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Message-ID: <20110121095658.1ab623fe@jbarnes-desktop>
Date: Fri, 21 Jan 2011 09:56:58 -0800
From: Jesse Barnes <jbarnes@...tuousgeek.org>
To: unlisted-recipients:; (no To-header on input)
Cc: Daniel Walker <dwalker@...eaurora.org>,
Joe Perches <joe@...ches.com>,
Dima Zavin <dmitriyz@...gle.com>,
linux-arm-msm@...r.kernel.org,
linux-arm-kernel@...ts.infradead.org, linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org,
davidb@...eaurora.org
Subject: Re: [PATCH 0/7] Nexus One Support
On Fri, 21 Jan 2011 09:48:27 -0800
Jesse Barnes <jbarnes@...tuousgeek.org> wrote:
> On Fri, 21 Jan 2011 07:46:41 -0800
> Daniel Walker <dwalker@...eaurora.org> wrote:
> > This isn't what's happening tho. In maintainer land if someone forwards
> > you a patch then you leave the original author on the patch. They wrote
> > the patch and your just forwarding it on up the ladder. This isn't the
> > case with these patches.. I crafted each of the commit I have authorship
> > on, no one forwarded those commits to me. I'm not taking authorship
> > credit for any thing I didn't create, although I an giving credit to the
> > place which gave me the raw material which was Google. From my
> > experience this is how it's done in Linux ..
>
> I don't know why you're even trying to defend this, just admit you were
> wrong and move on.
>
> Trying to claim the author field for these patches for yourself is both
> misleading and vain. You did not write the code and are therefore not
> the author, trying to conflate the author and commit fields in this way
> is so misguided I thought you must be trolling when I first saw this
> thread.
>
> This is not "how it's done in Linux" at all. In this case you're
> trying to act like a maintainer by collecting patches and forwarding
> them upstream, so you need to preserve authorship and the s-o-b chain.
> If you want to take responsibility for the code going forward, great,
> but don't pollute the logs with bogus author fields that imply you
> wrote the stuff in the first place.
That said, if you did significant work on these before committing them,
then you're right and I'm wrong. It *is* fairly common for committers
to change things; and if the changes are significant enough, they claim
authorship and note the original author in the changelog.
So if that's the case here, I apologize, but I didn't see that
explained in any part of the thread I read.
--
Jesse Barnes, Intel Open Source Technology Center
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