Message ID | cover.1558547956.git.robin.murphy@arm.com (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
Headers | show |
Series | Devmap cleanups + arm64 support | expand |
Robin, Andrew: I have a series for the hmm tree, which touches the section size bits, and remove device public memory support. It might be best if we include this series in the hmm tree as well to avoid conflicts. Is it ok to include the rebase version of at least the cleanup part (which looks like it is not required for the actual arm64 support) in the hmm tree to avoid conflicts?
On Wed, Jun 26, 2019 at 12:35:33AM -0700, Christoph Hellwig wrote: > Robin, Andrew: As a heads-up, Robin is currently on holiday, so this is all down to Andrew's preference. > I have a series for the hmm tree, which touches the section size > bits, and remove device public memory support. > > It might be best if we include this series in the hmm tree as well > to avoid conflicts. Is it ok to include the rebase version of at least > the cleanup part (which looks like it is not required for the actual > arm64 support) in the hmm tree to avoid conflicts? Per the cover letter, the arm64 patch has a build dependency on the others, so that might require a stable brnach for the common prefix. Thanks, Mark.
On Wed, Jun 26, 2019 at 01:31:40PM +0100, Mark Rutland wrote: > On Wed, Jun 26, 2019 at 12:35:33AM -0700, Christoph Hellwig wrote: > > Robin, Andrew: > > As a heads-up, Robin is currently on holiday, so this is all down to > Andrew's preference. > > > I have a series for the hmm tree, which touches the section size > > bits, and remove device public memory support. > > > > It might be best if we include this series in the hmm tree as well > > to avoid conflicts. Is it ok to include the rebase version of at least > > the cleanup part (which looks like it is not required for the actual > > arm64 support) in the hmm tree to avoid conflicts? > > Per the cover letter, the arm64 patch has a build dependency on the > others, so that might require a stable brnach for the common prefix. I guess we'll just have to live with the merge errors then, as the mm tree is a patch series and thus can't easily use a stable base tree. That is unlike Andrew wants to pull in the hmm tree as a prep patch for the series.
On Wed, Jun 26, 2019 at 08:38:29AM -0700, Christoph Hellwig wrote: > On Wed, Jun 26, 2019 at 01:31:40PM +0100, Mark Rutland wrote: > > On Wed, Jun 26, 2019 at 12:35:33AM -0700, Christoph Hellwig wrote: > > > Robin, Andrew: > > > > As a heads-up, Robin is currently on holiday, so this is all down to > > Andrew's preference. > > > > > I have a series for the hmm tree, which touches the section size > > > bits, and remove device public memory support. > > > > > > It might be best if we include this series in the hmm tree as well > > > to avoid conflicts. Is it ok to include the rebase version of at least > > > the cleanup part (which looks like it is not required for the actual > > > arm64 support) in the hmm tree to avoid conflicts? > > > > Per the cover letter, the arm64 patch has a build dependency on the > > others, so that might require a stable brnach for the common prefix. > > I guess we'll just have to live with the merge errors then, as the > mm tree is a patch series and thus can't easily use a stable base > tree. That is unlike Andrew wants to pull in the hmm tree as a prep > patch for the series. It looks like the first three patches apply cleanly to hmm.git .. So what we can do is base this 4 patch series off rc6 and pull the first 3 into hmm and the full 4 into arm.git. We use this workflow often with rdma and netdev. Let me know and I can help orchestate this. Jason
