Merge tag 'for-5.20/block-2022-07-29' of git://git.kernel.dk/linux-block
[linux-block.git] / Documentation / process / maintainer-tip.rst
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1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
2
3The tip tree handbook
4=====================
5
6What is the tip tree?
7---------------------
8
9The tip tree is a collection of several subsystems and areas of
10development. The tip tree is both a direct development tree and a
11aggregation tree for several sub-maintainer trees. The tip tree gitweb URL
12is: https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip.git
13
14The tip tree contains the following subsystems:
15
16 - **x86 architecture**
17
18 The x86 architecture development takes place in the tip tree except
19 for the x86 KVM and XEN specific parts which are maintained in the
20 corresponding subsystems and routed directly to mainline from
21 there. It's still good practice to Cc the x86 maintainers on
22 x86-specific KVM and XEN patches.
23
24 Some x86 subsystems have their own maintainers in addition to the
25 overall x86 maintainers. Please Cc the overall x86 maintainers on
26 patches touching files in arch/x86 even when they are not called out
27 by the MAINTAINER file.
28
29 Note, that ``x86@kernel.org`` is not a mailing list. It is merely a
30 mail alias which distributes mails to the x86 top-level maintainer
31 team. Please always Cc the Linux Kernel mailing list (LKML)
32 ``linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org``, otherwise your mail ends up only in
33 the private inboxes of the maintainers.
34
35 - **Scheduler**
36
37 Scheduler development takes place in the -tip tree, in the
38 sched/core branch - with occasional sub-topic trees for
39 work-in-progress patch-sets.
40
41 - **Locking and atomics**
42
43 Locking development (including atomics and other synchronization
44 primitives that are connected to locking) takes place in the -tip
45 tree, in the locking/core branch - with occasional sub-topic trees
46 for work-in-progress patch-sets.
47
48 - **Generic interrupt subsystem and interrupt chip drivers**:
49
50 - interrupt core development happens in the irq/core branch
51
52 - interrupt chip driver development also happens in the irq/core
53 branch, but the patches are usually applied in a separate maintainer
54 tree and then aggregated into irq/core
55
56 - **Time, timers, timekeeping, NOHZ and related chip drivers**:
57
58 - timekeeping, clocksource core, NTP and alarmtimer development
59 happens in the timers/core branch, but patches are usually applied in
60 a separate maintainer tree and then aggregated into timers/core
61
62 - clocksource/event driver development happens in the timers/core
63 branch, but patches are mostly applied in a separate maintainer tree
64 and then aggregated into timers/core
65
66 - **Performance counters core, architecture support and tooling**:
67
68 - perf core and architecture support development happens in the
69 perf/core branch
70
71 - perf tooling development happens in the perf tools maintainer
72 tree and is aggregated into the tip tree.
73
74 - **CPU hotplug core**
75
76 - **RAS core**
77
78 Mostly x86-specific RAS patches are collected in the tip ras/core
79 branch.
80
81 - **EFI core**
82
83 EFI development in the efi git tree. The collected patches are
84 aggregated in the tip efi/core branch.
85
86 - **RCU**
87
88 RCU development happens in the linux-rcu tree. The resulting changes
89 are aggregated into the tip core/rcu branch.
90
91 - **Various core code components**:
92
93 - debugobjects
94
95 - objtool
96
97 - random bits and pieces
98
99
100Patch submission notes
101----------------------
102
103Selecting the tree/branch
104^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
105
106In general, development against the head of the tip tree master branch is
107fine, but for the subsystems which are maintained separately, have their
108own git tree and are only aggregated into the tip tree, development should
109take place against the relevant subsystem tree or branch.
110
111Bug fixes which target mainline should always be applicable against the
112mainline kernel tree. Potential conflicts against changes which are already
113queued in the tip tree are handled by the maintainers.
114
115Patch subject
116^^^^^^^^^^^^^
117
118The tip tree preferred format for patch subject prefixes is
119'subsys/component:', e.g. 'x86/apic:', 'x86/mm/fault:', 'sched/fair:',
120'genirq/core:'. Please do not use file names or complete file paths as
121prefix. 'git log path/to/file' should give you a reasonable hint in most
122cases.
