Hi Peter, On Wed, Oct 10, 2012 at 2:08 PM, Peter Senna Tschudin <peter.senna@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Stephen and David, > > I've sent V2 of the patches and they were all accepted. Thank you. > > I've made a template for the commit message, and then copy and paste > function names from the code. Something like: > > -- // -- > The function sky2_probe() return 0 for success and negative value > for most of its internal tests failures. There are two exceptions > that are error cases going to err_out*:. For this two cases, the > function abort its success execution path, but returns non negative > value, making it dificult for a caller function to notice the error. > > This patch fixes the error cases that do not return negative values. > > This was found by Coccinelle, but the code change was made by hand. > This patch is not robot generated. > ... > --//-- > > How useful it was to have the function names when you were analyzing > the patches? It took me a lot of time to modify the template by copy > and paste, check if it is correct, then commit. I have some other > similar patches to submit and I wonder if having the function names in > the commit message helped you. > Having real function names in your commit message won't make it more useful. IMHO, the problem is you're still using a template commit message, which produces a robot-like commit message. Developers don't like that, we prefer to see a text written by some guy explaining why is this patch needed, and what it's fixing/improving from an overall point of view. This is not easy and takes much training. I believe patches should help maintainers, not only add work them, so it's important to double-triple-check the patch and double-triple-check the commit message. I know this is tedious and it'll slow you a bit. But it's a good thing: it means you are working :-) Also, in this particular case, where the coccinelle does not fix something obvious, then I'd say you should be *extra* careful. Hope this helps. Ezequiel -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe kernel-janitors" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html