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Mauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab at infradead dot org>
					Updated on 2007 December, 1st

This file describes the general procedures used by the LinuxTV team (*)
and by the v4l-dvb community.

(*) This is just an aka for the main developers involved in V4L/DVB
drivers. They are a volunteer and unremunerated group of people that
have the common interest of providing a good support on Linux for
receiving and capturing video streams from Web cams, Analog TV, Digital
TV and radio broadcast AM/FM.

   CONTENTS
   ========

	1. A Brief introduction about patch management
	2. Git trees' relationships with v4l/dvb development
	3. Mercurial trees used for v4l/dvb development
	4. Community best practices
	5. Knowing about newer patches committed at master hg repository
	6. Patch handling for kernel submission
	7. Patch submission from the community
	8. Identifying regressions with Mercurial
	9. Creating a newer driver

1. A Brief introduction about patch management
   ==========================================

Current V4L/DVB development is based on a modern SCM system that
fits better into kernel development model, called Mercurial (aka hg).

Kernel development model is based on a similar SCM, called git. While
very powerful for distributed development, git usage is not simple for
final users. That's the reason why hg was selected for V4L/DVB
development.

There are some tutorials, FAQs and other valuable information at
http://selenic.com/mercurial about hg usage.

Mercurial is a distributed SCM, which means every developer gets his
own full copy of the repository (including the complete revision
history), and can work and commit locally without network connection.
The resulting changesets can then be exchanged between repositories and
finally merged into a common repository on linuxtv.org.

A list of current available repositories is available at:
	http://linuxtv.org/hg

2. Git trees' relationships with v4l/dvb development
   =================================================

The main kernel trees are hosted at http://git.kernel.org. Each tree
is owned by a maintainer.

The main kernel trees is owned by Linus Torvalds, being located at:
	http://git.kernel.org/?p=linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux-2.6.git

The subsystem master tree is owned by the subsystem maintainer (Mauro
Carvalho Chehab) being located at:
	http://git.kernel.org/?p=linux/kernel/git/mchehab/v4l-dvb.git

Before committing into the master -git tree, the finished patches from
each maintainers tree are added on a staging tree, owned by the
subsystem maintainer, at:
	http://linuxtv.org/hg/v4l-dvb

The main function of this tree is to merge patches from other
repositories and to test the entire subsystem with the finished patches.

Users are welcome to use, test and report any issues via the mailing
lists or via the Kernel's bugzilla, available at:
	http://bugzilla.kernel.org

Michael Krufky maintains a backport tree, containing a subset of the
patches from the subsystem tree that are meant to be sent to kernel
-stable team, at:
	http://git.kernel.org/http://git.kernel.org/?p=linux/kernel/git/mkrufky/v4l-dvb-2.6.x.y.git

3. Mercurial trees used for v4l/dvb development
   ============================================

V4L/DVB driver development is hosted at http://linuxtv.org. There are a
number of trees there each owned by a developer of the LinuxTV team.

When a developer believes that he has patches done to be merged, he
sends a request the developers' mailing list and to the subsystem
maintainer. The patches are analyzed and, if they look ok, merged into
the master repository.

A script called hg-pull-req.pl is included that will generate this
request, providing a list of patches that will be pulled, links to each
patch, and a diffstat of the all patches.  It will work best if Hg has
been configured with the correct username (also used by the commit
message generator) and push path.  The script is designed to be easy to
modify to produce text for a given contributor's style.

It is good practice that each developer will have at least one tree
called 'v4l-dvb', which keeps their patches, and periodically update
this tree with the master tree's patches.

4. Community best practices
   ========================

From accumulated experience, there are some basic rules that should
be followed by the community:

a) Every developer should follow the "rules of thumb" of kernel development
   stated at Linux source code, especially those stated at kernel,
   under:
	Documentation/HOWTO
	Documentation/SubmittingPatches
	Documentation/SubmittingDrivers
	Documentation/SubmitChecklist
	Documentation/CodingStyle

b) All commits at mercurial trees should have a consistent message,
   describing the patch. This is done by using:

	make commit

   This will run some scripts that check changed files, correct
   bad whitespace and prepare the last Signed-off-by: field, as
   described below. A good comment will have a brief
   description at the first line, up to 68 characters wide, a blank
   line, the patch author's name on the third line, a blank line, and
   then a brief description, with no more than 80 chars per line, e. g.:

	   This patch does nothing

	   From: nowhere <nowhere@noplace.org>

	   This is just a sample commit comment, just for reference purposes.