On Wed, 26 Jun 2019 15:45:47 +0000 Jason Gunthorpe <jgg@mellanox.com> wrote: > On Wed, Jun 26, 2019 at 08:38:29AM -0700, Christoph Hellwig wrote: > > On Wed, Jun 26, 2019 at 01:31:40PM +0100, Mark Rutland wrote: > > > On Wed, Jun 26, 2019 at 12:35:33AM -0700, Christoph Hellwig wrote: > > > > Robin, Andrew: > > > > > > As a heads-up, Robin is currently on holiday, so this is all down to > > > Andrew's preference. > > > > > > > I have a series for the hmm tree, which touches the section size > > > > bits, and remove device public memory support. > > > > > > > > It might be best if we include this series in the hmm tree as well > > > > to avoid conflicts. Is it ok to include the rebase version of at least > > > > the cleanup part (which looks like it is not required for the actual > > > > arm64 support) in the hmm tree to avoid conflicts? > > > > > > Per the cover letter, the arm64 patch has a build dependency on the > > > others, so that might require a stable brnach for the common prefix. > > > > I guess we'll just have to live with the merge errors then, as the > > mm tree is a patch series and thus can't easily use a stable base > > tree. That is unlike Andrew wants to pull in the hmm tree as a prep > > patch for the series. > > It looks like the first three patches apply cleanly to hmm.git .. > > So what we can do is base this 4 patch series off rc6 and pull the > first 3 into hmm and the full 4 into arm.git. We use this workflow often > with rdma and netdev. > > Let me know and I can help orchestate this. Well. Whatever works. In this situation I'd stage the patches after linux-next and would merge them up after the prereq patches have been merged into mainline. Easy.
On Wed, 26 Jun 2019 20:35:51 -0700 Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org> wrote: > > Let me know and I can help orchestate this. > > Well. Whatever works. In this situation I'd stage the patches after > linux-next and would merge them up after the prereq patches have been > merged into mainline. Easy. All right, what the hell just happened? A bunch of new material has just been introduced into linux-next. I've partially unpicked the resulting mess, haven't dared trying to compile it yet. To get this far I'll need to drop two patch series and one individual patch: mm-clean-up-is_device__page-definitions.patch mm-introduce-arch_has_pte_devmap.patch arm64-mm-implement-pte_devmap-support.patch arm64-mm-implement-pte_devmap-support-fix.patch mm-sparsemem-introduce-struct-mem_section_usage.patch mm-sparsemem-introduce-a-section_is_early-flag.patch mm-sparsemem-add-helpers-track-active-portions-of-a-section-at-boot.patch mm-hotplug-prepare-shrink_zone-pgdat_span-for-sub-section-removal.patch mm-sparsemem-convert-kmalloc_section_memmap-to-populate_section_memmap.patch mm-hotplug-kill-is_dev_zone-usage-in-__remove_pages.patch mm-kill-is_dev_zone-helper.patch mm-sparsemem-prepare-for-sub-section-ranges.patch mm-sparsemem-support-sub-section-hotplug.patch mm-document-zone_device-memory-model-implications.patch mm-document-zone_device-memory-model-implications-fix.patch mm-devm_memremap_pages-enable-sub-section-remap.patch libnvdimm-pfn-fix-fsdax-mode-namespace-info-block-zero-fields.patch libnvdimm-pfn-stop-padding-pmem-namespaces-to-section-alignment.patch mm-sparsemem-cleanup-section-number-data-types.patch mm-sparsemem-cleanup-section-number-data-types-fix.patch I thought you were just going to move material out of -mm and into hmm.git. Didn't begin to suspect that new and quite disruptive material would be introduced late in -rc7!!