123
124The condensed patch description in the subject line should start with a
125uppercase letter and should be written in imperative tone.
126
127
128Changelog
129^^^^^^^^^
130
131The general rules about changelogs in the process documentation, see
132:ref:`Documentation/process/ <submittingpatches>`, apply.
133
134The tip tree maintainers set value on following these rules, especially on
135the request to write changelogs in imperative mood and not impersonating
136code or the execution of it. This is not just a whim of the
137maintainers. Changelogs written in abstract words are more precise and
138tend to be less confusing than those written in the form of novels.
139
140It's also useful to structure the changelog into several paragraphs and not
141lump everything together into a single one. A good structure is to explain
142the context, the problem and the solution in separate paragraphs and this
143order.
144
145Examples for illustration:
146
147 Example 1::
148
149 x86/intel_rdt/mbm: Fix MBM overflow handler during hot cpu
150
151 When a CPU is dying, we cancel the worker and schedule a new worker on a
152 different CPU on the same domain. But if the timer is already about to
153 expire (say 0.99s) then we essentially double the interval.
154
155 We modify the hot cpu handling to cancel the delayed work on the dying
156 cpu and run the worker immediately on a different cpu in same domain. We
157 donot flush the worker because the MBM overflow worker reschedules the
158 worker on same CPU and scans the domain->cpu_mask to get the domain
159 pointer.
160
161 Improved version::
162
163 x86/intel_rdt/mbm: Fix MBM overflow handler during CPU hotplug
164
165 When a CPU is dying, the overflow worker is canceled and rescheduled on a
166 different CPU in the same domain. But if the timer is already about to
167 expire this essentially doubles the interval which might result in a non
168 detected overflow.
169
170 Cancel the overflow worker and reschedule it immediately on a different CPU
171 in the same domain. The work could be flushed as well, but that would
172 reschedule it on the same CPU.
173
174 Example 2::
175
176 time: POSIX CPU timers: Ensure that variable is initialized
177
178 If cpu_timer_sample_group returns -EINVAL, it will not have written into
179 *sample. Checking for cpu_timer_sample_group's return value precludes the
180 potential use of an uninitialized value of now in the following block.
181 Given an invalid clock_idx, the previous code could otherwise overwrite
182 *oldval in an undefined manner. This is now prevented. We also exploit
183 short-circuiting of && to sample the timer only if the result will
184 actually be used to update *oldval.
185
186 Improved version::
187
188 posix-cpu-timers: Make set_process_cpu_timer() more robust
189
190 Because the return value of cpu_timer_sample_group() is not checked,
191 compilers and static checkers can legitimately warn about a potential use
192 of the uninitialized variable 'now'. This is not a runtime issue as all
193 call sites hand in valid clock ids.
194
195 Also cpu_timer_sample_group() is invoked unconditionally even when the
196 result is not used because *oldval is NULL.
197
198 Make the invocation conditional and check the return value.
199
200 Example 3::
201
202 The entity can also be used for other purposes.
203
204 Let's rename it to be more generic.
205
206 Improved version::
207
208 The entity can also be used for other purposes.
209
210 Rename it to be more generic.
211
212
213For complex scenarios, especially race conditions and memory ordering
214issues, it is valuable to depict the scenario with a table which shows
215the parallelism and the temporal order of events. Here is an example::
216
217 CPU0 CPU1
218 free_irq(X) interrupt X
219 spin_lock(desc->lock)
220 wake irq thread()
221 spin_unlock(desc->lock)
222 spin_lock(desc->lock)
223 remove action()
224 shutdown_irq()
225 release_resources() thread_handler()
226 spin_unlock(desc->lock) access released resources.
227 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
228 synchronize_irq()
229
230Lockdep provides similar useful output to depict a possible deadlock
231scenario::
232
233 CPU0 CPU1
234 rtmutex_lock(&rcu->rt_mutex)
235 spin_lock(&rcu->rt_mutex.wait_lock)
236 local_irq_disable()
237 spin_lock(&timer->it_lock)
238 spin_lock(&rcu->mutex.wait_lock)
239 --> Interrupt
240 spin_lock(&timer->it_lock)
241
242
243Function references in changelogs
244^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
245
246When a function is mentioned in the changelog, either the text body or the
247subject line, please use the format 'function_name()'. Omitting the
248brackets after the function name can be ambiguous::
249
250 Subject: subsys/component: Make reservation_count static
251
252 reservation_count is only used in reservation_stats. Make it static.