	   This "patch" does nothing.

	   Signed-off-by: nowhere <nowhere@noplace.org>

   All lines starting with # and all lines starting with HG: will be
   removed from the mercurial commit log.

   *WARNING* Be careful not to leave the first line blank, otherwise hg
   will leave subject blank.

   From: line shouldn't be omitted, since it will be used for the
   patch author when converting to -git.

c) Since June, 1st, 2007, all patches are requested to have their coding style
   validated by using script/checkpatch.pl. This check runs automatically by
   using "make commit". By default, it will try to use the newest version of
   the script, between the kernel one and a copy at v4l-dvb development tree.

   It is always a good idea to use in-kernel version, since additional tests
   are performed (like checking for the usage of depreciated API's that are
   about to be removed).

   It is possible to override the in-kernel checkpatch.pl location, by using
   the CHECKPATCH shell environment var to something like:
	CHECKPATCH="/usr/src/linux/scripts/checkpatch.pl"

d) For "make commit" to work properly, the HGUSER shell environment var
   should be defined (replacing the names at the left):

	HGUSER="My Name <myemail@mysite.com>"

   If HGUSER is not set, then, if present, the username defined in the
   user's ~/.hgrc file will be used.  Use of the .hgrc file is preferred
   over the HGUSER variable according to the hg man page.

   This name will be used for both the user metadata in the Hg commit
   log and the initial values of the "From:" and "Signed-off-by:" lines
   in the pre-made commit message.

   It is also possible to use a different login name at the site
   hosting the repository, by using:

	CHANGE_LOG_LOGIN=my_log_name

   With this, "make push" will use my_log_name, instead of the name for
   the current Unix user.

   Don't forget to export the vars at shell, with something like:

	export CHANGE_LOG_LOGIN HGUSER

   It is strongly recommended to have those lines in .bashrc or .profile.

e) All patches shall have a Developers Certificate of Origin
   version 1.1 in the commit log or the email description, signed by the
   patch authors, as postulated in the Linux Kernel source at:

	Documentation/SubmittingPatches

   This is done by adding Signed-off-by: fields to the commit message.

   It is not acceptable to use fake signatures, e.g.:

	Signed-off-by: Fake me <me@snakeoilcompany.com>

   The email must be a valid one.
   The author that is submitting the email should be at the button of
   the author's signed-off-by (SOB) block. Other SOBs or Acked-by: will be
   added at the bottom, marking that somebody else reviewed the patch.

   Each person who is in the kernel patch submission chain (driver author
   and/or driver maintainer, subsystem/core maintainers, etc) will
   review each patch. If they agree, the patch will be added to their
   trees and signed. Otherwise, they may comment on the patch, asking
   for some review.

f) Although not documented at kernel's Documentation/, a common kernel
   practice is to use Acked-by: tag.

   An Acked-by: tag usually means that the acked person didn't write the
   patch, nor is in the chain responsible for sending the patch to
   kernel, but tested or reviewed the patch and agreed that it was good.

   A patch acked-by can be added at hg trees, if received by each tree
   maintainer. It is also common to receive acks after having a patch
   inserted at master repository. In this case, the ack will be added
   only at -git tree.

g) Another kernel's practice that is agreed to be good is that a
   patchset should be reviewed/tested by other developers. So, a new
   tag should be used by testers/reviewers. So, reviewers are welcome.
   After reviewing a patchset, please send an e-mail indicating that, if
   possible, with some additional data about the testing, with the tag:
	Reviewed-by: My Name <myemail@mysite.com>
   This is particularly important for Kernel to userspace ABI changes.

h)  If the patch also affects other parts of kernel (like Alsa
    or i2c), it is required that, when submitting upstream, the patch
    also goes to the maintainers of that subsystem. To do this, the
    developer shall copy the interested parties.

    At mercurial tree, this can be handled automatically by the LinuxTV
    scripts, by using the cc: meta tag, together with the Signed-off-by
    lines. Something like:

	CC: someotherkerneldeveloper@someplace
	Signed-off-by: nowhere <nowhere@noplace.org>

    This way, when a patch arrives mercurial hg tree, a mailbomb script
    will copy the proper interested parties.

    When submitting a patch via e-mail, it is better to copy all interested
    parties directly, by adding them as cc's to the email itself.

