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Comment by themulticaster

4 years ago

I'd say that's a very valid argument in principle. If you want to start contributing to the Linux kernel, you'll have to start somewhere - but you can't start refactoring entire subsystems, rather you'll start with small patches and it's very natural to make minor procedural and technical mistakes at that stage. [1]

However, in this particular case, I agree that it is not a valid argument since it is doubtful whether the beginning kernel contributor's patches are in good faith.

[1] Torvalds encouraging new contributors to send in trivial patches back in 2004: https://lkml.org/lkml/2004/12/20/255

You have plenty of places to start. Fork and patch away. You don't start by patching the distribution the entire world uses.

It's like "be kind I'm new to the concept of airplanes, let me fly this airplane with hundreds of passengers"