253
254The variant with brackets is more precise::
255
256 Subject: subsys/component: Make reservation_count() static
257
258 reservation_count() is only called from reservation_stats(). Make it
259 static.
260
261
262Backtraces in changelogs
263^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
264
265See :ref:`backtraces`.
266
267Ordering of commit tags
268^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
269
270To have a uniform view of the commit tags, the tip maintainers use the
271following tag ordering scheme:
272
273 - Fixes: 12char-SHA1 ("sub/sys: Original subject line")
274
275 A Fixes tag should be added even for changes which do not need to be
276 backported to stable kernels, i.e. when addressing a recently introduced
277 issue which only affects tip or the current head of mainline. These tags
278 are helpful to identify the original commit and are much more valuable
279 than prominently mentioning the commit which introduced a problem in the
280 text of the changelog itself because they can be automatically
281 extracted.
282
283 The following example illustrates the difference::
284
285 Commit
286
287 abcdef012345678 ("x86/xxx: Replace foo with bar")
288
289 left an unused instance of variable foo around. Remove it.
290
291 Signed-off-by: J.Dev <j.dev@mail>
292
293 Please say instead::
294
295 The recent replacement of foo with bar left an unused instance of
296 variable foo around. Remove it.
297
298 Fixes: abcdef012345678 ("x86/xxx: Replace foo with bar")
299 Signed-off-by: J.Dev <j.dev@mail>
300
301 The latter puts the information about the patch into the focus and
302 amends it with the reference to the commit which introduced the issue
303 rather than putting the focus on the original commit in the first place.
304
305 - Reported-by: ``Reporter <reporter@mail>``
306
307 - Originally-by: ``Original author <original-author@mail>``
308
309 - Suggested-by: ``Suggester <suggester@mail>``
310
311 - Co-developed-by: ``Co-author <co-author@mail>``
312
313 Signed-off: ``Co-author <co-author@mail>``
314
315 Note, that Co-developed-by and Signed-off-by of the co-author(s) must
316 come in pairs.
317
318 - Signed-off-by: ``Author <author@mail>``
319
320 The first Signed-off-by (SOB) after the last Co-developed-by/SOB pair is the
321 author SOB, i.e. the person flagged as author by git.
322
323 - Signed-off-by: ``Patch handler <handler@mail>``
324
325 SOBs after the author SOB are from people handling and transporting
326 the patch, but were not involved in development. SOB chains should
327 reflect the **real** route a patch took as it was propagated to us,
328 with the first SOB entry signalling primary authorship of a single
329 author. Acks should be given as Acked-by lines and review approvals
330 as Reviewed-by lines.
331
332 If the handler made modifications to the patch or the changelog, then
333 this should be mentioned **after** the changelog text and **above**
334 all commit tags in the following format::
335
336 ... changelog text ends.
337
338 [ handler: Replaced foo by bar and updated changelog ]
339
340 First-tag: .....
341
342 Note the two empty new lines which separate the changelog text and the
343 commit tags from that notice.
344
345 If a patch is sent to the mailing list by a handler then the author has
346 to be noted in the first line of the changelog with::
347
348 From: Author <author@mail>
349
350 Changelog text starts here....
351
352 so the authorship is preserved. The 'From:' line has to be followed
353 by a empty newline. If that 'From:' line is missing, then the patch
354 would be attributed to the person who sent (transported, handled) it.
355 The 'From:' line is automatically removed when the patch is applied
356 and does not show up in the final git changelog. It merely affects
357 the authorship information of the resulting Git commit.
358
359 - Tested-by: ``Tester <tester@mail>``
360
361 - Reviewed-by: ``Reviewer <reviewer@mail>``
362
363 - Acked-by: ``Acker <acker@mail>``
364
365 - Cc: ``cc-ed-person <person@mail>``
366
367 If the patch should be backported to stable, then please add a '``Cc:
368 stable@vger.kernel.org``' tag, but do not Cc stable when sending your
369 mail.