On Thu, Jul 04, 2019 at 11:53:24AM -0700, Andrew Morton wrote: > On Wed, 26 Jun 2019 20:35:51 -0700 Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org> wrote: > > > > Let me know and I can help orchestate this. > > > > Well. Whatever works. In this situation I'd stage the patches after > > linux-next and would merge them up after the prereq patches have been > > merged into mainline. Easy. > > All right, what the hell just happened? Christoph's patch series for the devmap & hmm rework finally made it into linux-next, sorry, it took quite a few iterations on the list to get all the reviews and tests, and figure out how to resolve some other conflicting things. So it just made it this week. Recall, this is the patch series I asked you about routing a few weeks ago, as it really exceeded the small area that hmm.git was supposed to cover. I think we are both caught off guard how big the conflict is! > A bunch of new material has just been introduced into linux-next. > I've partially unpicked the resulting mess, haven't dared trying to > compile it yet. To get this far I'll need to drop two patch series > and one individual patch: > mm-clean-up-is_device__page-definitions.patch > mm-introduce-arch_has_pte_devmap.patch > arm64-mm-implement-pte_devmap-support.patch > arm64-mm-implement-pte_devmap-support-fix.patch This one we discussed, and I thought we agreed would go to your 'stage after linux-next' flow (see above). I think the conflict was minor here. > mm-sparsemem-introduce-struct-mem_section_usage.patch > mm-sparsemem-introduce-a-section_is_early-flag.patch > mm-sparsemem-add-helpers-track-active-portions-of-a-section-at-boot.patch > mm-hotplug-prepare-shrink_zone-pgdat_span-for-sub-section-removal.patch > mm-sparsemem-convert-kmalloc_section_memmap-to-populate_section_memmap.patch > mm-hotplug-kill-is_dev_zone-usage-in-__remove_pages.patch > mm-kill-is_dev_zone-helper.patch > mm-sparsemem-prepare-for-sub-section-ranges.patch > mm-sparsemem-support-sub-section-hotplug.patch > mm-document-zone_device-memory-model-implications.patch > mm-document-zone_device-memory-model-implications-fix.patch > mm-devm_memremap_pages-enable-sub-section-remap.patch > libnvdimm-pfn-fix-fsdax-mode-namespace-info-block-zero-fields.patch > libnvdimm-pfn-stop-padding-pmem-namespaces-to-section-alignment.patch Dan pointed to this while reviewing CH's series and said the conflicts would be manageable, but they are certainly larger than I expected! This series is the one that seems to be the really big trouble. I already checked all the other stuff that Stephen resolved, and it looks OK and managable. Just this one conflict with kernel/memremap.c is beyond me. What approach do you want to take to go forward? Here are some thoughts: CH has said he is away for the long weekend, so the path that involves the fewest people is if Dan respins the above on linux-next and it goes later with the arm patches above, assuming defering it for now has no other adverse effects on -mm. Pushing CH's series to -mm would need a respin on top of Dan's series above and would need to carry along the whole hmm.git (about 44 patches). Signs are that this could be managed with the code currently in the GPU trees. If we give up on CH's series the hmm.git will not have conflicts, however we just kick the can to the next merge window where we will be back to having to co-ordinate amd/nouveau/rdma git trees and -mm's patch workflow - and I think we will be worse off as we will have totally given up on a git based work flow for this. :( > mm-sparsemem-cleanup-section-number-data-types.patch > mm-sparsemem-cleanup-section-number-data-types-fix.patch Stephen used a minor conflict resolution for this one, I checked it carefully and it looked OK. > I thought you were just going to move material out of -mm and into > hmm.git. Dan brought up a patch from Ira conflicting with CH's work and we did handle that by moving a single patch, as well I moved several hmm specific patches early in the cycle. > Didn't begin to suspect that new and quite disruptive material would > be introduced late in -rc7!! Unfortunately a non-rebasing tree like hmm.git should only get patches into linux-next once they are fully reviewed and done on the list. I did not attempt to run separately patches 'under review' into linux-next as you do. Actually I didn't even know this would benefit your workflow, rebasing patches on top of linux-next is not part of the git based workflow I'm using :( AFAIK Dan and CH were both tracking conflicts with linux-next, so I'd like to hear from Dan what he thinks about his series, maybe the rebase is simple & safe for him? Dan and CH were working pretty closely on CH's series. Jason
On Thu, 4 Jul 2019 19:59:38 +0000 Jason Gunthorpe <jgg@mellanox.com> wrote: > On Thu, Jul 04, 2019 at 11:53:24AM -0700, Andrew Morton wrote: > > On Wed, 26 Jun 2019 20:35:51 -0700 Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org> wrote: > > > > > > Let me know and I can help orchestate this. > > > > > > Well. Whatever works. In this situation I'd stage the patches after > > > linux-next and would merge them up after the prereq patches have been > > > merged into mainline. Easy. > > > > All right, what the hell just happened? > > Christoph's patch series for the devmap & hmm rework finally made it > into linux-next We're talking about "dev_pagemap related cleanups v4", yes? I note that linux-next contains "mm: remove the HMM config option" which was present in Christoph's v3 series but wasn't present in v4. Perhaps something has gone wrong here. > sorry, it took quite a few iterations on the list to > get all the reviews and tests, and figure out how to resolve some > other conflicting things. So it just made it this week. > > Recall, this is the patch series I asked you about routing a few weeks > ago, as it really exceeded the small area that hmm.git was supposed to > cover. I think we are both caught off guard how big the conflict is! I guess I was distracted - I should have taken a look to see how mergable it all was. It's a large patchset and it appears to be mainly (entirely?) code cleanups. I don't think such material would be appropriate for a late -rc7 merge even if it didn't conflict with lots of other higher priority pending functional changes and fixes!
