[PATCH v4 0/3] use wincap in format_proc_cpuinfo for user_shstk
Brian Inglis
Brian.Inglis@Shaw.ca
Wed Jun 21 15:04:24 GMT 2023
On 2023-06-21 02:22, Corinna Vinschen wrote:
> On Jun 20 22:50, Brian Inglis wrote:
>> On 2023-06-20 02:22, Corinna Vinschen wrote:
>>> Never mind, I fixed the remaining problems. Thanks for the patch,
>>> I pushed it with slight modifications to the commit messages.
>>>
>>> I'm a bit puzzled if my original mail
>>> https://cygwin.com/pipermail/cygwin-patches/2023q2/012280.html
>>> was really that unclear. Reiterating for the records:
>>>
>>> - Commit messages should really try to explain why the patch is made and
>>> what it's good for. In case of fixing a bug, the bug should be explained
>>> and, ideally, explain why the patch is the better solution.
>>>
>>> - If a patch fixes an older bug, it should say so and point out the
>>> commit which introduced the bug using the Fixes: tag. The format
>>> is
>>> Fixes: <12-digit-SHA1> ("<commit headline>")
>>>
>>> The parens and quoting chars are part of the format.
>>>
>>> - Every patch should contain a Signed-off-by: to indicate that
>>> you did the patch by yourself. That's easily automated by
>>> using `git commit -s'.
>>>
>>> - Other Tags like "Reported-by:" or "Tested-by:" are nice to have,
>>> but not essential.
>>
>>>> - For obvious reasons, the message text in your cover message won't make
>>>> it into the git repo. However, the commit messages in git should
>>>> reflect why the change was made, so a future interested reader has
>>>> a chance to understand why a change was made.
>>
>> Not obvious to me unfortunately!
>
> No worries, we're all learning while we're going along.
>
>> https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/process/submitting-patches.rst
>
> This is pretty well written, and it very nicely explains how to write
> commit messages and use tagging.
>
> Writing useful commit messages helps other people a lot to understand
> why a patch was made, especially in tricky error cases (locking issues
> are hard to follow, a good explanation is key).
>
> If you ask me, there's no such thing as a too long commit message.
>
> We're a small group so we're not supposed to follow the above document
> to the core. However, things like "Fixes:" are really great, because
> they connect a patch with a history of other patches and allow an aha
> effect when checking on the referenced older patch. I can honestely
> tell you that it already helped me a lot when working on the Linux
> kernel. That's why I'd like to make this standard for our small project
> here, too.
>
> And one of the core expressions used in this doc is this:
> Don't get discouraged - or impatient
> :)
Cheers - never discouraged - a bit impatient because often frustrated -
sometimes confused - like Alice and the White Knight's song "Haddocks' Eyes" -
finding that the /footers/ are sometimes called /headers/ and other times /tags/
but actually named *trailers* finally gave more useful results where /fixes/ did
not! ;^>
--
Take care. Thanks, Brian Inglis Calgary, Alberta, Canada
La perfection est atteinte Perfection is achieved
non pas lorsqu'il n'y a plus rien à ajouter not when there is no more to add
mais lorsqu'il n'y a plus rien à retirer but when there is no more to cut
-- Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
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