Commit 81852018 authored by David S. Miller's avatar David S. Miller

Merge branch 'netdev-doc-defaq'

Jakub Kicinski says:

====================
netdev doc de-FAQization

We have outgrown the FAQ format for our process doc.
I often find myself struggling to locate information in this doc,
because the questions do not serve well as section headers.
Reformat the document.

v2: update the headers
v1: https://lore.kernel.org/all/20221221184007.1170384-1-kuba@kernel.org/
====================
Signed-off-by: default avatarDavid S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
parents 0e50d999 ff249be5
......@@ -2,9 +2,9 @@
.. _netdev-FAQ:
==========
netdev FAQ
==========
=============================
Networking subsystem (netdev)
=============================
tl;dr
-----
......@@ -15,14 +15,15 @@ tl;dr
- don't repost your patches within one 24h period
- reverse xmas tree
What is netdev?
---------------
It is a mailing list for all network-related Linux stuff. This
netdev
------
netdev is a mailing list for all network-related Linux stuff. This
includes anything found under net/ (i.e. core code like IPv6) and
drivers/net (i.e. hardware specific drivers) in the Linux source tree.
Note that some subsystems (e.g. wireless drivers) which have a high
volume of traffic have their own specific mailing lists.
volume of traffic have their own specific mailing lists and trees.
The netdev list is managed (like many other Linux mailing lists) through
VGER (http://vger.kernel.org/) with archives available at
......@@ -32,32 +33,10 @@ Aside from subsystems like those mentioned above, all network-related
Linux development (i.e. RFC, review, comments, etc.) takes place on
netdev.
How do the changes posted to netdev make their way into Linux?
--------------------------------------------------------------
There are always two trees (git repositories) in play. Both are
driven by David Miller, the main network maintainer. There is the
``net`` tree, and the ``net-next`` tree. As you can probably guess from
the names, the ``net`` tree is for fixes to existing code already in the
mainline tree from Linus, and ``net-next`` is where the new code goes
for the future release. You can find the trees here:
- https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/netdev/net.git
- https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/netdev/net-next.git
How do I indicate which tree (net vs. net-next) my patch should be in?
----------------------------------------------------------------------
To help maintainers and CI bots you should explicitly mark which tree
your patch is targeting. Assuming that you use git, use the prefix
flag::
git format-patch --subject-prefix='PATCH net-next' start..finish
Development cycle
-----------------
Use ``net`` instead of ``net-next`` (always lower case) in the above for
bug-fix ``net`` content.
How often do changes from these trees make it to the mainline Linus tree?
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
To understand this, you need to know a bit of background information on
Here is a bit of background information on
the cadence of Linux development. Each new release starts off with a
two week "merge window" where the main maintainers feed their new stuff
to Linus for merging into the mainline tree. After the two weeks, the
......@@ -69,9 +48,33 @@ rc2 is released. This repeats on a roughly weekly basis until rc7
state of churn), and a week after the last vX.Y-rcN was done, the
official vX.Y is released.
Relating that to netdev: At the beginning of the 2-week merge window,
the ``net-next`` tree will be closed - no new changes/features. The
accumulated new content of the past ~10 weeks will be passed onto
To find out where we are now in the cycle - load the mainline (Linus)
page here:
https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git
and note the top of the "tags" section. If it is rc1, it is early in
the dev cycle. If it was tagged rc7 a week ago, then a release is
probably imminent. If the most recent tag is a final release tag
(without an ``-rcN`` suffix) - we are most likely in a merge window
and ``net-next`` is closed.
git trees and patch flow
------------------------
There are two networking trees (git repositories) in play. Both are
driven by David Miller, the main network maintainer. There is the
``net`` tree, and the ``net-next`` tree. As you can probably guess from
the names, the ``net`` tree is for fixes to existing code already in the
mainline tree from Linus, and ``net-next`` is where the new code goes
for the future release. You can find the trees here:
- https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/netdev/net.git
- https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/netdev/net-next.git
Relating that to kernel development: At the beginning of the 2-week
merge window, the ``net-next`` tree will be closed - no new changes/features.
The accumulated new content of the past ~10 weeks will be passed onto
mainline/Linus via a pull request for vX.Y -- at the same time, the
``net`` tree will start accumulating fixes for this pulled content
relating to vX.Y
......@@ -103,22 +106,14 @@ focus for ``net`` is on stabilization and bug fixes.
Finally, the vX.Y gets released, and the whole cycle starts over.
