patch-1.3.97 linux/MAINTAINERS
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- Lines: 95
- Date:
Mon Apr 29 07:23:09 1996
- Orig file:
v1.3.96/linux/MAINTAINERS
- Orig date:
Tue Apr 23 13:57:01 1996
diff -u --recursive --new-file v1.3.96/linux/MAINTAINERS linux/MAINTAINERS
@@ -1,41 +1,47 @@
- Maintainers And Source Submission Procedures
+ List of maintainers and how to submit kernel changes
- In order to keep things easy for the maintainers please try to
-follow the guidelines given. Not all of these guidelines matter for every
+Please try to follow the guidelines below. This will make things
+easier on the maintainers. Not all of these guidelines matter for every
trivial patch so apply some common sense.
-1. Always _test_ your changes however small on at least 4 or 5 people,
-preferably many more.
+1. Always _test_ your changes, however small, on at least 4 or
+ 5 people, preferably many more.
-2. Try and release a few ALPHA test versions to the net. Announce them
-onto the kernel channel and await results. This is especially important
-for device drivers because often thats the only way you will find things
-like the fact version 3 firmware needs a magic fix you didn't know about, or
-some clown changed the chips on a board and not its name (Don't laugh look
-at the SMC etherpower for that).
+2. Try and release a few ALPHA test versions to the net. Announce
+ them onto the kernel channel and await results. This is especially
+ important for device drivers, because often thats the only way
+ you will find things like the fact version 3 firmware needs
+ a magic fix you didn't know about, or some clown changed the
+ chips on a board and not its name. (Don't laugh! Look at the
+ SMC etherpower for that).
-3. Make sure your changes compile correctly in multiple configurations.
+3. Make sure your changes compile correctly in multiple
+ configurations.
4. When you are happy with a change make it generally available for
-testing and await feedback.
+ testing and await feedback.
5. Make a patch available to the relevant maintainer in the list. Use
-'diff -u' to make the patch easy to merge. Be prepared to get your changes
-sent back with seemingly silly requests about formatting and variable names.
-These aren't as silly as they seem, one job the maintainers (and especially
-Linus) do is to keep things looking the same. Sometimes this means that
-the clever hack in your driver to get around a problem actual needs to
-become a generalised kernel feature ready for next time.
+ 'diff -u' to make the patch easy to merge. Be prepared to get your
+ changes sent back with seemingly silly requests about formatting
+ and variable names. These aren't as silly as they seem. One
+ job the maintainers (and especially Linus) do is to keep things
+ looking the same. Sometimes this means that the clever hack in
+ your driver to get around a problem actual needs to become a
+ generalised kernel feature ready for next time.
+
PLEASE try and include any credit lines you want added with the
-patch. It avoids people being missed off by mistake and makes it easier to
-know who wants adding and who doesn't.
- PLEASE Document known bugs. If it doesn't work for everything or
-does something very odd once a month document it.
+ patch. It avoids people being missed off by mistake and makes
+ it easier to know who wants adding and who doesn't.
+
+ PLEASE document known bugs. If it doesn't work for everything
+ or does something very odd once a month document it.
6. Make sure you have the right to send any changes you make. If you
-do changes at work you may find your employer owns the patch not you.
+ do changes at work you may find your employer owns the patch
+ not you.
-7. Happy hacking
+7. Happy hacking.
[This file is new: I've just put the existing network contacts in, other
@@ -49,7 +55,8 @@
M: Mail patches to
L: Mailing list that is relevant to this area
W: Web-page with status/info
-S: Status
+S: Status, one of the following:
+
Supported: Someone is actually paid to look after this (wildly
improbable).
Maintained: Someone actually looks after it.
@@ -57,9 +64,10 @@
much other than throw the odd patch in. See below..
Orphan: No current maintainer [but maybe you could take the
role as you write your new code].
- Obsolete: Ex code. Something tagged obsolete generally means
+ Obsolete: Old code. Something tagged obsolete generally means
its been replaced by a better system and you should
be using that.
+
3C501 NETWORK DRIVER
P: Alan Cox
M: net-patches@lxorguk.ukuu.org.uk
FUNET's LINUX-ADM group, linux-adm@nic.funet.fi
TCL-scripts by Sam Shen, slshen@lbl.gov
with Sam's (original) version of this