From d2b008f134b787c067b987c61f949b7768bb8b27 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Zenghui Yu Date: Wed, 27 Feb 2019 02:22:22 +0800 Subject: Documentation/process/howto: Update for 4.x -> 5.x versioning As linux-5.0 is coming up soon, the howto.rst document can be updated for the new kernel version. Instead of changing all 4.x references to 5.x, this time we git rid of all explicit version numbers and rework some kernel trees' name to keep the docs current and real. Signed-off-by: Zenghui Yu Signed-off-by: Jonathan Corbet --- Documentation/process/howto.rst | 47 +++++++++++++++++++---------------------- 1 file changed, 22 insertions(+), 25 deletions(-) (limited to 'Documentation/process') diff --git a/Documentation/process/howto.rst b/Documentation/process/howto.rst index f16242bfb962..ad2b6c852b95 100644 --- a/Documentation/process/howto.rst +++ b/Documentation/process/howto.rst @@ -235,22 +235,21 @@ Linux kernel development process currently consists of a few different main kernel "branches" and lots of different subsystem-specific kernel branches. These different branches are: - - main 4.x kernel tree - - 4.x.y -stable kernel tree - - subsystem specific kernel trees and patches - - the 4.x -next kernel tree for integration tests + - Linus's mainline tree + - Various stable trees with multiple major numbers + - Subsystem-specific trees + - linux-next integration testing tree -4.x kernel tree -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +Mainline tree +~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -4.x kernels are maintained by Linus Torvalds, and can be found on -https://kernel.org in the pub/linux/kernel/v4.x/ directory. Its development -process is as follows: +Mainline tree are maintained by Linus Torvalds, and can be found at +https://kernel.org or in the repo. Its development process is as follows: - As soon as a new kernel is released a two weeks window is open, during this period of time maintainers can submit big diffs to Linus, usually the patches that have already been included in the - -next kernel for a few weeks. The preferred way to submit big changes + linux-next for a few weeks. The preferred way to submit big changes is using git (the kernel's source management tool, more information can be found at https://git-scm.com/) but plain patches are also just fine. @@ -277,21 +276,19 @@ mailing list about kernel releases: released according to perceived bug status, not according to a preconceived timeline."* -4.x.y -stable kernel tree -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +Various stable trees with multiple major numbers +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Kernels with 3-part versions are -stable kernels. They contain relatively small and critical fixes for security problems or significant -regressions discovered in a given 4.x kernel. +regressions discovered in a given major mainline release, with the first +2-part of version number are the same correspondingly. This is the recommended branch for users who want the most recent stable kernel and are not interested in helping test development/experimental versions. -If no 4.x.y kernel is available, then the highest numbered 4.x -kernel is the current stable kernel. - -4.x.y are maintained by the "stable" team , and +Stable trees are maintained by the "stable" team , and are released as needs dictate. The normal release period is approximately two weeks, but it can be longer if there are no pressing problems. A security-related problem, instead, can cause a release to happen almost @@ -301,8 +298,8 @@ The file :ref:`Documentation/process/stable-kernel-rules.rst