MAINTAINERS (98f10f0e2613ba1ac2ad3f57a5174014f6dcb03d) MAINTAINERS (668725ce6bab12f7d5130fd46d99d0dc6fefe733)
1QEMU Maintainers
2================
3
4The intention of this file is not to establish who owns what portions of the
5code base, but to provide a set of names that developers can consult when they
6have a question about a particular subset and also to provide a set of names
7to be CC'd when submitting a patch to obtain appropriate review.
8

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18 These reviewers should be CCed on patches.
19 Reviewers are familiar with the subject matter and provide feedback
20 even though they are not maintainers.
21 L: Mailing list that is relevant to this area
22 These lists should be CCed on patches.
23 W: Web-page with status/info
24 Q: Patchwork web based patch tracking system site
25 T: SCM tree type and location. Type is one of: git, hg, quilt, stgit.
1QEMU Maintainers
2================
3
4The intention of this file is not to establish who owns what portions of the
5code base, but to provide a set of names that developers can consult when they
6have a question about a particular subset and also to provide a set of names
7to be CC'd when submitting a patch to obtain appropriate review.
8

--- 9 unchanged lines hidden (view full) ---

18 These reviewers should be CCed on patches.
19 Reviewers are familiar with the subject matter and provide feedback
20 even though they are not maintainers.
21 L: Mailing list that is relevant to this area
22 These lists should be CCed on patches.
23 W: Web-page with status/info
24 Q: Patchwork web based patch tracking system site
25 T: SCM tree type and location. Type is one of: git, hg, quilt, stgit.
26 S: Status, one of the following:
26 S: Status, one of the following (keep in sync with docs/devel/maintainers.rst):
27 Supported: Someone is actually paid to look after this.
28 Maintained: Someone actually looks after it.
29 Odd Fixes: It has a maintainer but they don't have time to do
30 much other than throw the odd patch in. See below.
31 Orphan: No current maintainer [but maybe you could take the
32 role as you write your new code].
33 Obsolete: Old code. Something tagged obsolete generally means
34 it has been replaced by a better system and you

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27 Supported: Someone is actually paid to look after this.
28 Maintained: Someone actually looks after it.
29 Odd Fixes: It has a maintainer but they don't have time to do
30 much other than throw the odd patch in. See below.
31 Orphan: No current maintainer [but maybe you could take the
32 role as you write your new code].
33 Obsolete: Old code. Something tagged obsolete generally means
34 it has been replaced by a better system and you

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