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Name
Mail - instructions for sending email to the project
Description
The main discussions regarding development of the project,
patches, bugs, news, doubts, etc. happen on the mailing list.
To send an email to the project, send it to Alejandro and CC the
mailing list:
To: Alejandro Colomar <alx@kernel.org>
Cc: <linux-man@vger.kernel.org>
Please CC any relevant developers and mailing lists that may know
about or be interested in the discussion. If your email
discusses a feature or change, and you know which developers
added the feature or made the change that your email discusses,
please CC them on the email; with luck they may review and
comment on it. If you don't know who the developers are, you may
be able to discover that information from mailing list archives
or from git(1) logs or logs in other version control systems.
Obviously, if you are the developer of the feature being
discussed in a man-pages email, please identify yourself as such.
Relevant mailing lists may include:
Cc: LKML <linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org>
Cc: Linux API <linux-api@vger.kernel.org>
Cc: Glibc <libc-alpha@sourceware.org>
For other kernel mailing lists and maintainers, check the
<MAINTAINERS> file in the Linux kernel repository.
Please don't send HTML email; it will be discarded by the list.
Archives:
<https://lore.kernel.org/linux-man/>
<https://marc.info/?l=linux-man>
Subscription:
It is not necessary to subscribe to the list to send an
email. For subscribing to the list, or information about
it, go to
<https://subspace.kernel.org/vger.kernel.org.html>.
Sign your emails with PGP
We encourage that you sign all of your emails sent to the
mailing list, (especially) including the ones containing
patches, with your PGP key. This helps establish trust between
you and other contributors of this project, and prevent others
impersonating you. If you don't have a key, it's not mandatory
to sign your email, but you're encouraged to create and start
using a PGP key. See also:
<https://www.gnupg.org/faq/gnupg-faq.html#use_pgpmime>
There are many ways you can sign your patches, and it depends on
your preferred tools. You can use neomutt(1) (>= 20240201) as a
driver for git-send-email(1). In <~/.gitconfig>, add the
following section:
[sendemail]
sendmailcmd = neomutt -C -H - && true
See also
CONTRIBUTING
CONTRIBUTING.d/*
<https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/linux-man-ml.html>
<https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/code_of_conduct.html>
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