Re: [PATCH 13/28] mfd: sec: Remove #ifdef guards for PM related functions

From: Lee Jones
Date: Tue Aug 09 2022 - 11:34:08 EST


On Mon, 08 Aug 2022, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote:

> On 07/08/2022 17:52, Paul Cercueil wrote:
> > Use the new DEFINE_SIMPLE_DEV_PM_OPS() and pm_sleep_ptr() macros
> > to handle the .suspend/.resume callbacks.
> >
> > These macros allow the suspend and resume functions to be automatically
> > dropped by the compiler when CONFIG_SUSPEND is disabled, without having
> > to use #ifdef guards.
> >
> > The advantage is then that these functions are now always compiled
> > independently of any Kconfig option, and thanks to that bugs and
> > regressions are easier to catch.
> >
> > Signed-off-by: Paul Cercueil <paul@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> > Cc: Krzysztof Kozlowski <krzysztof.kozlowski@xxxxxxxxxx>
> > Cc: Bartlomiej Zolnierkiewicz <b.zolnierkie@xxxxxxxxxxx>
>
> The address does not work. Please don't add it to commit log.
>
> > Cc: linux-samsung-soc@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>
> This is also not really needed in commit log... it's just a mailing list...
>
> I actually never understood why people want to add to commit log, so to
> something which will last 10 years, Cc-ing other folks, instead of
> adding such tags after '---'. Imagine 10 years from now:
>
> 1. What's the point to be cced on this patch after 10 years instead of
> using maintainers file (the one in 10 years)? Why Cc-ing me in 10 years?
> If I am a maintainer of this driver in that time, I will be C-ced based
> on maintainers file. If I am not a maintainer in 10 years, why the heck
> cc-ing me based on some 10-year old commit? Just because I was a
> maintainer once, like 10 years ago?

Why would that happen?

These tags are only used during initial submission.

> 2. Or why cc-ing such people when backporting to stable?

That doesn't happen either.

> It's quite a lot of unnecessary emails which many of us won't actually
> handle later...
>
> I sincerely admit I was once also adding such Cc-tags. But that time my
> employer was counting lines-of-patch (including commit log)... crazy, right?

Nothing wrong with adding these tags IMHO. It's what they're for.

I use them when I'm maintaining a large amount of out-of-tree, but
to-be-upstreamed patches over several versions. Re-applying the
recipients list can become pretty labour-some after several
iterations.

Adding them under the '---' doesn't work when the purpose of them is
to keep the recipients list in Git history.

--
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