[PATCH 3/3] Documentation: RISC-V: Mention the UEFI Standards
Atish Patra
atishp at atishpatra.org
Mon Sep 26 10:34:07 PDT 2022
On Tue, Sep 20, 2022 at 7:31 AM Palmer Dabbelt <palmer at rivosinc.com> wrote:
>
> The current patch acceptance policy requires that specifications are
> approved by the RISC-V foundation, but we rely on external
> specifications as well. This explicitly calls out the UEFI
> specifications that we're starting to depend on.
>
> Signed-off-by: Palmer Dabbelt <palmer at rivosinc.com>
> ---
> This also came up during the Plumbers BoF. The other discussed options
> were to wait for an ACPI/UEFI specification to be published or to just
> not wait at all, but this middle ground matches how we handle the RISC-V
> specifications and it seems like there was broad agreement on it.
>
> As usual with policy stuff I'll wait a bit for others to have a chance
> to chime in, but I think the wording on this one is at least easier to
> reason about than some of the others.
> ---
> Documentation/riscv/patch-acceptance.rst | 8 +++++---
> 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)
>
> diff --git a/Documentation/riscv/patch-acceptance.rst b/Documentation/riscv/patch-acceptance.rst
> index 8087718556da..08cb92324eaf 100644
> --- a/Documentation/riscv/patch-acceptance.rst
> +++ b/Documentation/riscv/patch-acceptance.rst
> @@ -20,9 +20,11 @@ Submit Checklist Addendum
> -------------------------
> We'll only accept patches for new modules or extensions if the
> specifications for those modules or extensions are listed as being
> -"Frozen" or "Ratified" by the RISC-V Foundation. (Developers may, of
> -course, maintain their own Linux kernel trees that contain code for
> -any draft extensions that they wish.)
> +unlikely to make incompatible changes in the future. For
> +specifications from the RISC-V foundation this means "Frozen" or
> +"Ratified", for the UEFI specifications this means a published ECR.
It would be good to explicitly mention "UEFI forum specifications"
or
UEFI/ACPI specifications.
> +(Developers may, of course, maintain their own Linux kernel trees that
> +contain code for any draft extensions that they wish.)
>
> Additionally, the RISC-V specification allows implementors to create
> their own custom extensions. These custom extensions aren't required
> --
> 2.34.1
>
>
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Other than that, LGTM
Reviewed-by: Atish Patra <atishp at rivosinc.com>
--
Regards,
Atish
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