Hi Bjorn,
On 2020-06-03 23:39, Bjorn Andersson wrote:
On Thu 28 May 23:56 PDT 2020, Sai Prakash Ranjan wrote:
Hi Bjorn,
On 2020-05-29 06:41, Bjorn Andersson wrote:
> On Mon 25 May 02:47 PDT 2020, Sai Prakash Ranjan wrote:
>
> > Hi Jonathan,
> >
> > On 2020-05-25 02:36, Jonathan Marek wrote:
> > > Add support for the graphics clock controller found on SM8250
> > > based devices. This would allow graphics drivers to probe and
> > > control their clocks.
> > >
> > > This is copied from the downstream kernel, adapted for upstream.
> > > For example, GDSCs have been added.
> > >
> > > Signed-off-by: Jonathan Marek <jonathan@xxxxxxxx>
> >
> > Since this is taken from downstream, maintain the original author's
> > signed-off and add yourself as the co-developer if you have done
> > any modifications. Same applies to all other patches.
> >
>
> I disagree with this.
>
> As expressed in the commit message, this patch is based on the
> downstream driver, not the individual patch. As such, the _patch_ is
> prepared by Jonathan and by his Signed-off-by certifies the origin of
> the contribution per section 11.a or 11.b of submitting-patches.rst.
>
I lost at the downstream driver vs the individual patch here. So the
downstream driver is also an individual patch right or did I get
something completely wrong.
The downstream driver is the result of a series of patches, by various
people, whom all use their Signed-off-by to denote that what they add
is
conforming to the given license and that they have permission to
contribute to the project.
So if someone prepares a patch and includes a commit description
saying it is taken from downstream, does it mean he is the author
of that patch?
No, but I think the wording here is wrong. The patch is not taken from
downstream, it's based on downstream code.
Shouldn't the author be included in "From: Author"
and his signed-off appear first before the submitter's(also a
contributor)
signed-off?
It should, in the case that what is contributed is the forwarding of a
patch found somewhere.
But as I said before, Jonathan does through his S-o-b state that his
patch is based on previous work that is covered under appropriate open
source license and that he has the right under that license to
contribute said work.
As such, his patch is meeting the requirements.
The other part is how to give credit to authors of the original work,
Jonathan does that by stating that it's based on work in the downstream
kernel - which is quite typical to how it's done.
Or is it because these clock data is auto generated and it
doesnt really matter?
No. The author and s-o-b relates to license compliance, as such the
person who committed the auto generated work will sign off that the
content is license compliant and he/she is allowed to contribute it to
the project.
Thanks for these nice explanations.
Regards,
Sai
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