    Please note that those changes generally require ack from the
    other subsystem maintainers. So, the best practice is to first ask
    for their acks, then commit to the development tree or send the
    patch via email with their Acked-by: already included.

i) Sometimes, mainstream changes affect the v4l-dvb tree, and mast be
   backported to the v4l-dvb tree. This kind of commit to the mercurial
   tree should follow the rules above and should also have the line:

	kernel-sync:

   Patches with this line will not be submitted upstream.

j) Sometimes it is necessary to introduce some testing code inside a
   module or remove parts that are not yet finished. Also, compatibility
   tests may be required to provide backporting.

   To allow compatibility tests, linux/version.h is automatically
   included by the building system. This allows adding tests like:

	#if LINUX_VERSION_CODE >= KERNEL_VERSION(2,5,0)
	#include <linux/kthread.h>
	#endif

   It should be noticed, however, that an explicit inclusion of
   linux/version.h is required if it is needed to use KERNEL_VERSION()
   macro (this is required, for example, by V4L2 VIDIOC_QUERYCAP
   ioctl), otherwise, the driver won't compile when submitted to kernel.

   There are several compatibility procedures already defined
   in "compat.h" file. If needed, it is better to include it after all
   other kernel standard headers, and before any specific header
   for that file. Something like:

	#include <linux/kernel.h>
	#include <linux/module.h>
		...
	#include <linux/videodev2.h>
	#include <media/v4l2-common.h>

	#include "compat.h"

	#include "mydriver-header.h"

should be included at the
   files under v4l-dvb tree. This header also includes linux/version.h.

   To include testing code, #if 0 or #if 1 may be used. If this code
   is meant to go also to kernel, a comment with the word "keep" should
   be used, e.g:

    #if 0 /* keep */
	or
    #if 1 /* keep */

   The kernel submit scripts will remove the compatibility codes, the
   tests for specific kernel versions and the #if 0/1 that doesn't have
   the "keep meta tag".

   See the file v4l/scripts/gentree.pl for a more complete description
   of what kind of code will be kept and what kind will be removed.

k) To import contributed stuff to a developer's, a script is provided.
   This allows an easy import of mbox-based patch emails.
   This is done with (called from the root tree directory):

	./mailimport <mbox file>

    For it to work properly, git tools need to be installed on the local
    machine, since git has a gitimport script that is used by mailimport.

    There's also a helper script to make easier to retrieve patches from
    other mercurial repositories. The syntax is:
	./hgimport <URL>

    Also, hg has a feature, called mqueue, that allows having several patches
    that can be applied/unapplied for testing. mailimport trusts on it to work,
    so, this extension should be enabled for mailimport script to work.

l) By submitting a patch to the subsystem maintainer, either via email
   or via pull request, the patch author(s) are agreeing that the
   submitted code will be added on Kernel, and that the submitted code
   are being released as GPLv2. The author may grant additional licenses
   to the submitted code (for example, using dual GPL/BSD) or GPLv2 or
   later. If no specific clause are added, the added code will be
   assumed as GPLv2 only.

m) "Commit earlier and commit often". This is a common used rule at
   Kernel. This means that a sooner submission of a patch will mean that
   a review can happen sooner, and help the develop to address the
   comments. This helps to reduce the life-cycle for having a changeset
   committed at kernel at the proper time. It also means that the one
   changeset should ideally address just one issue. So, mixing different
   things at the same patch should be avoided.

5. Knowing about newer patches committed at master hg repository
   =============================================================

There's a patchbomb script at linuxtv.org that will send one copy of
each patch applied to -hg tree to:

1) The subscribers of the linuxtv-commits mailing list, hosted on
   linuxtv.org;

2) The patch author (as stated on the From: field in the patch comments);

3) The patch committer (the "user" at hg metadata);

4) All people with Signed-off-by:, Acked-by:, or CC: metadata clause
   in the patch's comment.

If, for some reason, there's no "From:" metatag (or it is on the first
line, instead of the second one), sometimes the script may fail, maybe
filling patch authorship wrongly. So people should take care to properly
commit patches with "From:".

6. Patch handling for kernel submission
   ====================================

The subsystem maintainer, when preparing the kernel patches to be sent
to mainstream (or to -mm series), uses some scripts and a manual
procedure, based on a quilt-like procedure, where a patch series file is
generated, and patches can be handled one by one. This means that -git
patches can be properly fixed, when required, if not already sent to
mainstream, to fulfill the best practices and resolve conflicts with
other patches directly merged in mainstream.

