Hi Lukas, I'll review the file changes separately. This is just replying to the patch description comments. On 2/26/24 02:46, Lukas Bulwahn wrote: > While going through the submit checklist, the list order seemed rather > random, probably just by historical coincidences of always adding yet the > next point someone thought of at the end of the list. Probably. > Structure and order them by the category of such activity, > reviewing, documenting, checking with tools, building and testing. > > As the diff of the reordering is large: > Review code now includes previous points 1, 5 and 22. > Review Kconfig includes previous 6, 7 and 8. > Documenting includes previous 11, 15, 16, 17, 18 and 23. > Checking with tools includes previous 5, 9 and 10. > Building includes previous 2, 3, 20 and 24. > Testing includes previous 12, 13, 14, 19 and 21. > ... > > The recommendation to test with the -mm patchset (previous 21, now > testing, point 5) was updated to the current state of affairs to test with > a recent tag of linux-next. ack. > Note that the previous first point still remains the first list even after > reordering. Based on some vague memory, the first point was important to > Randy to stay the first one in any reordering. Yes, I have said that. Stephen Rothwell wanted it to be first in the list. > While at it, the reference to CONFIG_SLUB_DEBUG was replaced by > CONFIG_DEBUG_SLAB. I don't understand this comment. DEBUG_SLAB is gone. I think those 2 symbols might be reversed in your comments. ? > Signed-off-by: Lukas Bulwahn <lukas.bulwahn@xxxxxxxxx> > --- > So far, no point disappeared and nothing new was added. > That's a good start IMO. > Points/Ideas for further improvements (based on my knowledge and judgement): > > - The Review Kconfig changes makes sense, but I am not sure if they are > so central during review. If we keep it, let us see if there are other > parts for review that are also important similar to Kconfig changes. > > - Concerning checking with tools, checkpatch probably still makes sense; > it pointed out in several places. If sparse and checkstack are really > the next two tools to point out, I am not so sure about. I doubt that ckeckstack is important since gcc & clang warn us about stack usage. > sparse has a lot of false positives nowadays, and many things are not > fixed just because sparse complains about it. > And I have never used make checkstack and have not found much > documentation about it. > So, maybe other tools deserve to be mentioned here instead? > > I am happy to get feedback---I will work through submitting-patches next > and do some clean-up there. While doing that, I might learn what really > should go into a better future 'submit-checklist' documentation. > > Documentation/process/submit-checklist.rst | 157 +++++++++++---------- > 1 file changed, 84 insertions(+), 73 deletions(-) -- #Randy