370
371 - Link: ``https://link/to/information``
372
373 For referring to an email on LKML or other kernel mailing lists,
a9d85efb 374 please use the lore.kernel.org redirector URL::
31c9d7c8 375
a9d85efb 376 https://lore.kernel.org/r/email-message@id
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377
378 The kernel.org redirector is considered a stable URL, unlike other email
379 archives.
380
381 Maintainers will add a Link tag referencing the email of the patch
382 submission when they apply a patch to the tip tree. This tag is useful
383 for later reference and is also used for commit notifications.
384
385Please do not use combined tags, e.g. ``Reported-and-tested-by``, as
386they just complicate automated extraction of tags.
387
388
389Links to documentation
390^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
391
392Providing links to documentation in the changelog is a great help to later
393debugging and analysis. Unfortunately, URLs often break very quickly
394because companies restructure their websites frequently. Non-'volatile'
395exceptions include the Intel SDM and the AMD APM.
396
397Therefore, for 'volatile' documents, please create an entry in the kernel
398bugzilla https://bugzilla.kernel.org and attach a copy of these documents
399to the bugzilla entry. Finally, provide the URL of the bugzilla entry in
400the changelog.
401
402Patch resend or reminders
403^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
404
405See :ref:`resend_reminders`.
406
407Merge window
408^^^^^^^^^^^^
409
410Please do not expect large patch series to be handled during the merge
411window or even during the week before. Such patches should be submitted in
412mergeable state *at* *least* a week before the merge window opens.
413Exceptions are made for bug fixes and *sometimes* for small standalone
414drivers for new hardware or minimally invasive patches for hardware
415enablement.
416
417During the merge window, the maintainers instead focus on following the
418upstream changes, fixing merge window fallout, collecting bug fixes, and
419allowing themselves a breath. Please respect that.
420
421The release candidate -rc1 is the starting point for new patches to be
422applied which are targeted for the next merge window.
423
424
425Git
426^^^
427
428The tip maintainers accept git pull requests from maintainers who provide
429subsystem changes for aggregation in the tip tree.
430
431Pull requests for new patch submissions are usually not accepted and do not
432replace proper patch submission to the mailing list. The main reason for
433this is that the review workflow is email based.
434
435If you submit a larger patch series it is helpful to provide a git branch
436in a private repository which allows interested people to easily pull the
437series for testing. The usual way to offer this is a git URL in the cover
438letter of the patch series.
439
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440Testing
441^^^^^^^
442
443Code should be tested before submitting to the tip maintainers. Anything
444other than minor changes should be built, booted and tested with
445comprehensive (and heavyweight) kernel debugging options enabled.
446
447These debugging options can be found in kernel/configs/x86_debug.config
448and can be added to an existing kernel config by running:
449
450 make x86_debug.config
451
452Some of these options are x86-specific and can be left out when testing
453on other architectures.
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454
455Coding style notes
456------------------
457
458Comment style
459^^^^^^^^^^^^^
460
461Sentences in comments start with an uppercase letter.
462
463Single line comments::
464
465 /* This is a single line comment */
466
467Multi-line comments::
468
469 /*
470 * This is a properly formatted
471 * multi-line comment.
472 *
473 * Larger multi-line comments should be split into paragraphs.
474 */
475
476No tail comments:
477
478 Please refrain from using tail comments. Tail comments disturb the
479 reading flow in almost all contexts, but especially in code::
480
481 if (somecondition_is_true) /* Don't put a comment here */
482 dostuff(); /* Neither here */
483
484 seed = MAGIC_CONSTANT; /* Nor here */
485
486 Use freestanding comments instead::
487
488 /* This condition is not obvious without a comment */
489 if (somecondition_is_true) {
490 /* This really needs to be documented */
491 dostuff();
492 }
493
494 /* This magic initialization needs a comment. Maybe not? */
495 seed = MAGIC_CONSTANT;
496
497Comment the important things:
498
499 Comments should be added where the operation is not obvious. Documenting
500 the obvious is just a distraction::
501
502 /* Decrement refcount and check for zero */
503 if (refcount_dec_and_test(&p->refcnt)) {
504 do;
505 lots;
506 of;
507 magic;
508 things;
509 }
510
511 Instead, comments should explain the non-obvious details and document
512 constraints::
513
514 if (refcount_dec_and_test(&p->refcnt)) {
515 /*
516 * Really good explanation why the magic things below
517 * need to be done, ordering and locking constraints,
518 * etc..
