AI assistance when contributing to the Linux kernel

https://news.ycombinator.com/rss Hits: 8
Summary

This document provides guidance for AI tools and developers using AI assistance when contributing to the Linux kernel. AI tools helping with Linux kernel development should follow the standard kernel development process: Documentation/process/development-process.rst Documentation/process/coding-style.rst Documentation/process/submitting-patches.rst Licensing and Legal Requirements All contributions must comply with the kernel's licensing requirements: All code must be compatible with GPL-2.0-only Use appropriate SPDX license identifiers See Documentation/process/license-rules.rst for details Signed-off-by and Developer Certificate of Origin AI agents MUST NOT add Signed-off-by tags. Only humans can legally certify the Developer Certificate of Origin (DCO). The human submitter is responsible for: Reviewing all AI-generated code Ensuring compliance with licensing requirements Adding their own Signed-off-by tag to certify the DCO Taking full responsibility for the contribution When AI tools contribute to kernel development, proper attribution helps track the evolving role of AI in the development process. Contributions should include an Assisted-by tag in the following format: Assisted-by: AGENT_NAME:MODEL_VERSION [TOOL1] [TOOL2] Where: AGENT_NAME is the name of the AI tool or framework MODEL_VERSION is the specific model version used [TOOL1] [TOOL2] are optional specialized analysis tools used (e.g., coccinelle, sparse, smatch, clang-tidy) Basic development tools (git, gcc, make, editors) should not be listed. Example: Assisted-by: Claude:claude-3-opus coccinelle sparse

First seen: 2026-04-10 20:01

Last seen: 2026-04-11 03:04