On Thu, 26 Apr 2007 15:54:26 +0200 Adrian Bunk wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 26, 2007 at 12:41:41PM +0200, Rene Herman wrote:
> > On 04/26/2007 03:18 AM, Andrew Morton wrote:
> >
> >> On Mon, 23 Apr 2007 14:32:36 +0200 Rene Herman <[email protected]>
> >> wrote:
> >>> Provide MODULE_MAINTAINER() as a convenient place to stick a name and
> >>> email address both for drivers having multiple (current and
> >>> non-current) authors and for when someone who wants to maintain a
> >>> driver isn't so much an author.
> >
> > [ snip ]
> >
> >> I'm not sure we want to do this - that's what ./MAINTAINERS is for and we
> >> end up having to maintain the same info in two places.
> >
> > joe@user:~$ less ./MAINTAINERS
> > ./MAINTAINERS: No such file or directory
> >
> > MAINTAINERS is a developers thing, not users, yet a maintainer is someone
> > who other than by developers wants to be contacted by users of a particular
> > driver. Right now, a module exports a set of name and email addresses
> > through the MODULE_AUTHOR tag but given multiple current and non-current
> > authors, completely or largely orphaned drivers (I have a lot of junk PC
> > hardware so I come across those relatively often) and people who might be
> > interested in taking care of a driver but who do not consider themselves an
> > author for (upto now) having done a s/, struct pt_regs// on it, that tag
> > only confuses the issue of whom to contact.
> >
> > And it in fact even does so when Joe does know about a MAINTAINERS file and
> > does happen to have a kernel source tree lying around somewhere. With one
> > set of addresses displayed prominently inside the sourcecode of the very
> > driver and another one of in a MAINTAINERS file, the first one wins. Joe
> > would have to be very new to Linux to trust something in the tree that's
> > not actually compiled over something that is.
> >
> > As the first response in this thread Cristoph Hellwig stated that
> > MODULE_AUTHOR serves no purpose other than what MODULE_MAINTAINER would be
> > serving. Others agreed and Adrian Bunk suggested deleting MODULE_AUTHOR
> > outright.
> >
> > That would actually also serve my purposes; if there's no MODULE_AUTHOR
> > confusing the issue, I don't so much need a MODULE_MAINTAINER to fix it
> > again. I believe having "modinfo" (optionally!) display a contact address
> > for a driver might be a user advantage, but with all the wrong addresses
> > gone, I don't really care deeply; MODULE_AUTHOR doesn't serve the purpose
> > today and with it gone the user at least knows he needs to look elsewhere.
> > MODULE_AUTHOR is also a credits issue but the information can be
> > transferred to copyright headers. It would obviously also fix any possible
> > maintenance issues.
> >
> > Alan Cox believes that having author information embedded in the module
> > serves a legal purpose though and objects to removal.
Wouldn't a /* comment */ satisfy AUTHOR needs?
It gives deserved attribution and should serve legal purpose just as
well as a macro does (IANAL!).
IMO we want MAINTAINER info in the macro and in modinfo,
so I'm for removing MODULE_AUTHOR and just having MAINTAINER.
> >...
>
> Let me try to summarize the points:
> - you think MODULE_AUTHOR without MODULE_MAINTAINER confuses users
> - Alan wants MODULE_AUTHOR to stay for easing showing authorship of code
> to people
> - I (and others) think MODULE_MAINTAINER wouldn't make sense
>
> Is there any good solution for this?
> E.g. modinfo could be changed to no longer defaulting to show the author?
---
~Randy
*** Remember to use Documentation/SubmitChecklist when testing your code ***
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to [email protected]
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/
[Index of Archives]
[Kernel Newbies]
[Netfilter]
[Bugtraq]
[Photo]
[Stuff]
[Gimp]
[Yosemite News]
[MIPS Linux]
[ARM Linux]
[Linux Security]
[Linux RAID]
[Video 4 Linux]
[Linux for the blind]
[Linux Resources]