On 28/08/2023 19:56, Guru Das Srinagesh wrote: > On Aug 28 2023 10:21, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote: >> On 26/08/2023 10:07, Guru Das Srinagesh wrote: >>> This script runs get_maintainer.py on a given patch file (or multiple >>> patch files) and adds its output to the patch file in place with the >>> appropriate email headers "To: " or "Cc: " as the case may be. These new >>> headers are added after the "From: " line in the patch. >>> >>> Currently, for a single patch, maintainers and reviewers are added as >>> "To: ", mailing lists and all other roles are added as "Cc: ". >>> >>> For a series of patches, however, a set-union scheme is employed in >>> order to solve the all-too-common problem of ending up sending only >>> subsets of a patch series to some lists, which results in important >>> pieces of context such as the cover letter (or other patches in the >>> series) being dropped from those lists. This scheme is as follows: >>> >>> - Create set-union of all maintainers and reviewers from all patches and >>> use this to do the following per patch: >>> - add only that specific patch's maintainers and reviewers as "To: " >>> - add the other maintainers and reviewers from the other patches as "Cc: " >>> >>> - Create set-union of all mailing lists corresponding to all patches and >>> add this to all patches as "Cc: " >>> >>> - Create set-union of all other roles corresponding to all patches and >>> add this to all patches as "Cc: " >>> >>> Please note that patch files that don't have any "Maintainer"s or >>> "Reviewers" explicitly listed in their `get_maintainer.pl` output will >> >> So before you will ignoring the reviewers, right? One more reason to not >> get it right... > > In v2, Reviewers were added as "Cc:" whereas here in v3 they are added as > "To:". Not sure where you're getting "ignoring the reviewers" from. > >>> not have any "To: " entries added to them; developers are expected to >>> manually make edits to the added entries in such cases to convert some >>> "Cc: " entries to "To: " as desired. >>> >>> The script is quiet by default (only prints errors) and its verbosity >>> can be adjusted via an optional parameter. >>> >>> Signed-off-by: Guru Das Srinagesh <quic_gurus@xxxxxxxxxxx> >>> --- >>> MAINTAINERS | 5 ++ >>> scripts/add-maintainer.py | 164 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ >>> 2 files changed, 169 insertions(+) >>> create mode 100755 scripts/add-maintainer.py >>> >> >> I do not see the benefits of this script. For me - it's unnecessarily >> more complicated instead of my simple bash function which makes > > Your function adds mailing lists also in "To:" which is not ideal, in my view. > You've mentioned before that To or Cc doesn't matter [1] which I disagree > with: it doesn't matter, why does Cc exist as a concept at all? To/Cc does not matter when sending new patch, because maintainers know they are maintainers of which parts. I know what I handle. To/Cc still makes sense in other cases, when for example you ping someone asking for reviews. It also makes much more sense in all corpo-worlds where such distinction is obvious. We are not a corpo-world here. Best regards, Krzysztof