On 26.07.21 16:51, Andy Shevchenko wrote: > On Mon, Jul 26, 2021 at 5:05 PM Jan Kiszka <jan.kiszka@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> On 26.07.21 15:59, Guenter Roeck wrote: >>> On 7/26/21 6:40 AM, Andy Shevchenko wrote: >>>> On Mon, Jul 26, 2021 at 3:04 PM Jan Kiszka <jan.kiszka@xxxxxxxxxxx> >>>> wrote: >>>>> >>>>> On 26.07.21 14:01, Andy Shevchenko wrote: >>>>>> On Mon, Jul 26, 2021 at 2:46 PM Jan Kiszka <jan.kiszka@xxxxxxxxxxx> >>>>>> wrote: >>>>>>> >>>>>>> From: Jan Kiszka <jan.kiszka@xxxxxxxxxxx> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Obviously, the test needs to run against the register content, not its >>>>>>> address. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Fixes: cb011044e34c ("watchdog: iTCO_wdt: Account for rebooting on >>>>>>> second timeout") >>>>>>> Reported-by: Mantas Mikulėnas <grawity@xxxxxxxxx> >>>>>> >>>>>>> Signed-off-by: Jan Kiszka <jan.kiszka@xxxxxxxxxxx> >>>>>> >>>>>> Missed SoB of the submitter (hint: configure your Git to make sure >>>>>> that submitter and author are the same in terms of name-email). >>>>> >>>>> The signed off is there. Not sure what you are referring to. >>>> >>>> Nope. It's not. The sign of that is the From: line in the body of the >>>> email. It happens when the submitter != author. And SoB of the former >>>> one is absent. But what is strange is that reading them here I haven't >>>> found the difference. Maybe one is in UTF-8 while the other is not and >>>> a unicode character degraded to Latin-1 or so? >>>> >>> >>> I have no idea why there is an additional From:, but both From: >>> tags in the e-mail source are exact matches, and both match the >>> name and e-mail address in Signed-off-by:. I agree with Jan, >>> the SoB is there. >> >> There is one unknown in this equation, and that is the anti-email system >> operated by a our IT and some company in Redmond. > > Hmm... The From: in the body is the result of the `git format-patch` I believe. > So, two (or more?) possibilities here: > 1) your configuration enforces it to always put From: (something new to me); Yes, it does, as I explained in my other reply. That's a safety net because you never have full control over what some mail servers do to the first From. > 2) the submitter and author are not the same (see also: > https://github.com/git/git/commit/a90804752f6ab2b911882d47fafb6c2b78f447c3); > 3) ...anything else...? > >> But I haven't received >> any complaints that my outgoing emails are negatively affected by it >> (incoming are, but that's a different story...). If you received >> something mangled, Andy, please share the source of that email. I'm >> happy to escalate internally - and externally. > > I believe I see it in the same way as lore, i.e. > https://lore.kernel.org/linux-watchdog/d84f8e06-f646-8b43-d063-fb11f4827044@xxxxxxxxxxx/raw Perfect, then all is fine as it should be (and no time for O365 bashing, today). Jan -- Siemens AG, T RDA IOT Corporate Competence Center Embedded Linux