519 */
520 do;
521 lots;
522 of;
523 magic;
524 /* Needs to be the last operation because ... */
525 things;
526 }
527
528Function documentation comments:
529
530 To document functions and their arguments please use kernel-doc format
531 and not free form comments::
532
533 /**
534 * magic_function - Do lots of magic stuff
535 * @magic: Pointer to the magic data to operate on
536 * @offset: Offset in the data array of @magic
537 *
538 * Deep explanation of mysterious things done with @magic along
539 * with documentation of the return values.
540 *
541 * Note, that the argument descriptors above are arranged
542 * in a tabular fashion.
543 */
544
545 This applies especially to globally visible functions and inline
546 functions in public header files. It might be overkill to use kernel-doc
547 format for every (static) function which needs a tiny explanation. The
548 usage of descriptive function names often replaces these tiny comments.
549 Apply common sense as always.
550
551
552Documenting locking requirements
553^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
554 Documenting locking requirements is a good thing, but comments are not
555 necessarily the best choice. Instead of writing::
556
557 /* Caller must hold foo->lock */
558 void func(struct foo *foo)
559 {
560 ...
561 }
562
563 Please use::
564
565 void func(struct foo *foo)
566 {
567 lockdep_assert_held(&foo->lock);
568 ...
569 }
570
571 In PROVE_LOCKING kernels, lockdep_assert_held() emits a warning
572 if the caller doesn't hold the lock. Comments can't do that.
573
574Bracket rules
575^^^^^^^^^^^^^
576
577Brackets should be omitted only if the statement which follows 'if', 'for',
578'while' etc. is truly a single line::
579
580 if (foo)
581 do_something();
582
583The following is not considered to be a single line statement even
584though C does not require brackets::
585
586 for (i = 0; i < end; i++)
587 if (foo[i])
588 do_something(foo[i]);
589
590Adding brackets around the outer loop enhances the reading flow::
591
592 for (i = 0; i < end; i++) {
593 if (foo[i])
594 do_something(foo[i]);
595 }
596
597
598Variable declarations
599^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
600
601The preferred ordering of variable declarations at the beginning of a
602function is reverse fir tree order::
603
604 struct long_struct_name *descriptive_name;
605 unsigned long foo, bar;
606 unsigned int tmp;
607 int ret;
608
609The above is faster to parse than the reverse ordering::
610
611 int ret;
612 unsigned int tmp;
613 unsigned long foo, bar;
614 struct long_struct_name *descriptive_name;
615
616And even more so than random ordering::
617
618 unsigned long foo, bar;
619 int ret;
620 struct long_struct_name *descriptive_name;
621 unsigned int tmp;
622
623Also please try to aggregate variables of the same type into a single
624line. There is no point in wasting screen space::
625
626 unsigned long a;
627 unsigned long b;
628 unsigned long c;
629 unsigned long d;
630
631It's really sufficient to do::
632
633 unsigned long a, b, c, d;
634
635Please also refrain from introducing line splits in variable declarations::
636
637 struct long_struct_name *descriptive_name = container_of(bar,
638 struct long_struct_name,
639 member);
640 struct foobar foo;
641
642It's way better to move the initialization to a separate line after the
643declarations::
644
645 struct long_struct_name *descriptive_name;
646 struct foobar foo;
647
648 descriptive_name = container_of(bar, struct long_struct_name, member);
649
650
651Variable types
652^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
653
654Please use the proper u8, u16, u32, u64 types for variables which are meant
655to describe hardware or are used as arguments for functions which access
656hardware. These types are clearly defining the bit width and avoid
657truncation, expansion and 32/64-bit confusion.
658
659u64 is also recommended in code which would become ambiguous for 32-bit
660kernels when 'unsigned long' would be used instead. While in such
661situations 'unsigned long long' could be used as well, u64 is shorter
662and also clearly shows that the operation is required to be 64 bits wide
663independent of the target CPU.
664
665Please use 'unsigned int' instead of 'unsigned'.
