On 2024/4/24 18:37, Ian Kent wrote:
On 24/4/24 17:47, Ian Kent wrote:
On 23/4/24 18:34, Gao Xiang wrote:
Hi Ian,

On 2024/4/22 21:10, Ian Kent wrote:
On 22/4/24 17:12, Gao Xiang wrote:
Hi Ian,

(+Cc Jingbo here).

On 2024/4/22 16:31, Ian Kent wrote:
I'm new to the list so Hi to all,


I'm working with a heavily patched 5.14 kernel and I've gathered together 
patches to bring erofs

up to 5.19 and I'm trying to run the erofs and fscache tests from a checkout of 
the 1.7.1 repo.

(branch experimental-tests-fscache) and I have a couple of fails I can't quite 
work out so I'm

hoping for a little halp.

Thanks for your interest and provide the detailed infos.

I guess a modified 5.14 kernel may be originated from RHEL 9?

Yes, that's right.

I am working on improving erofs support in RHEL which of course goes via CentOS 
Stream 9.

BTW, could you submit the current patches to CentOS stream 9 mainline?
so I could review as well.

CentOS Stream is meant to allow our development to be public so, yes, I would 
like to do that.


It will be interesting to see how it works, I'll have a look around the CentOS 
web site to see if I can work

out how it looks to external people.


Timing is good too as I'm about to construct a merge request and our process 
requires that to be against

the CentOS Stream repo.


That repository is located on GitLab ... so we'll need to work out how to go 
about that.

Looking at the CentOS web page at 
https://docs.centos.org/en-US/stream-contrib/quickstart/

you would need a GitLab account to take part in the merge request review 
process.

Yes, I have a gitlab account.



If you wanted to take part in the case discussion as well you would need a Red 
Hat Issues

account (sign up https://issues.redhat.com/). This is only needed if you want 
to take part

in development/log bug reports, etc. since a Jira bug is required for each 
merge request.

I guess I don't need a Red Hat Issues account, since I could comment in the PR 
itself.



As the Mandalorian would say, "this is the way".


If you don't wish to do this then I can post elsewhere, perhaps a kernel.org 
repo. but it gets

a bit harder if we work outside of the development process.

Nope, gitlab repo is fine, and I already participated in CentOS
Stream 9 repo before.

Thanks,
Gao Xiang



Ian

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