There's a delay between updating a patch at master and sending it to
mainstream. During this period, it is possible to review a patch. The
common situations are:

1) If a patch at master tree receives a late Acked-by: or a
Reviewed-by:, this can be added at -git tree;

2) If somebody fully nacks a patch applied at -hg, A reverse patch
can be applied at -hg, and the original patch can be removed -git;

3) If somebody partially nacks a patch or sends a reviewing patch,
the -git patch may be a result of the merger of the two patches.

By merging both patches at -git will allow avoiding storing unnecessary
patch history details at -git and at Mainstream.

Those changes will require some manual sync between -git and -hg, it is
better to avoid those circumstances.

During the procedure of generating kernel patches, the maintainer uses
to do a diff between the kernel tree and v4l-dvb mercurial tree
(without any backport code there). If there are discrepancies, a
backport patch from mainstream to v4l-dvb is generally applied by the
maintainer.

8. Commit windows
   ==============

Kernel development occurs on some cycles, according with the following
picture:

------------   2 week    ------------     ---------------     ---------
| 2.6.(x-1) | ---------> | 2.6.x-rc1 | .. | 2.6.x-rc[n] | --> | 2.6.x |
------------             ------------     ---------------     ---------
	      Submission
		Window

Once a kernel release is done (for example, 2.6.(x-1) version), a
submission window for the newer features and board additions to the next
kernel release should start. This means that the subsystem maintainer
will use this window to submit the work that were done during 2.6.(x-2)
time.

For this to happen, patches for 2.6.x should be already at the subsystem
maintainers -hg tree before the release of 2.6.(x-1), to allow proper
testing.

After the submission window, only patches with bug fixes should be sent
to mainstream. This means that the subsystem maintainer will separate
those patches from the submitted ones for kernel submission during -rc
cycle. Generally, the stabilization process (rc kernels) takes from 5
to 7 weeks.

To make life easier for the subsystem maintainer, please add:
[FIX] at the subject of the submitted emails or at the commit first
lines.

7. Patch submission from the community
   ===================================

Patch submission is open to all the Free Software community. The general
procedure to have a patch accepted in the v4l/dvb subsystem and in the
kernel is the following:

a. Post your patches to the corresponding mailing list for review and
   test by other people.

   For analog or core changes, the V4L mailing list is
	video4linux-list on redhat.com

   For DVB changes, the mailing list is
	linux-dvb on linuxtv.org

   PS.: Sending emails to DVB Mailing List requires subscription via
	http://linuxtv.org/lists.php

	V4L mailing list doesn't require subscription, although
	  subscription is recommended.

b. Use [PATCH] and a brief description in the email's subject.
   This will help the LinuxTV team to better handle it.

c. Please include a brief description in the headers of your
   patch, like described above. Something like:

	   This is just a sample commit comment, just for reference purposes.
	   This does nothing.

	   Signed-off-by nowhere <nowere@noplace.org>

d. Every patch shall have a Developers Certificate of Origin and should
   be submitted by one of its authors. All the patch authors should sign
   it.

e. People will eventually comment about the patch. In this case,
   please fix problems and repeat until everyone is happy ;)

f. If the patch is fixing an existing maintained driver, the
   low-level driver maintainer will apply to his tree, and at some later
   time, ask the subsystem maintainer to pull it. It is a good idea to
   send the patch to the maintainer C/C the mailing list for him to know
   that you're expecting him to forward the patch.

g. If it is a newer driver (not yet in one of the development trees),
   please send the patch to the subsystem maintainer, C/C the proper
   mailing lists.

