On Thu, 5 Sep 2019 16:57:47 -0300 Mauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab+samsung@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > The description at Documentation/process/license-rules.rst is very strict > with regards to the position where the SPDX tags should be. > > In the past several developers and maintainers interpreted it on a > more permissive way, placing the SPDX header between lines 1 to 15, > with are the ones which the scripts/spdxcheck.py script verifies. > > However, recently, devs are becoming more strict about such > requirement and want it to strictly follow the rule, with states that > the SPDX rule should be at the first line ever on most files, and > at the second line for scripts. > > Well, for Python script, such requirement causes violation to PEP-263, > making regressions on scripts that contain encoding lines, as PEP-263 > also states about the same. > > This series addresses it. So I really don't want to be overly difficult here, but I would like to approach this from yet another angle... > Patches 1 to 3 fix some Python scripts that violates PEP-263; I just checked all of those scripts, and they are all just plain ASCII. So it really doesn't matter whether the environment defaults to UTF-8 or ASCII here. So, in other words, we really shouldn't need to define the encoding at all. This suggests to me that we're adding a bunch of complications that we don't necessarily need. What am I missing here? Educate me properly and I'll not try to stand in the way of all this... Thanks, jon