Hi Dmitry, Thank-you very much for reaching out to the mailing list. The Linux kernel follows a structure for patch submissions. There’s a tutorial on github with a pdf and readmes. https://github.com/gregkh/kernel-tutorial Tutorial Videos on YouTube by GregKH are also very useful. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LLBrBBImJt4 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XXix80GCvpo These will give an overview of the entire process. It would be nice if you could push your current working kernel somewhere on a git server where we could see the patches and then provide guidance accordingly. If you don't have a public-facing git server. You could just push the code to a repository on github and share the link. Regards, ZubairLK On 14/04/16 15:43, Dmitry.Dunaev@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
Good day! I'm Dmitry Dunaev, software designer from Baikal Electronics - Russian semiconductor company (http://www.baikalelectronics.com/). Some time ago we are released our first MIPS processor based on P5600 core (https://www.linux-mips.org/wiki/Baikal). Now we have this SoC in silicon. Also we have released several revisions of development boards for our SoC. So it seems that we ready to add our platform code into Linux kernel mainline. Could you please clarify me what steps we should to do to add our code into kernel repositary? Best regards, Dmitry Dunaev http://www.baikalelectronics.com/