1.. _development_process: 2 3How the development process works 4================================= 5 6Linux kernel development in the early 1990's was a pretty loose affair, 7with relatively small numbers of users and developers involved. With a 8user base in the millions and with some 2,000 developers involved over the 9course of one year, the kernel has since had to evolve a number of 10processes to keep development happening smoothly. A solid understanding of 11how the process works is required in order to be an effective part of it. 12 13The big picture 14--------------- 15 16The Linux kernel uses a loosely time-based, rolling release development 17model. A new major kernel release (which we will call, as an example, 9.x) 18[1]_ happens every two or three months, which comes with new features, 19internal API changes, and more. A typical release can contain about 13,000 20changesets with changes to several hundred thousand lines of code. Recent 21releases, along with their dates, can be found at `Wikipedia 22<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linux_kernel_version_history>`_. 23 24.. [1] Strictly speaking, the Linux kernel does not use semantic versioning 25 number scheme, but rather the 9.x pair identifies major release 26 version as a whole number. For each release, x is incremented, 27 but 9 is incremented only if x is deemed large enough (e.g. 28 Linux 5.0 is released following Linux 4.20). 29 30A relatively straightforward discipline is followed with regard to the 31merging of patches for each release. At the beginning of each development 32cycle, the "merge window" is said to be open. At that time, code which is 33deemed to be sufficiently stable (and which is accepted by the development 34community) is merged into the mainline kernel. The bulk of changes for a 35new development cycle (and all of the major changes) will be merged during 36this time, at a rate approaching 1,000 changes ("patches," or "changesets") 37per day. 38 39(As an aside, it is worth noting that the changes integrated during the 40merge window do not come out of thin air; they have been collected, tested, 41and staged ahead of time. How that process works will be described in 42detail later on). 43 44The merge window lasts for approximately two weeks. At the end of this 45time, Linus Torvalds will declare that the window is closed and release the 46first of the "rc" kernels. For the kernel which is destined to be 9.x, 47for example, the release which happens at the end of the merge window will 48be called 9.x-rc1. The -rc1 release is the signal that the time to 49merge new features has passed, and that the time to stabilize the next 50kernel has begun. 51 52Over the next six to ten weeks, only patches which fix problems should be 53submitted to the mainline. On occasion a more significant change will be 54allowed, but such occasions are rare; developers who try to merge new 55features outside of the merge window tend to get an unfriendly reception. 56As a general rule, if you miss the merge window for a given feature, the 57best thing to do is to wait for the next development cycle. (An occasional 58exception is made for drivers for previously-unsupported hardware; if they 59touch no in-tree code, they cannot cause regressions and should be safe to 60add at any time). 61 62As fixes make their way into the mainline, the patch rate will slow over 63time. Linus releases new -rc kernels about once a week; a normal series 64will get up to somewhere between -rc6 and -rc9 before the kernel is 65considered to be sufficiently stable and the final release is made. 66At that point the whole process starts over again. 67 68As an example, here is how the 5.4 development cycle went (all dates in 692019): 70 71 ============== =============================== 72 September 15 5.3 stable release 73 September 30 5.4-rc1, merge window closes 74 October 6 5.4-rc2 75 October 13 5.4-rc3 76 October 20 5.4-rc4 77 October 27 5.4-rc5 78 November 3 5.4-rc6 79 November 10 5.4-rc7 80 November 17 5.4-rc8 81 November 24 5.4 stable release 82 ============== =============================== 83 84How do the developers decide when to close the development cycle and create 85the stable release? The most significant metric used is the list of 86regressions from previous releases. No bugs are welcome, but those which 87break systems which worked in the past are considered to be especially 88serious. For this reason, patches which cause regressions are looked upon 89unfavorably and are quite likely to be reverted during the stabilization 90period. 91 92The developers' goal is to fix all known regressions before the stable 93release is made. In the real world, this kind of perfection is hard to 94achieve; there are just too many variables in a project of this size. 95There comes a point where delaying the final release just makes the problem 96worse; the pile of changes waiting for the next merge window will grow 97larger, creating even more regressions the next time around. So most kernels 98go out with a handful of known regressions, though, hopefully, none of them 99are serious. 