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authorMatthew Brost <matthew.brost@intel.com>2026-03-12 07:17:56 -0700
committerMatthew Brost <matthew.brost@intel.com>2026-03-12 07:23:23 -0700
commit42d3b66d4cdbacfc9d120d2301b8de89cc29a914 (patch)
tree999800b4737152481da268f2450088ab2f557115 /Documentation/process/4.Coding.rst
parent635e3eba1ebcd5b92856e975e1d3859b487dc88b (diff)
parent58351f46de26bcc4403f9972f7aed430d15cbd03 (diff)
Merge drm/drm-next into drm-xe-next
Backmerging to bring in 7.00-rc3. Important ahead GPU SVM merging THP support. Signed-off-by: Matthew Brost <matthew.brost@intel.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/process/4.Coding.rst')
-rw-r--r--Documentation/process/4.Coding.rst6
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/process/4.Coding.rst b/Documentation/process/4.Coding.rst
index 80bcc1cabc23..c0f57d0c4f73 100644
--- a/Documentation/process/4.Coding.rst
+++ b/Documentation/process/4.Coding.rst
@@ -160,12 +160,12 @@ irrelevant.
Locking
*******
-In May, 2006, the "Devicescape" networking stack was, with great
+In May 2006, the "Devicescape" networking stack was, with great
fanfare, released under the GPL and made available for inclusion in the
mainline kernel. This donation was welcome news; support for wireless
networking in Linux was considered substandard at best, and the Devicescape
stack offered the promise of fixing that situation. Yet, this code did not
-actually make it into the mainline until June, 2007 (2.6.22). What
+actually make it into the mainline until June 2007 (2.6.22). What
happened?
This code showed a number of signs of having been developed behind
@@ -204,7 +204,7 @@ regression in the first place.
It is often argued that a regression can be justified if it causes things
to work for more people than it creates problems for. Why not make a
change if it brings new functionality to ten systems for each one it
-breaks? The best answer to this question was expressed by Linus in July,
+breaks? The best answer to this question was expressed by Linus in July
2007:
::