Well known open-source Linux graphics driver developer David Airlie of Red Hat, who is the co-maintainer of the Direct Rendering Manager (DRM) kernel graphics/display drivers and accelerator “accel” drivers, announced experimental work on AI-drive code/patch review for these open-source kernel drivers.
Following discussions at last year’s Kernel Maintainers Summit, David Airlie has been working to demonstrate useful AI patch review. For now at least these AI patch reviews are being sent to their own dedicated mailing list to avoid polluting the common DRM/DRI mailing lists.
Airlie’s AI patch review process is feeding various review prompts to look at recent patch series both on the basis of the complete work as well as per-patch reviews. This is all being powered by Claude with Opus 4.6 that Red Hat provides for their employees.
Before anyone gets too worked up one way or another, Airlie ended his announcement with:
“This is also just an experiment to see what might stick, it might disappear at any time, and it probably needs a lot of tuning.”
More details on his DRM driver AI patch review via the mailing list announcement.
The drm-ai-reviews is the mailing list where these AI-generated patch reviews are currently being posted.
Airlie isn’t the only upstream Linux kernel developer experimenting with AI code review. The b4 development tool is dog-feeding its AI agent code review helper and Btrfs creator Chris Mason has been leading the work on an AI code review prompts initiative for the Linux kernel.