100 101Once a stable release is made, its ongoing maintenance is passed off to the 102"stable team," currently Greg Kroah-Hartman. The stable team will release 103occasional updates to the stable release using the 9.x.y numbering scheme. 104To be considered for an update release, a patch must (1) fix a significant 105bug, and (2) already be merged into the mainline for the next development 106kernel. Kernels will typically receive stable updates for a little more 107than one development cycle past their initial release. So, for example, the 1085.2 kernel's history looked like this (all dates in 2019): 109 110 ============== =============================== 111 July 7 5.2 stable release 112 July 14 5.2.1 113 July 21 5.2.2 114 July 26 5.2.3 115 July 28 5.2.4 116 July 31 5.2.5 117 ... ... 118 October 11 5.2.21 119 ============== =============================== 120 1215.2.21 was the final stable update of the 5.2 release. 122 123Some kernels are designated "long term" kernels; they will receive support 124for a longer period. Please refer to the following link for the list of active 125long term kernel versions and their maintainers: 126 127 https://www.kernel.org/category/releases.html 128 129The selection of a kernel for long-term support is purely a matter of a 130maintainer having the need and the time to maintain that release. There 131are no known plans for long-term support for any specific upcoming 132release. 133 134 135The lifecycle of a patch 136------------------------ 137 138Patches do not go directly from the developer's keyboard into the mainline 139kernel. There is, instead, a somewhat involved (if somewhat informal) 140process designed to ensure that each patch is reviewed for quality and that 141each patch implements a change which is desirable to have in the mainline. 142This process can happen quickly for minor fixes, or, in the case of large 143and controversial changes, go on for years. Much developer frustration 144comes from a lack of understanding of this process or from attempts to 145circumvent it. 146 147In the hopes of reducing that frustration, this document will describe how 148a patch gets into the kernel. What follows below is an introduction which 149describes the process in a somewhat idealized way. A much more detailed 150treatment will come in later sections. 151 152The stages that a patch goes through are, generally: 153 154 - Design. This is where the real requirements for the patch - and the way 155 those requirements will be met - are laid out. Design work is often 156 done without involving the community, but it is better to do this work 157 in the open if at all possible; it can save a lot of time redesigning 158 things later. 159 160 - Early review. Patches are posted to the relevant mailing list, and 161 developers on that list reply with any comments they may have. This 162 process should turn up any major problems with a patch if all goes 163 well. 164 165 - Wider review. When the patch is getting close to ready for mainline 166 inclusion, it should be accepted by a relevant subsystem maintainer - 167 though this acceptance is not a guarantee that the patch will make it 168 all the way to the mainline. The patch will show up in the maintainer's 169 subsystem tree and into the -next trees (described below). When the 170 process works, this step leads to more extensive review of the patch and 171 the discovery of any problems resulting from the integration of this 172 patch with work being done by others. 173 174- Please note that most maintainers also have day jobs, so merging 175 your patch may not be their highest priority. If your patch is 176 getting feedback about changes that are needed, you should either 177 make those changes or justify why they should not be made. If your 178 patch has no review complaints but is not being merged by its 179 appropriate subsystem or driver maintainer, you should be persistent 180 in updating the patch to the current kernel so that it applies cleanly 181 and keep sending it for review and merging. 182 183 - Merging into the mainline. Eventually, a successful patch will be 184 merged into the mainline repository managed by Linus Torvalds. More 185 comments and/or problems may surface at this time; it is important that 186 the developer be responsive to these and fix any issues which arise. 187 188 - Stable release. The number of users potentially affected by the patch 189 is now large, so, once again, new problems may arise. 190 191 - Long-term maintenance. While it is certainly possible for a developer 192 to forget about code after merging it, that sort of behavior tends to 193 leave a poor impression in the development community. Merging code 194 eliminates some of the maintenance burden, in that others will fix 195 problems caused by API changes. But the original developer should 196 continue to take responsibility for the code if it is to remain useful 197 in the longer term. 198 199One of the largest mistakes made by kernel developers (or their employers) 200is to try to cut the process down to a single "merging into the mainline" 201step. This approach invariably leads to frustration for everybody 202involved. 