So where are we now in this cycle?
----------------------------------
netdev patch review
-------------------
Load the mainline (Linus) page here:
Patch status
~~~~~~~~~~~~
https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git
and note the top of the "tags" section. If it is rc1, it is early in
the dev cycle. If it was tagged rc7 a week ago, then a release is
probably imminent. If the most recent tag is a final release tag
(without an ``-rcN`` suffix) - we are most likely in a merge window
and ``net-next`` is closed.
How can I tell the status of a patch I've sent?
-----------------------------------------------
Start by looking at the main patchworks queue for netdev:
Status of a patch can be checked by looking at the main patchwork
queue for netdev:
https://patchwork.kernel.org/project/netdevbpf/list/
......@@ -127,73 +122,141 @@ patch. Patches are indexed by the ``Message-ID`` header of the emails
which carried them so if you have trouble finding your patch append
the value of ``Message-ID`` to the URL above.
How long before my patch is accepted?
-------------------------------------
Generally speaking, the patches get triaged quickly (in less than
48h). But be patient, if your patch is active in patchwork (i.e. it's
listed on the project's patch list) the chances it was missed are close to zero.
Asking the maintainer for status updates on your
patch is a good way to ensure your patch is ignored or pushed to the
bottom of the priority list.
Updating patch status
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Should I directly update patchwork state of my own patches?
-----------------------------------------------------------
It may be tempting to help the maintainers and update the state of your
own patches when you post a new version or spot a bug. Please do not do that.
own patches when you post a new version or spot a bug. Please **do not**
do that.
Interfering with the patch status on patchwork will only cause confusion. Leave
it to the maintainer to figure out what is the most recent and current
version that should be applied. If there is any doubt, the maintainer
will reply and ask what should be done.
How do I divide my work into patches?
-------------------------------------
Review timelines
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Put yourself in the shoes of the reviewer. Each patch is read separately
and therefore should constitute a comprehensible step towards your stated
goal.
Generally speaking, the patches get triaged quickly (in less than
48h). But be patient, if your patch is active in patchwork (i.e. it's
listed on the project's patch list) the chances it was missed are close to zero.
Asking the maintainer for status updates on your
patch is a good way to ensure your patch is ignored or pushed to the
bottom of the priority list.
Avoid sending series longer than 15 patches. Larger series takes longer
to review as reviewers will defer looking at it until they find a large
chunk of time. A small series can be reviewed in a short time, so Maintainers
just do it. As a result, a sequence of smaller series gets merged quicker and
with better review coverage. Re-posting large series also increases the mailing
list traffic.
Partial resends
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I made changes to only a few patches in a patch series should I resend only those changed?
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
No, please resend the entire patch series and make sure you do number your
Please always resend the entire patch series and make sure you do number your
patches such that it is clear this is the latest and greatest set of patches
that can be applied.
I have received review feedback, when should I post a revised version of the patches?
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Allow at least 24 hours to pass between postings. This will ensure reviewers
from all geographical locations have a chance to chime in. Do not wait
too long (weeks) between postings either as it will make it harder for reviewers
to recall all the context.
that can be applied. Do not try to resend just the patches which changed.
Make sure you address all the feedback in your new posting. Do not post a new
version of the code if the discussion about the previous version is still
ongoing, unless directly instructed by a reviewer.
Handling misapplied patches
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I submitted multiple versions of a patch series and it looks like a version other than the last one has been accepted, what should I do?
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Occasionally a patch series gets applied before receiving critical feedback,
or the wrong version of a series gets applied.
There is no revert possible, once it is pushed out, it stays like that.
Please send incremental versions on top of what has been merged in order to fix
the patches the way they would look like if your latest patch series was to be
merged.
Are there special rules regarding stable submissions on netdev?
---------------------------------------------------------------
Stable tree
~~~~~~~~~~~
While it used to be the case that netdev submissions were not supposed
to carry explicit ``CC: stable@vger.kernel.org`` tags that is no longer
the case today. Please follow the standard stable rules in
:ref:`Documentation/process/stable-kernel-rules.rst <stable_kernel_rules>`,
and make sure you include appropriate Fixes tags!
Is the comment style convention different for the networking content?
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Yes, in a largely trivial way. Instead of this::
Security fixes
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Do not email netdev maintainers directly if you think you discovered
a bug that might have possible security implications.