On 2019-07-04 8:59 pm, Jason Gunthorpe wrote: > On Thu, Jul 04, 2019 at 11:53:24AM -0700, Andrew Morton wrote: >> On Wed, 26 Jun 2019 20:35:51 -0700 Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org> wrote: >> >>>> Let me know and I can help orchestate this. >>> >>> Well. Whatever works. In this situation I'd stage the patches after >>> linux-next and would merge them up after the prereq patches have been >>> merged into mainline. Easy. >> >> All right, what the hell just happened? Aw crap, and I had this series chalked up as done... > Christoph's patch series for the devmap & hmm rework finally made it > into linux-next, sorry, it took quite a few iterations on the list to > get all the reviews and tests, and figure out how to resolve some > other conflicting things. So it just made it this week. > > Recall, this is the patch series I asked you about routing a few weeks > ago, as it really exceeded the small area that hmm.git was supposed to > cover. I think we are both caught off guard how big the conflict is! > >> A bunch of new material has just been introduced into linux-next. >> I've partially unpicked the resulting mess, haven't dared trying to >> compile it yet. To get this far I'll need to drop two patch series >> and one individual patch: > >> mm-clean-up-is_device__page-definitions.patch >> mm-introduce-arch_has_pte_devmap.patch >> arm64-mm-implement-pte_devmap-support.patch >> arm64-mm-implement-pte_devmap-support-fix.patch > > This one we discussed, and I thought we agreed would go to your 'stage > after linux-next' flow (see above). I think the conflict was minor > here. I can rebase and resend tomorrow if there's an agreement on what exactly to base it on - I'd really like to get this ticked off for 5.3 if at all possible. Thanks, Robin. >> mm-sparsemem-introduce-struct-mem_section_usage.patch >> mm-sparsemem-introduce-a-section_is_early-flag.patch >> mm-sparsemem-add-helpers-track-active-portions-of-a-section-at-boot.patch >> mm-hotplug-prepare-shrink_zone-pgdat_span-for-sub-section-removal.patch >> mm-sparsemem-convert-kmalloc_section_memmap-to-populate_section_memmap.patch >> mm-hotplug-kill-is_dev_zone-usage-in-__remove_pages.patch >> mm-kill-is_dev_zone-helper.patch >> mm-sparsemem-prepare-for-sub-section-ranges.patch >> mm-sparsemem-support-sub-section-hotplug.patch >> mm-document-zone_device-memory-model-implications.patch >> mm-document-zone_device-memory-model-implications-fix.patch >> mm-devm_memremap_pages-enable-sub-section-remap.patch >> libnvdimm-pfn-fix-fsdax-mode-namespace-info-block-zero-fields.patch >> libnvdimm-pfn-stop-padding-pmem-namespaces-to-section-alignment.patch > > Dan pointed to this while reviewing CH's series and said the conflicts > would be manageable, but they are certainly larger than I expected! > > This series is the one that seems to be the really big trouble. I > already checked all the other stuff that Stephen resolved, and it > looks OK and managable. Just this one conflict with kernel/memremap.c > is beyond me. > > What approach do you want to take to go forward? Here are some thoughts: > > CH has said he is away for the long weekend, so the path that involves > the fewest people is if Dan respins the above on linux-next and it > goes later with the arm patches above, assuming defering it for now > has no other adverse effects on -mm. > > Pushing CH's series to -mm would need a respin on top of Dan's series > above and would need to carry along the whole hmm.git (about 44 > patches). Signs are that this could be managed with the code currently > in the GPU trees. > > If we give up on CH's series the hmm.git will not have conflicts, > however we just kick the can to the next merge window where we will be > back to having to co-ordinate amd/nouveau/rdma git trees and -mm's > patch workflow - and I think we will be worse off as we will have > totally given up on a git based work flow for this. :( > >> mm-sparsemem-cleanup-section-number-data-types.patch >> mm-sparsemem-cleanup-section-number-data-types-fix.patch > > Stephen used a minor conflict resolution for this one, I checked it > carefully and it looked OK. > >> I thought you were just going to move material out of -mm and into >> hmm.git. > > Dan brought up a patch from Ira conflicting with CH's work and we did > handle that by moving a single patch, as well I moved several hmm > specific patches early in the cycle. > >> Didn't begin to suspect that new and quite disruptive material would >> be introduced late in -rc7!! > > Unfortunately a non-rebasing tree like hmm.git should only get patches > into linux-next once they are fully reviewed and done on the list. I > did not attempt to run separately patches 'under review' into > linux-next as you do. > > Actually I didn't even know this would benefit your workflow, rebasing > patches on top of linux-next is not part of the git based workflow I'm > using :( > > AFAIK Dan and CH were both tracking conflicts with linux-next, so I'd > like to hear from Dan what he thinks about his series, maybe the > rebase is simple & safe for him? Dan and CH were working pretty > closely on CH's series. > > Jason >
On Thu, 4 Jul 2019 21:54:36 +0100 Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@arm.com> wrote: > >> mm-clean-up-is_device__page-definitions.patch > >> mm-introduce-arch_has_pte_devmap.patch > >> arm64-mm-implement-pte_devmap-support.patch > >> arm64-mm-implement-pte_devmap-support-fix.patch > > > > This one we discussed, and I thought we agreed would go to your 'stage > > after linux-next' flow (see above). I think the conflict was minor > > here. > > I can rebase and resend tomorrow if there's an agreement on what exactly > to base it on - I'd really like to get this ticked off for 5.3 if at all > possible. I took another look. Yes, it looks like the repairs were simple. Let me now try to compile all this...