203 204How patches get into the Kernel 205------------------------------- 206 207There is exactly one person who can merge patches into the mainline kernel 208repository: Linus Torvalds. But, for example, of the over 9,500 patches 209which went into the 2.6.38 kernel, only 112 (around 1.3%) were directly 210chosen by Linus himself. The kernel project has long since grown to a size 211where no single developer could possibly inspect and select every patch 212unassisted. The way the kernel developers have addressed this growth is 213through the use of a lieutenant system built around a chain of trust. 214 215The kernel code base is logically broken down into a set of subsystems: 216networking, specific architecture support, memory management, video 217devices, etc. Most subsystems have a designated maintainer, a developer 218who has overall responsibility for the code within that subsystem. These 219subsystem maintainers are the gatekeepers (in a loose way) for the portion 220of the kernel they manage; they are the ones who will (usually) accept a 221patch for inclusion into the mainline kernel. 222 223Subsystem maintainers each manage their own version of the kernel source 224tree, usually (but certainly not always) using the git source management 225tool. Tools like git (and related tools like quilt or mercurial) allow 226maintainers to track a list of patches, including authorship information 227and other metadata. At any given time, the maintainer can identify which 228patches in his or her repository are not found in the mainline. 229 230When the merge window opens, top-level maintainers will ask Linus to "pull" 231the patches they have selected for merging from their repositories. If 232Linus agrees, the stream of patches will flow up into his repository, 233becoming part of the mainline kernel. The amount of attention that Linus 234pays to specific patches received in a pull operation varies. It is clear 235that, sometimes, he looks quite closely. But, as a general rule, Linus 236trusts the subsystem maintainers to not send bad patches upstream. 237 238Subsystem maintainers, in turn, can pull patches from other maintainers. 239For example, the networking tree is built from patches which accumulated 240first in trees dedicated to network device drivers, wireless networking, 241etc. This chain of repositories can be arbitrarily long, though it rarely 242exceeds two or three links. Since each maintainer in the chain trusts 243those managing lower-level trees, this process is known as the "chain of 244trust." 245 246Clearly, in a system like this, getting patches into the kernel depends on 247finding the right maintainer. Sending patches directly to Linus is not 248normally the right way to go. 249 250 251Next trees 252---------- 253 254The chain of subsystem trees guides the flow of patches into the kernel, 255but it also raises an interesting question: what if somebody wants to look 256at all of the patches which are being prepared for the next merge window? 257Developers will be interested in what other changes are pending to see 258whether there are any conflicts to worry about; a patch which changes a 259core kernel function prototype, for example, will conflict with any other 260patches which use the older form of that function. Reviewers and testers 261want access to the changes in their integrated form before all of those 262changes land in the mainline kernel. One could pull changes from all of 263the interesting subsystem trees, but that would be a big and error-prone 264job. 265 266The answer comes in the form of -next trees, where subsystem trees are 267collected for testing and review. The older of these trees, maintained by 268Andrew Morton, is called "-mm" (for memory management, which is how it got 269started). The -mm tree integrates patches from a long list of subsystem 270trees; it also has some patches aimed at helping with debugging. 271 272Beyond that, -mm contains a significant collection of patches which have 273been selected by Andrew directly. These patches may have been posted on a 274mailing list, or they may apply to a part of the kernel for which there is 275no designated subsystem tree. As a result, -mm operates as a sort of 276subsystem tree of last resort; if there is no other obvious path for a 277patch into the mainline, it is likely to end up in -mm. Miscellaneous 278patches which accumulate in -mm will eventually either be forwarded on to 279an appropriate subsystem tree or be sent directly to Linus. In a typical 280development cycle, approximately 5-10% of the patches going into the 281mainline get there via -mm. 282 283The current -mm patch is available in the "mmotm" (-mm of the moment) 284directory at: 285 286 https://www.ozlabs.org/~akpm/mmotm/ 287 288Use of the MMOTM tree is likely to be a frustrating experience, though; 289there is a definite chance that it will not even compile. 