On 30/10/2020 14:44, Sasha Levin wrote:
On Fri, Oct 30, 2020 at 10:14:16AM +0100, Greg Kroah-Hartman wrote:
On Fri, Oct 30, 2020 at 09:49:15AM +0100, Greg Kroah-Hartman wrote:
On Fri, Oct 30, 2020 at 09:26:54AM +0100, Pavel Machek wrote:
> Hi!
>
> > I'm announcing the release of the 4.19.153 kernel.
> >
> > All users of the 4.19 kernel series must upgrade.
> >
> > The updated 4.19.y git tree can be found at:
> >
git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/stable/linux-stable.git
linux-4.19.y
> > and can be browsed at the normal kernel.org git web browser:
> >
https://git.kernel.org/?p=linux/kernel/git/stable/linux-stable.git;a=summary
>
> Did something go seriously wrong here?
>
> The original 4.19.153-rc1 series had 264 patches. "powerpc/tau: Remove
> duplicated set_thresholds() call" is 146/264 of the series, but it is
> last one in 4.19.153 as released. "178/264 ext4: limit entries
> returned when counting...", for example, is not present in
> 4.19.153... as are others, for example "net: korina: cast KSEG0
> address to pointer in kfree". Looks like 118 or so patches are
> missing.
>
> They are not in origin/queue/4.19, either.
Wow, something did go wrong here, thanks for catching this.
Let me dig and see what happened, the whole series did not apply, which
makes me wonder if the same thing happened for other branches as well...
thanks for checking up and finding this.
Give me a bit...
Ok, figure3d it out.
Sasha changed a powerpc patch to build properly but didn't realize that
later powerpc patches would not apply because of that. I didn't run my
"apply all patches to make sure they are clean" script before doing the
release after he did that, so 'git quiltimport' failed when applying the
series at the place where the powerpc path failed to apply.
My scripts don't check for the result of 'git quiltimport' being
successful or not (I don't even know if it return an error for this type
of thing), and just moved on in the release process.
I'll go do a new 4.19 release with the rest of the patches missed here,
thank you for finding this.
And I'll go make my release scripts more robust to failures like this as
well.
thanks so much!
You're right, sorry :( And thanks Pavel!
Hey Greg and Sasha, just want to express my gratitude for all the work
you guys do maintaining a gazillion stable kernels :-) There is bound to
be a hiccup in the process every once in a while.