts. For contributors, that means having a very simple rule/guideline. "Use kvm-x86/next unless you know better" satisfies all those conditions. > If a different approach makes sense for a particular series then we can > discuss it on the list and arrive at something agreeable for all parties > involved. > > > That means patches that primarily kvm ARM changes should be based on > > kvm-x86/next, right? > > No, don't do that. +<infinity symbol> This doc is specifically for KVM x86.