290 291The primary tree for next-cycle patch merging is linux-next, maintained by 292Stephen Rothwell. The linux-next tree is, by design, a snapshot of what 293the mainline is expected to look like after the next merge window closes. 294Linux-next trees are announced on the linux-kernel and linux-next mailing 295lists when they are assembled; they can be downloaded from: 296 297 https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/next/ 298 299Linux-next has become an integral part of the kernel development process; 300all patches merged during a given merge window should really have found 301their way into linux-next some time before the merge window opens. 302 303 304Staging trees 305------------- 306 307The kernel source tree contains the drivers/staging/ directory, where 308many sub-directories for drivers or filesystems that are on their way to 309being added to the kernel tree live. They remain in drivers/staging while 310they still need more work; once complete, they can be moved into the 311kernel proper. This is a way to keep track of drivers that aren't 312up to Linux kernel coding or quality standards, but people may want to use 313them and track development. 314 315Greg Kroah-Hartman currently maintains the staging tree. Drivers that 316still need work are sent to him, with each driver having its own 317subdirectory in drivers/staging/. Along with the driver source files, a 318TODO file should be present in the directory as well. The TODO file lists 319the pending work that the driver needs for acceptance into the kernel 320proper, as well as a list of people that should be Cc'd for any patches to 321the driver. Current rules require that drivers contributed to staging 322must, at a minimum, compile properly. 323 324Staging can be a relatively easy way to get new drivers into the mainline 325where, with luck, they will come to the attention of other developers and 326improve quickly. Entry into staging is not the end of the story, though; 327code in staging which is not seeing regular progress will eventually be 328removed. Distributors also tend to be relatively reluctant to enable 329staging drivers. So staging is, at best, a stop on the way toward becoming 330a proper mainline driver. 331 332 333Tools 334----- 335 336As can be seen from the above text, the kernel development process depends 337heavily on the ability to herd collections of patches in various 338directions. The whole thing would not work anywhere near as well as it 339does without suitably powerful tools. Tutorials on how to use these tools 340are well beyond the scope of this document, but there is space for a few 341pointers. 342 343By far the dominant source code management system used by the kernel 344community is git. Git is one of a number of distributed version control 345systems being developed in the free software community. It is well tuned 346for kernel development, in that it performs quite well when dealing with 347large repositories and large numbers of patches. It also has a reputation 348for being difficult to learn and use, though it has gotten better over 349time. Some sort of familiarity with git is almost a requirement for kernel 350developers; even if they do not use it for their own work, they'll need git 351to keep up with what other developers (and the mainline) are doing. 352 353Git is now packaged by almost all Linux distributions. There is a home 354page at: 355 356 https://git-scm.com/ 357 358That page has pointers to documentation and tutorials. 359 360Among the kernel developers who do not use git, the most popular choice is 361almost certainly Mercurial: 362 363 https://www.selenic.com/mercurial/ 364 365Mercurial shares many features with git, but it provides an interface which 366many find easier to use. 367 368The other tool worth knowing about is Quilt: 369 370 https://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/quilt/ 371 372Quilt is a patch management system, rather than a source code management 373system. It does not track history over time; it is, instead, oriented 374toward tracking a specific set of changes against an evolving code base. 375Some major subsystem maintainers use quilt to manage patches intended to go 376upstream. For the management of certain kinds of trees (-mm, for example), 377quilt is the best tool for the job. 378 379 380Mailing lists 381------------- 382 383A great deal of Linux kernel development work is done by way of mailing 384lists. It is hard to be a fully-functioning member of the community 385without joining at least one list somewhere. But Linux mailing lists also 386represent a potential hazard to developers, who risk getting buried under a 387load of electronic mail, running afoul of the conventions used on the Linux 388lists, or both. 389 390Most kernel mailing lists are hosted at kernel.org; the master list can 391be found at: 392 393 https://subspace.kernel.org 394 395There are lists hosted elsewhere; please check the MAINTAINERS file for 396the list relevant for any particular subsystem. 397 398The core mailing list for kernel development is, of course, linux-kernel. 