On Thu, Jul 04, 2019 at 01:53:32PM -0700, Andrew Morton wrote: > On Thu, 4 Jul 2019 19:59:38 +0000 Jason Gunthorpe <jgg@mellanox.com> wrote: > > > On Thu, Jul 04, 2019 at 11:53:24AM -0700, Andrew Morton wrote: > > > On Wed, 26 Jun 2019 20:35:51 -0700 Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org> wrote: > > > > > > > > Let me know and I can help orchestate this. > > > > > > > > Well. Whatever works. In this situation I'd stage the patches after > > > > linux-next and would merge them up after the prereq patches have been > > > > merged into mainline. Easy. > > > > > > All right, what the hell just happened? > > > > Christoph's patch series for the devmap & hmm rework finally made it > > into linux-next > > We're talking about "dev_pagemap related cleanups v4", yes? > > I note that linux-next contains "mm: remove the HMM config option" > which was present in Christoph's v3 series but wasn't present in v4. > Perhaps something has gone wrong here. When CH sent v4 to the list it was corrupted, v3 is the one to reference for content. Here is the mailing thread discussing this: https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/20190702184201.GO31718@mellanox.com/ > > sorry, it took quite a few iterations on the list to > > get all the reviews and tests, and figure out how to resolve some > > other conflicting things. So it just made it this week. > > > > Recall, this is the patch series I asked you about routing a few weeks > > ago, as it really exceeded the small area that hmm.git was supposed to > > cover. I think we are both caught off guard how big the conflict is! > > I guess I was distracted - I should have taken a look to see how > mergable it all was. Okay, fair enough. I also could have also done more checks myself with linux-next > It's a large patchset and it appears to be mainly (entirely?) code > cleanups. I don't think such material would be appropriate for a late > -rc7 merge even if it didn't conflict with lots of other higher > priority pending functional changes and fixes! I see your other email you resolved the conflicts - so please let me know if you want to proceed with dropping CH's series or not, I'll make a special effort to get that change into tomorrows linux-next if you want (it is already 6pm here) Regards, Jason
On Thu, Jul 4, 2019 at 12:59 PM Jason Gunthorpe <jgg@mellanox.com> wrote: > > On Thu, Jul 04, 2019 at 11:53:24AM -0700, Andrew Morton wrote: > > On Wed, 26 Jun 2019 20:35:51 -0700 Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org> wrote: > > > > > > Let me know and I can help orchestate this. > > > > > > Well. Whatever works. In this situation I'd stage the patches after > > > linux-next and would merge them up after the prereq patches have been > > > merged into mainline. Easy. > > > > All right, what the hell just happened? > > Christoph's patch series for the devmap & hmm rework finally made it > into linux-next, sorry, it took quite a few iterations on the list to > get all the reviews and tests, and figure out how to resolve some > other conflicting things. So it just made it this week. > > Recall, this is the patch