8. Identifying regressions with Mercurial
   ======================================

   The better way for you to identify regressions with Mercurial is to
   use hg bisect. This is an extension provided with the current
   mercurial versions. For it to work, you need to have the proper setup
   at an hgrc file. To test if bisect is working, you can do:
	hg bisect help

   If Mercurial answers with
	hg: unknown command 'bisect'

   You will need to add the following lines to your ~/.hgrc file:
	[extensions]
	hgext.hbisect=/usr/lib/python2.5/site-packages/hgext/hbisect.py

	(assuming that hbisect.py is installed under python2.5 default dir)

   The first step is to initialize bisect for a newer regression testing
   session. This is done with:
	hg bisect init

   If the bisect were previously initialized, you should, instead do:
	hg bisect reset

   Supposing that the latest kernel version have some regression, you
   should do something like:
	hg update -C

   (This will clean any changes you had on your tree, and will update to
    the latest patch)

   Then, you will mark the latest version as "bad":
	hg bisect bad

   The next step is to find one version where the your board is properly
   working. Supposing that review "4000" is ok, you would do:
	hg update 4000

   Test if the review is really ok. If so, you should mark it as good:
	hg bisect good

   If everything is ok, it should print something like:

	Testing changeset 4481:a53c7904e47d (944 changesets remaining, ~9 tests)
	405 files updated, 0 files merged, 8 files removed, 0 files unresolved

   The above line shows that Mercurial selected another revision for you
   to test. Redo your tests. If this version is ok, you would do:

	hg bisect good

   otherwise, if the version is broken, you should do:

	hg bisect bad

   This should be repeated until you have an answer like:

	The first bad revision is:
	changeset:   4593:26d1ce012c5e
	user:        Someone <Someone@somewhere>
	date:        Thu Feb 31 17:52:53 2006 -0300
	summary:     This is the broken patch that we should find

   If, in the middle of the process, you need to know on what revision
      you are, you can do something like:
	hg log -r `hg id|cut -d' ' -f 1`

9. Creating a newer driver
   =======================

   This quick HOWTO explains how to create a new driver using v4l-dvb
   tree.

   The v4l-dvb tree have a the following basic structure:
	/
	|-- Documentation
	|   |-- dvb		<== DVB drivers documentation
	|   `-- video4linux	<== V4L drivers documentation
	|-- drivers
	|   `-- media
	|       |-- common	<== Common stuff, like IR
	|       |-- dvb		<== DVB only drivers
	|       |-- radio	<== V4L Radio only drivers
	|       `-- video	<== V4L Analog TV  (plus radio and/or
	|					    DVB) drivers
	`-- include
	    |-- linux		<== V4L userspace API files
	    |   `-- dvb		<== DVB userspace API files
	    `-- media		<== V4L internal API files

   9.1 - simple drivers
   ====================

   For very simple drivers that have only one .c and one .h file, the
   recommended way is not to create a newer directory, but keep the
   driver into an existing one.

   Assuming that the will be V4L+DVB, the better place for it to be is under
   /linux/drivers/media/video. Assuming also that the newer driver
   will be called as "newdevice", you need to do:

   a) add at /linux/drivers/media/video/Kconfig something like:

config VIDEO_NEWDEVICE
	tristate "newdevice driver"
	select VIDEO_V4L2
	select VIDEO_BUF
	help
	  Support for newdevice Device

	  Say Y if you own such a device and want to use it.

   b) add at /linux/drivers/media/video/Makefile something like:

obj-$(CONFIG_VIDEO_NEWDEVICE) += newdevice.o
EXTRA_CFLAGS = -Idrivers/media/video

   9.2 - bigger drivers
   ====================

   In this case, a driver will be splitted into several different source
   codes. Ideally, a source file should have up to 1000 source code
   lines. After that, you should consider splitting it into smaller files.

   In this case, assuming that the will be V4L+DVB, and that the driver
   is called "newdevice", all that is needed to add the newer driver is:

   a) create a newer dir with your driver, for example:
	/linux/drivers/media/video/newdevice
   b) create /linux/drivers/media/video/newdevice/Kconfig with something
      like:

config VIDEO_NEWDEVICE
	tristate "newdevice driver"
	select VIDEO_V4L2
	select VIDEO_BUF
	help
	  Support for new device Device

	  Say Y if you own such a device and want to use it.

   c) create /linux/drivers/media/video/newdevice/Makefile with
      something like:

obj-$(CONFIG_VIDEO_NEWDEVICE) += newdevice.o
EXTRA_CFLAGS = -Idrivers/media/video

   d) Add your driver directory at /linux/drivers/media/Makefile:

obj-$(CONFIG_VIDEO_NEWDEVICE) += newdevice/

   e) Add your driver directory at /linux/drivers/media/Kconfig:

source "drivers/media/video/newdevice/Kconfig"

   After that, you will be able to use v4l-dvb Makefile to compile your
   driver.  With:

	make help

   you'll see some useful syntax that may help your development.