----- Original Message ----- | Hi, | | It was nice meeting you at the Cluster Summit, good to see such an | active community around corosync and GFS2. | | I have just seen your GFS2 pull request for 4.14, which contains fixes | for some data/memory corruption bugs. | It would appear that the corruption bugfixes are small enough to meet | the -stable criteria [1], do you intend to send them to | [email protected] for the benefit of LTS kernel users (e.g. 4.4.x)? | | [1] | https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/v4.14/process/stable-kernel-rules.html#stable-kernel-rules | | Thanks, | --Edwin | Hi Edwin,
It was nice to meet you at Cluster Summit 2017 in Nuremberg and see the level of interest in GFS2 in the real world. The 4.14 fixes you wrote about were for the last merge window, back in September, and it was a large one with more GFS2 patches than usual. Some of them were actually put into stable branches, if I remember correctly. The current merge window for 4.15 is already open, and I've already posted our list of proposed patches we have for it, so this is a rapidly moving environment. :) I'm redirecting your email to the public cluster-devel mailing list so that other developers can see your email and make comments. If you're not already subscribed, perhaps you might want to subscribe to that mailing list for the latest GFS2 discussions and patches. You can subscribe here: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/cluster-devel At this point, we'd have to go back and see which patches were in that merge window and which ones got rolled into which stable kernel. If you have specific patches you want to see ported to stable branches, feel free to ask. It shouldn't take much effort to get that to happen. Regards, Bob Peterson Red Hat File Systems
