On Tue, Nov 05, 2024 at 05:52:05AM -0700, Jens Axboe wrote: > > Why is this so difficult to grasp? It's a pretty common method for > cross subsystem work - it avoids introducing conflicts when later > work goes into each subsystem, and freedom of either side to send a > PR before the other. > > So please don't start committing the patches again, it'll just cause > duplicate (and empty) commits in Linus's tree. Jens, what's going on is that in order to test untorn (aka "atomic" although that's a bit of a misnomer) writes, changes are needed in the block, vfs, and ext4 or xfs git trees. So we are aware that you had taken the block-related patches into the block tree. What Darrick has done is to apply the the vfs patches on top of the block commits, and then applied the ext4 and xfs patches on top of that. I'm willing to allow the ext4 patches to flow to Linus's tree without it personally going through the ext4 tree. If all Maintainers required that patches which touched their trees had to go through their respective trees, it would require multiple (strictly ordered) pull requests during the merge window, or multiple merge windows, to land these series. Since you insisted on the block changes had to go through the block tree, we're trying to accomodate you; and also (a) we don't want to have duplicate commits in Linus's tree; and at the same time, (b) but these patches have been waiting to land for almost two years, and we're also trying to make things land a bit more expeditiously. Cheers, - Ted