series I asked you about routing a few weeks > ago, as it really exceeded the small area that hmm.git was supposed to > cover. I think we are both caught off guard how big the conflict is! > > > A bunch of new material has just been introduced into linux-next. > > I've partially unpicked the resulting mess, haven't dared trying to > > compile it yet. To get this far I'll need to drop two patch series > > and one individual patch: > > > mm-clean-up-is_device__page-definitions.patch > > mm-introduce-arch_has_pte_devmap.patch > > arm64-mm-implement-pte_devmap-support.patch > > arm64-mm-implement-pte_devmap-support-fix.patch > > This one we discussed, and I thought we agreed would go to your 'stage > after linux-next' flow (see above). I think the conflict was minor > here. > > > mm-sparsemem-introduce-struct-mem_section_usage.patch > > mm-sparsemem-introduce-a-section_is_early-flag.patch > > mm-sparsemem-add-helpers-track-active-portions-of-a-section-at-boot.patch > > mm-hotplug-prepare-shrink_zone-pgdat_span-for-sub-section-removal.patch > > mm-sparsemem-convert-kmalloc_section_memmap-to-populate_section_memmap.patch > > mm-hotplug-kill-is_dev_zone-usage-in-__remove_pages.patch > > mm-kill-is_dev_zone-helper.patch > > mm-sparsemem-prepare-for-sub-section-ranges.patch > > mm-sparsemem-support-sub-section-hotplug.patch > > mm-document-zone_device-memory-model-implications.patch > > mm-document-zone_device-memory-model-implications-fix.patch > > mm-devm_memremap_pages-enable-sub-section-remap.patch > > libnvdimm-pfn-fix-fsdax-mode-namespace-info-block-zero-fields.patch > > libnvdimm-pfn-stop-padding-pmem-namespaces-to-section-alignment.patch > > Dan pointed to this while reviewing CH's series and said the conflicts > would be manageable, but they are certainly larger than I expected! > > This series is the one that seems to be the really big trouble. I > already checked all the other stuff that Stephen resolved, and it > looks OK and managable. Just this one conflict with kernel/memremap.c > is beyond me. > > What approach do you want to take to go forward? Here are some thoughts: > > CH has said he is away for the long weekend, so the path that involves > the fewest people is if Dan respins the above on linux-next and it > goes later with the arm patches above, assuming defering it for now > has no other adverse effects on -mm. > > Pushing CH's series to -mm would need a respin on top of Dan's series > above and would need to carry along the whole hmm.git (about 44 > patches). Signs are that this could be managed with the code currently > in the GPU trees. > > If we give up on CH's series the hmm.git will not have conflicts, > however we just kick the can to the next merge window where we will be > back to having to co-ordinate amd/nouveau/rdma git trees and -mm's > patch workflow - and I think we will be worse off as we will have > totally given up on a git based work flow for this. :( I think the problem would be resolved going forward post-v5.3 since we won't have two tress managing kernel/memremap.c. This cycle however there is a backlog of kernel/memremap.c changes in -mm.
