Re: Understanding of Acked-By
From: Shreyansh Jain <hidden>
Date: 2017-01-27 07:13:24
On Wednesday 25 January 2017 08:28 PM, Thomas Monjalon wrote:
2017-01-25 13:53, Van Haaren, Harry:quoted
There was an idea (from Thomas) to better document the Acked-by and Reviewed-By in the above thread, which I think is worth doing to make the process clearer. I'll kick off a thread*, and offer to submit a patch for the documentation when a consensus is reached. The question that needs to be addressed is "What is the most powerful signoff to add as somebody who checked a patch?"I do not see the benefit of knowing the most powerful. Anyway, the most powerful tags are done by trusted people. And people are trusted after delivering good reviews or patches ;) The question should be "How to use the tags?"quoted
The documentation mentions Acked, Reviewed, and Tested by[1], as signoffs that can be commented on patches. The Review Process[2] section mentions Reviewed and Tested by, but nowhere specifically states what any of these indicate. Offered below is my current understanding of the Acked-by; Reviewed-by; and Tested-by tags, in order of least-powerful first: 3) Tested-by: (least powerful) - Indicates having passed testing of functionality, and works as expected for Tester - Does NOT include full code review (instead use Reviewed by) - Does NOT indicate that the Tester understands architecture (instead use Acked by) 2) Reviewed-by: - Indicates having passed code-review, checkpatch and compilation testing by ReviewerCompilation testing is done by the CI. The reviewer must just check the results.quoted
- Does NOT include full testing of functionality (instead use Tested-by) - Does NOT indicate that the Reviewer understands architecture (instead use Acked by)I disagree here. The reviewer must understand the impacts of the patch. That's why a Reviewed-by tag is really strong.
From what I understand, 'Reviewed-by' and 'Acked-by' are the other way around. - Acked-by is intent that 'I agree with change'. - Reviewed-by is 'I vouch for the changes' either through review or testing or both.
quoted
1) Acked-by: (most powerful) - Indicates Reviewed-by, but also:A maintainer may want to approve the intent without doing a full review, especially if he trusts the author or the reviewers. That's why I think Acked-by should not include Reviewed-by. If a maintainer does a full review, he should use Reviewed-by instead of Acked-by.quoted
- Acker understands impact to architecture (if any) and agrees with changes - Acker has performed runtime sanity checkNot sure about this one. Personnaly I give some Acks without testing sometimes. We may add a Tested-by to indicate we made some tests.quoted
- Requests "please merge" to maintainerYes, "please merge" to tree maintainer (committer).quoted
- Level of trust in Acked-by based on previous contributions to DPDK/networking communityThe level of trust applies to any tag or comment.quoted
The above is a suggested interpretation, alternative interpretations welcomed.Thanks Harry