On Thu, 29 Feb 2024 at 01:23, Nikolai Kondrashov <spbnick@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > However, I think a better approach would be *not* to add the .gitlab-ci.yaml > file in the root of the source tree, but instead change the very same repo > setting to point to a particular entry YAML, *inside* the repo (somewhere > under "ci" directory) instead. I really don't want some kind of top-level CI for the base kernel project. We already have the situation that the drm people have their own ci model. II'm ok with that, partly because then at least the maintainers of that subsystem can agree on the rules for that one subsystem. I'm not at all interested in having something that people will then either fight about, or - more likely - ignore, at the top level because there isn't some global agreement about what the rules are. For example, even just running checkpatch is often a stylistic thing, and not everybody agrees about all the checkpatch warnings. I would suggest the CI project be separate from the kernel. And having that slack channel that is restricted to particular companies is just another sign of this whole disease. If you want to make a google/microsoft project to do kernel CI, then more power to you, but don't expect it to be some kind of agreed-upon kernel project when it's a closed system. Linus