Mark Brown <broo...@kernel.org> writes: > On Fri, Oct 26, 2018 at 12:36:14PM -0500, Rob Herring wrote: >> On Thu, Oct 25, 2018 at 9:14 AM Linus Torvalds >> <torva...@linux-foundation.org> wrote: > >> > Are there other situations where you might want to track something >> > _outside_ of a pull request? Maybe. I can't really think of a lot of >> > them, though. Patches etc don't have commit ID's to track, but it > > patchwork gives them IDs and lets you do lookups using them, that's what > I'm doing. You can get the ID from a git commit by piping the output of > git show into parser.py from the patchwork source, it works a lot of the > time but things like editing the commit message will break it (this is a > theme with my scripting around the mail stuff...). > >> submissions. For example, with Greg and Mark B you can expect an >> automated replies. Mark's reply gets threaded with the original, but >> Greg's do not. For networking, you may or may not get a manual reply, > > Mine *mostly* gets threaded, it's relying on being able to talk to > patchwork to figure out the message ID at the minute so if the patchwork > lookup fails for whatever reason it'll just use on what's in the commit > for the CC list and not thread. That isn't ideal, especially when I'm > travelling and my network connection isn't the best, I keep meaning to > try to figure out a better way which would probably be based on git > notes as discussed earlier.
Yeah I use git notes for this. When I apply a patch I record the patchwork id in a git note, I have a custom hacked pwclient that does it automatically. I also download the full mbox from patchwork and stash it in .git/patchwork/<patch id>. Then I have everything I need to generate a properly threaded reply to the original mail. The git notes work well, if you add the following to your .git/config: [notes] rewriteRef = refs/notes/* displayRef = refs/notes/* Then all notes are copied when you rewrite a commit (rebase), and also displayed by eg. git show. Every now and then if you do extensive rebasing/splitting you get commits with the wrong or no patchwork ids. But that's pretty rare and not that hard to fixup when it happens. There's a slightly sanitised version of some of my scripts here: https://github.com/mpe/patchwork-scripts cheers