Thread (30 messages) 30 messages, 8 authors, 2020-08-26

Re: [PATCH 00/49] DRM driver for Hikey 970

From: Mauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab+huawei@kernel.org>
Date: 2020-08-20 07:03:40
Also in: bpf, dri-devel, linux-devicetree, linux-media, lkml, netdev

Em Wed, 19 Aug 2020 12:52:06 -0700
John Stultz [off-list ref] escreveu:
On Wed, Aug 19, 2020 at 8:31 AM Laurent Pinchart
[off-list ref] wrote:
quoted
On Wed, Aug 19, 2020 at 05:21:20PM +0200, Sam Ravnborg wrote:  
quoted
On Wed, Aug 19, 2020 at 01:45:28PM +0200, Mauro Carvalho Chehab wrote:  
quoted
This patch series port the out-of-tree driver for Hikey 970 (which
should also support Hikey 960) from the official 96boards tree:

   https://github.com/96boards-hikey/linux/tree/hikey970-v4.9

Based on his history, this driver seems to be originally written
for Kernel 4.4, and was later ported to Kernel 4.9. The original
driver used to depend on ION (from Kernel 4.4) and had its own
implementation for FB dev API.

As I need to preserve the original history (with has patches from
both HiSilicon and from Linaro),  I'm starting from the original
patch applied there. The remaining patches are incremental,
and port this driver to work with upstream Kernel.
 
...
quoted
quoted
quoted
- Due to legal reasons, I need to preserve the authorship of
  each one responsbile for each patch. So, I need to start from
  the original patch from Kernel 4.4;  
...
quoted
quoted
I do acknowledge you need to preserve history and all -
but this patchset is not easy to review.  
Why do we need to preserve history ? Adding relevant Signed-off-by and
Co-developed-by should be enough, shouldn't it ? Having a public branch
that contains the history is useful if anyone is interested, but I don't
think it's required in mainline.  
Yea. I concur with Laurent here. I'm not sure what legal reasoning you
have on this but preserving the "absolute" history here is actively
detrimental for review and understanding of the patch set.

Preserving Authorship, Signed-off-by lines and adding Co-developed-by
lines should be sufficient to provide both atribution credit and DCO
history.
I'm not convinced that, from legal standpoint, folding things would
be enough. See, there are at least 3 legal systems involved here
among the different patch authors:

	- civil law;
	- common law;
	- customary law + common law.

Merging stuff altogether from different law systems can be problematic,
and trying to discuss this with experienced IP property lawyers will
for sure take a lot of time and efforts. I also bet that different
lawyers will have different opinions, because laws are subject to 
interpretation. With that matter I'm not aware of any court rules 
with regards to folded patches. So, it sounds to me that folding 
patches is something that has yet to be proofed in courts around
the globe.

At least for US legal system, it sounds that the Country of
origin of a patch is relevant, as they have a concept of
"national technology" that can be subject to export regulations.

From my side, I really prefer to play safe and stay out of any such
legal discussions.

Thanks,
Mauro

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