On 28.09.22 02:30, Bryan O'Donoghue wrote: > Recently when submitting a yaml change I found that I had omitted the > maintainer whose tree the change needed to go through. > > The reason for that is the path in MAINTAINERS is marked as Supported not > Maintained. Reading MAINTAINERS we see quote: > > Supported: Someone is actually paid to look after this. > Maintained: Someone actually looks after it. > > The current submitting-patches.rst only says to mail maintainers though not > supporters. When we run scripts/get_maintainer.pl anybody who is denoted a > paid maintainer will appear as a supporter. > > Let's add some text to the submitting-patches.rst to indicate that > supporters should similarly be mailed so that you can't do as I did and > mail every maintainer get_maintainer.pl tells you to, without actually > mailing the one supporter you need to. > > Signed-off-by: Bryan O'Donoghue <bryan.odonoghue@xxxxxxxxxx> Looks good to me, but while at it, one quick question: Would Documentation/process/5.Posting.rst (which sadly covers exactly the same topic) benefit from a similar clarification, even if it doesn't mention get_maintainers explicitly? Which leads to two other question: Are there any other places that might benefit from such a clarification? Or would it be even make sense to change the format of MAINTAINERS to avoid the problem in the first place? Maybe something like "Maintained(v)" (Someone volunteered to look after it in spare hours.) and "Maintained(p)" (Someone is actually paid to look after this.). Ahh, no, that doesn't look good. But you get the idea. > diff --git a/Documentation/process/submitting-patches.rst b/Documentation/process/submitting-patches.rst > index be49d8f2601b4..5f97379da41da 100644 > --- a/Documentation/process/submitting-patches.rst > +++ b/Documentation/process/submitting-patches.rst > @@ -227,9 +227,11 @@ You should always copy the appropriate subsystem maintainer(s) on any patch > to code that they maintain; look through the MAINTAINERS file and the > source code revision history to see who those maintainers are. The > script scripts/get_maintainer.pl can be very useful at this step (pass paths to > -your patches as arguments to scripts/get_maintainer.pl). If you cannot find a > -maintainer for the subsystem you are working on, Andrew Morton > -(akpm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx) serves as a maintainer of last resort. > +your patches as arguments to scripts/get_maintainer.pl). You should mail > +everyone who appears as "maintainer" or "supporter" in the > +scripts/get_maintainer.pl output. Side note and bikeshedding: Not sure, I wonder if the 'in the scripts/get_maintainer.pl output' can be dropped to make things shorter. Or maybe even shorter along the lines of 'Mail everyone listed as "maintainer" or "supporter"'? Whatever, not that important. > If you cannot find a maintainer for the > +subsystem you are working on, Andrew Morton (akpm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx) serves > +as a maintainer of last resort. > > You should also normally choose at least one mailing list to receive a copy > of your patch set. linux-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx should be used by default Ciao, Thorsten