The current netdev maintainer has consistently requested that
people use the mailing lists and not reach out directly. If you aren't
OK with that, then perhaps consider mailing security@kernel.org or
reading about http://oss-security.openwall.org/wiki/mailing-lists/distros
as possible alternative mechanisms.
Co-posting changes to user space components
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
User space code exercising kernel features should be posted
alongside kernel patches. This gives reviewers a chance to see
how any new interface is used and how well it works.
When user space tools reside in the kernel repo itself all changes
should generally come as one series. If series becomes too large
or the user space project is not reviewed on netdev include a link
to a public repo where user space patches can be seen.
In case user space tooling lives in a separate repository but is
reviewed on netdev (e.g. patches to ``iproute2`` tools) kernel and
user space patches should form separate series (threads) when posted
to the mailing list, e.g.::
[PATCH net-next 0/3] net: some feature cover letter
└─ [PATCH net-next 1/3] net: some feature prep
└─ [PATCH net-next 2/3] net: some feature do it
└─ [PATCH net-next 3/3] selftest: net: some feature
[PATCH iproute2-next] ip: add support for some feature
Posting as one thread is discouraged because it confuses patchwork
(as of patchwork 2.2.2).
Preparing changes
-----------------
Attention to detail is important. Re-read your own work as if you were the
reviewer. You can start with using ``checkpatch.pl``, perhaps even with
the ``--strict`` flag. But do not be mindlessly robotic in doing so.
If your change is a bug fix, make sure your commit log indicates the
end-user visible symptom, the underlying reason as to why it happens,
and then if necessary, explain why the fix proposed is the best way to
get things done. Don't mangle whitespace, and as is common, don't
mis-indent function arguments that span multiple lines. If it is your
first patch, mail it to yourself so you can test apply it to an
unpatched tree to confirm infrastructure didn't mangle it.
Finally, go back and read
:ref:`Documentation/process/submitting-patches.rst <submittingpatches>`
to be sure you are not repeating some common mistake documented there.
Indicating target tree
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
To help maintainers and CI bots you should explicitly mark which tree
your patch is targeting. Assuming that you use git, use the prefix
flag::
git format-patch --subject-prefix='PATCH net-next' start..finish
Use ``net`` instead of ``net-next`` (always lower case) in the above for
bug-fix ``net`` content.
Dividing work into patches
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Put yourself in the shoes of the reviewer. Each patch is read separately
and therefore should constitute a comprehensible step towards your stated
goal.
Avoid sending series longer than 15 patches. Larger series takes longer
to review as reviewers will defer looking at it until they find a large
chunk of time. A small series can be reviewed in a short time, so Maintainers
just do it. As a result, a sequence of smaller series gets merged quicker and
with better review coverage. Re-posting large series also increases the mailing
list traffic.
Multi-line comments
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Comment style convention is slightly different for networking and most of
the tree. Instead of this::
/*
* foobar blah blah blah
......@@ -206,8 +269,8 @@ it is requested that you make it look like this::
* another line of text
*/
What is "reverse xmas tree"?
----------------------------
Local variable ordering ("reverse xmas tree", "RCS")
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Netdev has a convention for ordering local variables in functions.
Order the variable declaration lines longest to shortest, e.g.::
......@@ -219,21 +282,31 @@ Order the variable declaration lines longest to shortest, e.g.::
If there are dependencies between the variables preventing the ordering
move the initialization out of line.
I am working in existing code which uses non-standard formatting. Which formatting should I use?
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Make your code follow the most recent guidelines, so that eventually all code
Format precedence
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
When working in existing code which uses nonstandard formatting make
your code follow the most recent guidelines, so that eventually all code
in the domain of netdev is in the preferred format.
I found a bug that might have possible security implications or similar. Should I mail the main netdev maintainer off-list?
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
No. The current netdev maintainer has consistently requested that
people use the mailing lists and not reach out directly. If you aren't
OK with that, then perhaps consider mailing security@kernel.org or
reading about http://oss-security.openwall.org/wiki/mailing-lists/distros
as possible alternative mechanisms.
Resending after review
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Allow at least 24 hours to pass between postings. This will ensure reviewers
from all geographical locations have a chance to chime in. Do not wait
too long (weeks) between postings either as it will make it harder for reviewers
to recall all the context.
Make sure you address all the feedback in your new posting. Do not post a new
version of the code if the discussion about the previous version is still
ongoing, unless directly instructed by a reviewer.
Testing
-------
Expected level of testing
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
What level of testing is expected before I submit my change?
