On Thu, Sep 11, 2025 at 11:32:10AM -0400, James Bottomley wrote: > On Thu, 2025-09-11 at 14:49 +0100, Mark Brown wrote: > > On Thu, Sep 11, 2025 at 09:18:05AM -0400, James Bottomley wrote: > > One pattern you see with trees that do this is that some bug is found > > in -next, the bug is fixed and the patch applied but if the patch is > > applied to a tree that isn't in -next you still see the bug in -next > > until the pull request to the upstream tree goes through.  Any > > incubation that the subtree does before sending their pull request, > > or delay in taking the pull request from the subtree, shows up in > > additional time that the bug is visible in -next. > In theory a fix to a pulled commit, whether separate or rebased, should > be treated like a bug fix and go up with speed, so is this simply a > missing rule (or encouragement) for a tree not in -next? Partly, yes, but the bug isn't always directly in the tree where the fix is going so it can be a bit less clear and sometimes the delay is on the pull side (eg, due to holidays or whatever). It's a lot simpler to just put the tree in -next.