On Thu, Jul 15, 2021 at 9:47 AM Winiarska, Iwona <iwona.winiarska@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Wed, 2021-07-14 at 16:54 +0000, Williams, Dan J wrote: > > On Tue, 2021-07-13 at 00:04 +0200, Iwona Winiarska wrote: > > > Baseboard management controllers (BMC) often run Linux but are > > > usually > > > implemented with non-X86 processors. They can use PECI to access > > > package > > > config space (PCS) registers on the host CPU and since some > > > information, > > > e.g. figuring out the core count, can be obtained using different > > > registers on different CPU generations, they need to decode the > > > family > > > and model. > > > > > > Move the data from arch/x86/include/asm/intel-family.h into a new > > > file > > > include/linux/x86/intel-family.h so that it can be used by other > > > architectures. > > > > At least it would make the diffstat smaller to allow for rename > > detection when the old file is deleted in the same patch: > > > > MAINTAINERS | 1 + > > {arch/x86/include/asm => include/linux/x86}/intel-family.h | 6 +++--- > > 2 files changed, 4 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) > > > > ...one thing people have done in the past is include a conversion > > script in the changelog that produced the diff. That way if a > > maintainer wants to be sure to catch any new usage of the header at > > the old location they just run the script. > > You mean like a simple s#asm/intel-family.h#linux/x86/intel-family.h#g > ? > Operating on kernel tree? Or individual patches? Whole kernel tree, something like this patch is a good example: 58c1a35cd522 btrfs: convert kmap to kmap_local_page, simple cases In this one, Ira generated a patch from a script, and the maintainer could re-run it if new development added more of the "old way" before applying Ira's patch. > Is including "old" header in new code that big of a deal? I was proposing ripping the band-aid off and deleting the old header, in which case it would cause compile breakage if someone added a new instance of the old include before the conversion patch was applied. > I guess it > could break grepability (looking for users of the header, now that it > can be pulled from two different places). > It would be worse if someone decided to add new content to old header, > but this should be easier to catch during review. Having 2 potential places for the same definition causes a small ongoing maintenance / review burden, so I vote moving the file rather than leaving a place holder, but it's ultimately an x86 maintainer call.