On Mon, 13 Feb 2017, Hans Verkuil wrote:

> This is the v2 patch:
> 
> https://patchwork.linuxtv.org/patch/32648/

Oh, ok, thanks!

Guennadi

>       Hans
> 
> On 02/13/2017 04:10 PM, Guennadi Liakhovetski wrote:
> > Hi,
> > 
> > According to the explanations below, "superseded" means, that either a 
> > newer version of the patch is available, or it's been included in a pull 
> > request. Since I don't see a newer version, I should assume, that it's 
> > been included in a pull request. However, I don't see one on linux-media 
> > either. How am I supposed to track such patch status changes?
> > 
> > Thanks
> > Guennadi
> > 
> > ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> > Date: Mon, 13 Feb 2017 14:56:01 -0000
> > From: Patchwork <patchw...@linuxtv.org>
> > To: g.liakhovet...@gmx.de
> > Subject: [linux-media] Patch notification: 1 patch updated
> > 
> > Hello,
> > 
> > The following patch (submitted by you) has been updated in patchwork:
> > 
> >  * linux-media: V4L: add Y12I, Y8I and Z16 pixel format documentation
> >      - http://patchwork.linuxtv.org/patch/32257/
> >      - for: Linux Media kernel patches
> >     was: New
> >     now: Superseded
> > 
> > This email is a notification only - you do not need to respond.
> > 
> > -
> > 
> > Patches submitted to linux-media@vger.kernel.org have the following
> > possible states:
> > 
> > New: Patches not yet reviewed (typically new patches);
> > 
> > Under review: When it is expected that someone is reviewing it (typically,
> >           the driver's author or maintainer). Unfortunately, patchwork
> >           doesn't have a field to indicate who is the driver maintainer.
> >           If in doubt about who is the driver maintainer please check the
> >           MAINTAINERS file or ask at the ML;
> > 
> > Superseded: when the same patch is sent twice, or a new version of the
> >         same patch is sent, and the maintainer identified it, the first
> >         version is marked as such. It is also used when a patch was
> >         superseeded by a git pull request.
> > 
> > Obsoleted: patch doesn't apply anymore, because the modified code doesn't
> >        exist anymore.
> > 
> > Changes requested: when someone requests changes at the patch;
> > 
> > Rejected: When the patch is wrong or doesn't apply. Most of the
> >       time, 'rejected' and 'changes requested' means the same thing
> >       for the developer: he'll need to re-work on the patch.
> > 
> > RFC: patches marked as such and other patches that are also RFC, but the
> >      patch author was not nice enough to mark them as such. That includes:
> >     - patches sent by a driver's maintainer who send patches
> >       via git pull requests;
> >     - patches with a very active community (typically from developers
> >       working with embedded devices), where lots of versions are
> >       needed for the driver maintainer and/or the community to be
> >       happy with.
> > 
> > Not Applicable: for patches that aren't meant to be applicable via 
> >             the media-tree.git.
> > 
> > Accepted: when some driver maintainer says that the patch will be applied
> >       via his tree, or when everything is ok and it got applied
> >       either at the main tree or via some other tree (fixes tree;
> >       some other maintainer's tree - when it belongs to other subsystems,
> >       etc);
> > 
> > If you think any status change is a mistake, please send an email to the ML.
> > 
> > -
> > 
> > This is an automated mail sent by the patchwork system at
> > patchwork.linuxtv.org. To stop receiving these notifications, edit
> > your mail settings at:
> >   http://patchwork.linuxtv.org/mail/
> > 
> 

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