Patch Tracking
Overview
The primary place where KSPP patches are tracked is through our patchwork instance. This helps collect Reviewed-by, Acked-by, Tested-by, etc, tags in a single place to see status.
Process
The overview list shows patches that need some kind of work to move through the tracking process:
- Action Needed: Needs work from someone from the linux-hardening patchwork team.
The specific “state machine” we use follows this path:
- New:
No activity yet.
- Move to “Under Review” (possibly with a delegate assigned to do the review).
- Move to “Superseded” if a newer version of the same patch has been sent (the patchwork-bot usually does this automatically).
- Under
Review:
Reviewers need to give feedback on the patch.
- Move to “Changes Requested” if a new version of the patch is needed after review feedback.
- Move to “Needs ACK” if another subsystem is expected to take the patch into their tree.
- Move to “Handled Elsewhere” if a non-linux-hardening tree says they are applying the patch.
- Move to “Queued” if a linux-hardening tree applies the patch.
- Move to “Superseded” if a newer version of the same patch has been sent (the patchwork-bot usually does this automatically).
- Move to “In Next” if the patch appears in linux-next (the patchwork-bot usually does this automatically).
- In rare cases, a patch can be moved to “Rejected”, but that is uncommon, as normally review feedback is expected to be acted on.
- Queued:
Going via a linux-hardening tree, but not yet in linux-next.
- Move to “In Next” once a patch appears in linux-next (the patchwork-bot usually does this automatically).
- Needs
ACK:
Going via another tree, but not yet reviewed by maintainer.
- Move to “Handled Elsewhere” once other tree maintainer says they are applying the patch.
- Move to “In Next” once a patch appears in linux-next (the patchwork-bot usually does this automatically).
- Handled
Elsewhere:
Going via another tree, but not yet in linux-next.
- Move to “In Next” once a patch appears in linux-next (the patchwork-bot usually does this automatically).
- In
Next:
In linux-next, but not yet in Linus’s tree.
- Move to “Mainlined” once a patch appears in Linus’s tree (the patchwork-bot usually does this automatically).
- Mainlined: Done! In Linus’s tree.