you don't find any, install `the latest release from that series
<https://kernel.org/>`_. If it still shows the issue, report it to the stable
mailing list (stable@vger.kernel.org) and CC the regressions list
-(regressions@lists.linux.dev).
+(regressions@lists.linux.dev); ideally also CC the maintainer and the mailing
+list for the subsystem in question.
In all other cases try your best guess which kernel part might be causing the
issue. Check the :ref:`MAINTAINERS <maintainers>` file for how its developers
If you are facing multiple issues with the Linux kernel at once, report each
separately. While writing your report, include all information relevant to the
issue, like the kernel and the distro used. In case of a regression, CC the
-regressions mailing list (regressions@lists.linux.dev) to your report; also try
-to include the commit-id of the change causing it, which a bisection can find.
+regressions mailing list (regressions@lists.linux.dev) to your report. Also try
+to pin-point the culprit with a bisection; if you succeed, include its
+commit-id and CC everyone in the sign-off-by chain.
Once the report is out, answer any questions that come up and help where you
can. That includes keeping the ball rolling by occasionally retesting with newer
* Send a short problem report to the Linux stable mailing list
(stable@vger.kernel.org) and CC the Linux regressions mailing list
- (regressions@lists.linux.dev). Roughly describe the issue and ideally
- explain how to reproduce it. Mention the first version that shows the
- problem and the last version that's working fine. Then wait for further
- instructions.
+ (regressions@lists.linux.dev); if you suspect the cause in a particular
+ subsystem, CC its maintainer and its mailing list. Roughly describe the
+ issue and ideally explain how to reproduce it. Mention the first version
+ that shows the problem and the last version that's working fine. Then
+ wait for further instructions.
The reference section below explains each of these steps in more detail.
the results to the archives at that URL.
It's also wise to check the internet, LKML and maybe bugzilla.kernel.org again
-at this point.
+at this point. If your report needs to be filed in a bug tracker, you may want
+to check the mailing list archives for the subsystem as well, as someone might
+have reported it only there.
For details how to search and what to do if you find matching reports see
"Search for existing reports, first run" above.
When sending the report by mail, CC the Linux regressions mailing list
(regressions@lists.linux.dev). In case the report needs to be filed to some web
-tracker, proceed to do so; once filed, forward the report by mail to the
-regressions list. Make sure to inline the forwarded report, hence do not attach
-it. Also add a short note at the top where you mention the URL to the ticket.
+tracker, proceed to do so. Once filed, forward the report by mail to the
+regressions list; CC the maintainer and the mailing list for the subsystem in
+question. Make sure to inline the forwarded report, hence do not attach it.
+Also add a short note at the top where you mention the URL to the ticket.
When mailing or forwarding the report, in case of a successful bisection add the
author of the culprit to the recipients; also CC everyone in the signed-off-by
*Send a short problem report to the Linux stable mailing list
(stable@vger.kernel.org) and CC the Linux regressions mailing list
- (regressions@lists.linux.dev). Roughly describe the issue and ideally
- explain how to reproduce it. Mention the first version that shows the
- problem and the last version that's working fine. Then wait for further
- instructions.*
+ (regressions@lists.linux.dev); if you suspect the cause in a particular
+ subsystem, CC its maintainer and its mailing list. Roughly describe the
+ issue and ideally explain how to reproduce it. Mention the first version
+ that shows the problem and the last version that's working fine. Then
+ wait for further instructions.*
When reporting a regression that happens within a stable or longterm kernel
line (say when updating from 5.10.4 to 5.10.5) a brief report is enough for
-the start to get the issue reported quickly. Hence a rough description is all
-it takes.
+the start to get the issue reported quickly. Hence a rough description to the
+stable and regressions mailing list is all it takes; but in case you suspect
+the cause in a particular subsystem, CC its maintainers and its mailing list
+as well, because that will speed things up.
-But note, it helps developers a great deal if you can specify the exact version
+And note, it helps developers a great deal if you can specify the exact version
that introduced the problem. Hence if possible within a reasonable time frame,
try to find that version using vanilla kernels. Lets assume something broke when
your distributor released a update from Linux kernel 5.10.5 to 5.10.8. Then as
reverted to fix the issue quickly). Hence consider to do a proper bisection
right away if time permits. See the section 'Special care for regressions' and
the document 'Documentation/admin-guide/bug-bisect.rst' for details how to
-perform one.
+perform one. In case of a successful bisection add the author of the culprit to
+the recipients; also CC everyone in the signed-off-by chain, which you find at
+the end of its commit message.
Reference for "Reporting issues only occurring in older kernel version lines"