On Sat, Sep 19, 2020 at 08:40:20AM +0200, Greg Kroah-Hartman wrote: > On Fri, Sep 18, 2020 at 03:19:05PM +0300, Leon Romanovsky wrote: > > > So we do have an open-source library called hl-thunk, which uses our > > > driver and indeed that was part of the requirement. > > > It is similar to libdrm. > > > Here is the link: > > > https://github.com/HabanaAI/hl-thunk > > > > Are you kidding? > > > > This is mirror of some internal repository that looks like dumpster > > with ChangeId, internal bug tracker numbers, not part of major OS > > distributions. > > > > It is not open-source library and shows very clear why you chose > > to upstream your driver through driver/misc/ tree. > > It is an open source library, as per the license and the code > availability. What more is expected here? So can I fork iproute2, add bunch of new custom netlink UAPIs and expect Dave to merge it after I throw it on github? > > No distro has to pick it up, that's not a requirement for kernel code, > we have many kernel helper programs that are not in distros. Heck, udev > took a long time to get into distros, does that mean the kernel side of > that interface should never have been merged? > > I don't understand your complaint here, it's not our place to judge the > code quality of userspace libraries, otherwise we would never get any > real-work done :) My main complaint is that you can't imagine merging code into large subsystems (netdev, RDMA, DRM? e.t.c) without being civil open-source citizen. It means use of existing user-space libraries/tools and/or providing new ones that will be usable for everyone. In this case, we have some custom char device with library that is not usable for anyone else and this is why drivers/misc/ is right place. While we are talking about real-work, it is our benefit to push companies to make investment into ecosystem and not letting them to find an excuse for not doing it. Thanks > > thanks, > > greg k-h