Re: [PATCH v2] certs/extract-cert: Fix checkpatch issues

From: Ben Boeckel
Date: Tue Jun 06 2023 - 17:44:01 EST


On Tue, Jun 06, 2023 at 18:25:24 +0300, Dan Carpenter wrote:
> I'm looking through the git log to see if it's true the imperative tense
> commit message are shorter and better and neither one of those things is
> obvious to me.
>
> This patch had an imperative subject already so it was already kind of
> imperative. Does every sentence have to be imperative or can you just
> add a "Fix it." to the end?

I don't know about the length argument, but it feels like it reads
better when skimming summaries with the imperative mood. The way I think
about it is that the subject should complete the phrase:

When applied, this patch will…

The body then gives more context and description as necessary. I don't
really worry so much about the mood/tense/whatever in the body except
that I try to use the present tense for anything the patch is doing and
past for any historical context. I understand that kernel maintainers
may care a lot more about it though.

Basically, a patch, on its own, does nothing (just like a recipe). It is
only when it is applied that anything actually happens. I read it as
"`git apply`, please $summary".

--Ben