On 19/05/21 12:47, Greg Kroah-Hartman wrote:
It is not a dumping ground for stuff that arch maintainers can not seem
to agree on, and it is not a place where you can just randomly play
around with user/kernel apis with no consequences.
So no, sorry, not going to take this code at all.
And to be a bit more clear about this, having other subsystem
maintainers drop their unwanted code on this subsystem,_without_ even
asking me first is just not very nice. All of a sudden I am now > responsible for this stuff, without me even being asked about it.
Should I start throwing random drivers into the kvm subsystem for them
to maintain because I don't want to?:)
(I did see the smiley), I'm on board with throwing random drivers in
arch/riscv. :)
The situation here didn't seem very far from what process/2.Process.rst
says about staging:
- "a way to keep track of drivers that aren't up to standards", though
in this case the issue is not coding standards or quality---the code is
very good---and which people "may want to use"
- the code could be removed if there's no progress on either changing
the RISC-V acceptance policy or ratifying the spec
Of course there should have been a TODO file explaining the situation.
But if you think this is not the right place, I totally understand; if
my opinion had any weight in this, I would just place it in arch/riscv/kvm.
The RISC-V acceptance policy as is just doesn't work, and the fact that
people are trying to work around it is proving it. There are many ways
to improve it:
- get rid of it;
- provide a path to get an exception;
- provide a staging place sot hat people to do their job of contributing
code to Linux (e.g. arch/riscv/staging/kvm).
If everything else fail, I guess we can place it in
drivers/virt/riscv/kvm, even though that's just as silly a workaround.
It's a pity because the RISC-V virtualization architecture has a very
nice design, and the KVM code is also a very good example of how to do
things right.
Paolo
If there's really no other way to do this, than to put it in staging,
let's talk about it. But saying "this must go here" is not a
conversation...