On 04/07/2019 22:13, Andrew Morton wrote: > On Thu, 4 Jul 2019 21:54:36 +0100 Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@arm.com> wrote: > >>>> mm-clean-up-is_device__page-definitions.patch >>>> mm-introduce-arch_has_pte_devmap.patch >>>> arm64-mm-implement-pte_devmap-support.patch >>>> arm64-mm-implement-pte_devmap-support-fix.patch >>> >>> This one we discussed, and I thought we agreed would go to your 'stage >>> after linux-next' flow (see above). I think the conflict was minor >>> here. >> >> I can rebase and resend tomorrow if there's an agreement on what exactly >> to base it on - I'd really like to get this ticked off for 5.3 if at all >> possible. > > I took another look. Yes, it looks like the repairs were simple. > > Let me now try to compile all this... Thanks, the revised patches look OK to me, and I've confirmed that today's -next builds and boots for arm64. Cheers, Robin.
On Thu, Jul 04, 2019 at 04:37:51PM -0700, Dan Williams wrote: > > If we give up on CH's series the hmm.git will not have conflicts, > > however we just kick the can to the next merge window where we will be > > back to having to co-ordinate amd/nouveau/rdma git trees and -mm's > > patch workflow - and I think we will be worse off as we will have > > totally given up on a git based work flow for this. :( > > I think the problem would be resolved going forward post-v5.3 since we > won't have two tress managing kernel/memremap.c. This cycle however > there is a backlog of kernel/memremap.c changes in -mm. IHMO there is always something :( CH's series had something like 5 different collisions already, and I think we did a good job of with everything but your subsection patches. Jason
On Thu, Jul 04, 2019 at 06:28:50PM -0300, Jason Gunthorpe wrote: > > It's a large patchset and it appears to be mainly (entirely?) code > > cleanups. I don't think such material would be appropriate for a late > > -rc7 merge even if it didn't conflict with lots of other higher > > priority pending functional changes and fixes! > > I see your other email you resolved the conflicts - so please let me > know if you want to proceed with dropping CH's series or not, I'll > make a special effort to get that change into tomorrows linux-next if > you want (it is already 6pm here) I spent some time this morning looking at the various conflicts, and I think Dan is right, they are mangable. In the sense we can forward a merge resolution to Linus and it is not completely crazy. Most hunks are the usual mechanical sort of conflicts. Like Stephen, only two small conflict hunks in the memremap.c give me any pause, and I'm confident with CH and Dan's help it can be resolved robustly. If Linus doesn't like it then we fall back to dropping CH's series. So, here is a fourth idea.. We remove hmm.git entirely from your workflow (ie you revert commit "cc5dfd59e375f Merge branch 'hmm-devmem-cleanup.4' into rdma.git hmm" in your local version of linux-next) and I will send hmm.git to Linus after Dan's patches and others are merged by you to Linus. With Dan and CH's help I will forward the reviewed conflict resolution. This will not disturb the -mm patch workflow at all, and you can put everything back the way it was on July 3. What do you think about this? Jason