666
667
668Constants
669^^^^^^^^^
670
671Please do not use literal (hexa)decimal numbers in code or initializers.
672Either use proper defines which have descriptive names or consider using
673an enum.
674
675
676Struct declarations and initializers
677^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
678
679Struct declarations should align the struct member names in a tabular
680fashion::
681
682 struct bar_order {
683 unsigned int guest_id;
684 int ordered_item;
685 struct menu *menu;
686 };
687
688Please avoid documenting struct members within the declaration, because
689this often results in strangely formatted comments and the struct members
690become obfuscated::
691
692 struct bar_order {
693 unsigned int guest_id; /* Unique guest id */
694 int ordered_item;
695 /* Pointer to a menu instance which contains all the drinks */
696 struct menu *menu;
697 };
698
699Instead, please consider using the kernel-doc format in a comment preceding
700the struct declaration, which is easier to read and has the added advantage
701of including the information in the kernel documentation, for example, as
702follows::
703
704
705 /**
706 * struct bar_order - Description of a bar order
707 * @guest_id: Unique guest id
708 * @ordered_item: The item number from the menu
709 * @menu: Pointer to the menu from which the item
710 * was ordered
711 *
712 * Supplementary information for using the struct.
713 *
714 * Note, that the struct member descriptors above are arranged
715 * in a tabular fashion.
716 */
717 struct bar_order {
718 unsigned int guest_id;
719 int ordered_item;
720 struct menu *menu;
721 };
722
723Static struct initializers must use C99 initializers and should also be
724aligned in a tabular fashion::
725
726 static struct foo statfoo = {
727 .a = 0,
728 .plain_integer = CONSTANT_DEFINE_OR_ENUM,
729 .bar = &statbar,
730 };
731
732Note that while C99 syntax allows the omission of the final comma,
733we recommend the use of a comma on the last line because it makes
734reordering and addition of new lines easier, and makes such future
735patches slightly easier to read as well.
736
737Line breaks
738^^^^^^^^^^^
739
740Restricting line length to 80 characters makes deeply indented code hard to
741read. Consider breaking out code into helper functions to avoid excessive
742line breaking.
743
744The 80 character rule is not a strict rule, so please use common sense when
745breaking lines. Especially format strings should never be broken up.
746
747When splitting function declarations or function calls, then please align
748the first argument in the second line with the first argument in the first
749line::
750
751 static int long_function_name(struct foobar *barfoo, unsigned int id,
752 unsigned int offset)
753 {
754
755 if (!id) {
756 ret = longer_function_name(barfoo, DEFAULT_BARFOO_ID,
757 offset);
758 ...
759
760Namespaces
761^^^^^^^^^^
762
763Function/variable namespaces improve readability and allow easy
764grepping. These namespaces are string prefixes for globally visible
765function and variable names, including inlines. These prefixes should
766combine the subsystem and the component name such as 'x86_comp\_',
767'sched\_', 'irq\_', and 'mutex\_'.
768
769This also includes static file scope functions that are immediately put
770into globally visible driver templates - it's useful for those symbols
771to carry a good prefix as well, for backtrace readability.
772
773Namespace prefixes may be omitted for local static functions and
774variables. Truly local functions, only called by other local functions,
775can have shorter descriptive names - our primary concern is greppability
776and backtrace readability.
777
778Please note that 'xxx_vendor\_' and 'vendor_xxx_` prefixes are not
779helpful for static functions in vendor-specific files. After all, it
780is already clear that the code is vendor-specific. In addition, vendor
781names should only be for truly vendor-specific functionality.
782
783As always apply common sense and aim for consistency and readability.
784
785
786Commit notifications
787--------------------
788
789The tip tree is monitored by a bot for new commits. The bot sends an email
790for each new commit to a dedicated mailing list
791(``linux-tip-commits@vger.kernel.org``) and Cc's all people who are
792mentioned in one of the commit tags. It uses the email message ID from the
793Link tag at the end of the tag list to set the In-Reply-To email header so
794the message is properly threaded with the patch submission email.
795
796The tip maintainers and submaintainers try to reply to the submitter
797when merging a patch, but they sometimes forget or it does not fit the
798workflow of the moment. While the bot message is purely mechanical, it
799also implies a 'Thank you! Applied.'.