------------------------------------------------------------
At the very minimum your changes must survive an ``allyesconfig`` and an
``allmodconfig`` build with ``W=1`` set without new warnings or failures.
......@@ -244,86 +317,42 @@ and the patch series contains a set of kernel selftest for
You are expected to test your changes on top of the relevant networking
tree (``net`` or ``net-next``) and not e.g. a stable tree or ``linux-next``.
How do I post corresponding changes to user space components?
-------------------------------------------------------------
User space code exercising kernel features should be posted
alongside kernel patches. This gives reviewers a chance to see
how any new interface is used and how well it works.
When user space tools reside in the kernel repo itself all changes
should generally come as one series. If series becomes too large
or the user space project is not reviewed on netdev include a link
to a public repo where user space patches can be seen.
In case user space tooling lives in a separate repository but is
reviewed on netdev (e.g. patches to ``iproute2`` tools) kernel and
user space patches should form separate series (threads) when posted
to the mailing list, e.g.::
[PATCH net-next 0/3] net: some feature cover letter
└─ [PATCH net-next 1/3] net: some feature prep
└─ [PATCH net-next 2/3] net: some feature do it
└─ [PATCH net-next 3/3] selftest: net: some feature
[PATCH iproute2-next] ip: add support for some feature
Posting as one thread is discouraged because it confuses patchwork
(as of patchwork 2.2.2).
Can I reproduce the checks from patchwork on my local machine?
--------------------------------------------------------------
patchwork checks
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Checks in patchwork are mostly simple wrappers around existing kernel
scripts, the sources are available at:
https://github.com/kuba-moo/nipa/tree/master/tests
Running all the builds and checks locally is a pain, can I post my patches and have the patchwork bot validate them?
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
No, you must ensure that your patches are ready by testing them locally
**Do not** post your patches just to run them through the checks.
You must ensure that your patches are ready by testing them locally
before posting to the mailing list. The patchwork build bot instance
gets overloaded very easily and netdev@vger really doesn't need more
traffic if we can help it.
netdevsim is great, can I extend it for my out-of-tree tests?
-------------------------------------------------------------
netdevsim
~~~~~~~~~
No, ``netdevsim`` is a test vehicle solely for upstream tests.
(Please add your tests under ``tools/testing/selftests/``.)
``netdevsim`` is a test driver which can be used to exercise driver
configuration APIs without requiring capable hardware.
Mock-ups and tests based on ``netdevsim`` are strongly encouraged when
adding new APIs, but ``netdevsim`` in itself is **not** considered
a use case/user. You must also implement the new APIs in a real driver.
We also give no guarantees that ``netdevsim`` won't change in the future
We give no guarantees that ``netdevsim`` won't change in the future
in a way which would break what would normally be considered uAPI.
Is netdevsim considered a "user" of an API?
-------------------------------------------
Linux kernel has a long standing rule that no API should be added unless
it has a real, in-tree user. Mock-ups and tests based on ``netdevsim`` are
strongly encouraged when adding new APIs, but ``netdevsim`` in itself
is **not** considered a use case/user.
Any other tips to help ensure my net/net-next patch gets OK'd?
--------------------------------------------------------------
Attention to detail. Re-read your own work as if you were the
reviewer. You can start with using ``checkpatch.pl``, perhaps even with
the ``--strict`` flag. But do not be mindlessly robotic in doing so.
If your change is a bug fix, make sure your commit log indicates the
end-user visible symptom, the underlying reason as to why it happens,
and then if necessary, explain why the fix proposed is the best way to
get things done. Don't mangle whitespace, and as is common, don't
mis-indent function arguments that span multiple lines. If it is your
first patch, mail it to yourself so you can test apply it to an
unpatched tree to confirm infrastructure didn't mangle it.
Finally, go back and read
:ref:`Documentation/process/submitting-patches.rst <submittingpatches>`
to be sure you are not repeating some common mistake documented there.
``netdevsim`` is reserved for use by upstream tests only, so any
new ``netdevsim`` features must be accompanied by selftests under
``tools/testing/selftests/``.
My company uses peer feedback in employee performance reviews. Can I ask netdev maintainers for feedback?
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Testimonials / feedback
-----------------------
Yes, especially if you spend significant amount of time reviewing code
Some companies use peer feedback in employee performance reviews.
Please feel free to request feedback from netdev maintainers,
especially if you spend significant amount of time reviewing code
and go out of your way to improve shared infrastructure.
The feedback must be requested by you, the contributor, and will always
......
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