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How to use this list:
Find the most specific section entry (described below) that matches where
your change lives and add the reviewers (R) and maintainers (M) as
reviewers. You can use the same method to track down who knows a particular
code base best.
Your change/query may span multiple entries; that is okay.
If you do not find an entry that describes your request at all, someone
forgot to update this list; please at least file an issue or send an email
to a maintainer, but preferably you should just update this document.
Description of section entries:
Section entries are structured according to the following scheme:
X: NAME <EMAIL_USERNAME@DOMAIN> <DISCORD_USERNAME!>
X: ...
.
.
.
Where REPO_NAME is the name of the repository within the OpenBMC GitHub
organization; FILE_PATH is a file path within the repository, possibly with
wildcards; X is a tag of one of the following types:
M: Denotes maintainer; has fields NAME <EMAIL_USERNAME@DOMAIN> <DISCORD_USERNAME!>;
if omitted from an entry, assume one of the maintainers from the
MAINTAINERS entry.
R: Denotes reviewer; has fields NAME <EMAIL_USERNAME@DOMAIN> <DISCORD_USERNAME!>;
these people are to be added as reviewers for a change matching the repo
path.
F: Denotes forked from an external repository; has fields URL.
Line comments are to be denoted "# SOME COMMENT" (typical shell style
comment); it is important to follow the correct syntax and semantics as we
may want to use automated tools with this file in the future.
A change cannot be added to an OpenBMC repository without a MAINTAINER's
approval; thus, a MAINTAINER should always be listed as a reviewer.
START OF MAINTAINERS LIST
-------------------------
M: Ed Tanous <ed@tanous.net> <edtanous!>
M: Gunnar Mills <gmills@linux.vnet.ibm.com> <GunnarM!>