On Mon, Jul 29, 2019 at 03:47:45PM +0800, Hillf Danton wrote:
> 
> On Tue, 23 Jul 2019 19:50:08 -0700
> > 
> > [This email was generated by a script.  Let me know if you have any 
> > suggestions
> > to make it better, or if you want it re-generated with the latest status.]
> > 
> > Of the currently open syzbot reports against the upstream kernel, I've 
> > manually
> > marked 1 of them as possibly being a bug in the rtc subsystem.
> > 
> > If you believe this bug is no longer valid, please close the syzbot report 
> > by
> > sending a '#syz fix', '#syz dup', or '#syz invalid' command in reply to the
> > original thread, as explained at https://goo.gl/tpsmEJ#status
> > 
> > If you believe I misattributed this bug to the rtc subsystem, please let me
> > know, and if possible forward the report to the correct people or mailing 
> > list.
> > 
> > Here is the bug:
> > 
> > --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> > Title:              BUG: workqueue lockup (4)
> > Last occurred:      40 days ago
> > Reported:           289 days ago
> > Branches:           Mainline and others
> > Dashboard link:     
> > https://syzkaller.appspot.com/bug?id=0041bf1423916e9ae458b08b760e269a33c14960
> > Original thread:    
> > https://lkml.kernel.org/lkml/0000000000005764090577a27...@google.com/T/#u
> > 
> Better if %s=lkml.kernel.org=lore.kernel.org=
> 

Out of curiosity, is there a reason for this?  They both go to the same place,
but the reason I used lkml.kernel.org is that some high-profile kernel
developers (e.g. Andrew Morton) are using it in the "Link: " tag in commits.
So it seems like lkml.kernel.org is maybe "right" one that is intended to
always keep working in the future?

But then I see Greg KH is using lore.kernel.org, so maybe it doesn't matter?

Maybe lore.kernel.org is better because people won't confuse it with lkml.org
and refuse to go to it :-)

- Eric

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