399This list is an intimidating place to be; volume can reach 500 messages per 400day, the amount of noise is high, the conversation can be severely 401technical, and participants are not always concerned with showing a high 402degree of politeness. But there is no other place where the kernel 403development community comes together as a whole; developers who avoid this 404list will miss important information. 405 406There are a few hints which can help with linux-kernel survival: 407 408- Have the list delivered to a separate folder, rather than your main 409 mailbox. One must be able to ignore the stream for sustained periods of 410 time. 411 412- Do not try to follow every conversation - nobody else does. It is 413 important to filter on both the topic of interest (though note that 414 long-running conversations can drift away from the original subject 415 without changing the email subject line) and the people who are 416 participating. 417 418- Do not feed the trolls. If somebody is trying to stir up an angry 419 response, ignore them. 420 421- When responding to linux-kernel email (or that on other lists) preserve 422 the Cc: header for all involved. In the absence of a strong reason (such 423 as an explicit request), you should never remove recipients. Always make 424 sure that the person you are responding to is in the Cc: list. This 425 convention also makes it unnecessary to explicitly ask to be copied on 426 replies to your postings. 427 428- Search the list archives (and the net as a whole) before asking 429 questions. Some developers can get impatient with people who clearly 430 have not done their homework. 431 432- Use interleaved ("inline") replies, which makes your response easier to 433 read. (i.e. avoid top-posting -- the practice of putting your answer above 434 the quoted text you are responding to.) For more details, see 435 :ref:`Documentation/process/submitting-patches.rst <interleaved_replies>`. 436 437- Ask on the correct mailing list. Linux-kernel may be the general meeting 438 point, but it is not the best place to find developers from all 439 subsystems. 440 441The last point - finding the correct mailing list - is a common place for 442beginning developers to go wrong. Somebody who asks a networking-related 443question on linux-kernel will almost certainly receive a polite suggestion 444to ask on the netdev list instead, as that is the list frequented by most 445networking developers. Other lists exist for the SCSI, video4linux, IDE, 446filesystem, etc. subsystems. The best place to look for mailing lists is 447in the MAINTAINERS file packaged with the kernel source. 448 449 450Getting started with Kernel development 451--------------------------------------- 452 453Questions about how to get started with the kernel development process are 454common - from both individuals and companies. Equally common are missteps 455which make the beginning of the relationship harder than it has to be. 456 457Companies often look to hire well-known developers to get a development 458group started. This can, in fact, be an effective technique. But it also 459tends to be expensive and does not do much to grow the pool of experienced 460kernel developers. It is possible to bring in-house developers up to speed 461on Linux kernel development, given the investment of a bit of time. Taking 462this time can endow an employer with a group of developers who understand 463the kernel and the company both, and who can help to train others as well. 464Over the medium term, this is often the more profitable approach. 465 466Individual developers are often, understandably, at a loss for a place to 467start. Beginning with a large project can be intimidating; one often wants 468to test the waters with something smaller first. This is the point where 469some developers jump into the creation of patches fixing spelling errors or 470minor coding style issues. Unfortunately, such patches create a level of 471noise which is distracting for the development community as a whole, so, 472increasingly, they are looked down upon. New developers wishing to 473introduce themselves to the community will not get the sort of reception 474they wish for by these means. 475 476Andrew Morton gives this advice for aspiring kernel developers 477 478:: 479 480 The #1 project for all kernel beginners should surely be "make sure 481 that the kernel runs perfectly at all times on all machines which 482 you can lay your hands on". Usually the way to do this is to work 483 with others on getting things fixed up (this can require 484 persistence!) but that's fine - it's a part of kernel development. 485 486(https://lwn.net/Articles/283982/). 487 488In the absence of obvious problems to fix, developers are advised to look 489at the current lists of regressions and open bugs in general. There is 490never any shortage of issues in need of fixing; by addressing these issues, 491developers will gain experience with the process while, at the same time, 492building respect with the rest of the development community. 493