Re: 2.6.39-rc2 regression: X201s fails to resumeb77dcf8460ae57d4eb9fd3633eb4f97b8fb20716

From: Thomas Gleixner
Date: Mon Apr 11 2011 - 18:19:41 EST


On Tue, 12 Apr 2011, Thomas Gleixner wrote:
> On Mon, 11 Apr 2011, Marcel Holtmann wrote:
>
> > Hi Thomas,
> >
> > > > > > Can the bluetooth folks please have a look at that ASAP? The obvious
> > > > > > fast fix for Linus tree is to revert the second hunk for now, but this
> > > > > > needs to be fixed proper.
> > > > >
> > > > > Who will submit this patch? I'd rather have your name on it so that
> > > > > people come complain at you...
> > > >
> > > > I took a shot at it and just sent a patch (also attached for convenience)
> > > > that should solve the problem.
> > >
> > > Aaarg. No. That patch reverts both hunks.
> > >
> > > --- a/net/bluetooth/hci_core.c
> > > +++ b/net/bluetooth/hci_core.c
> > > @@ -586,9 +586,6 @@ static int hci_dev_do_close(struct hci_dev *hdev)
> > > hci_req_cancel(hdev, ENODEV);
> > > hci_req_lock(hdev);
> > >
> > > - /* Stop timer, it might be running */
> > > - del_timer_sync(&hdev->cmd_timer);
> > > -
> > > if (!test_and_clear_bit(HCI_UP, &hdev->flags)) {
> > > hci_req_unlock(hdev);
> > > return 0;
> > >
> > > As I said before you need that first hunk to stay for the case where
> > > there is no device up and you return via the !HCI_UP check. You just
> > > moved back to the state before as the stupid timer is active for
> > > whatever reason even when HCI_UP is not set.
> >
> > if I read this right then we have the case that we arm this timer for no
> > real reason. A device in !HCI_UP should have nothing running. Certainly
> > not the cmd_timer since it will never process any commands.
> >
> > According to Gustavo, the problem is really in the hci_reset logic were
> > we arm the timer even when shutting down the device.
>
> The reason why the original patch was sent is, that the timer was
> running when the thing went out via the !HCI_UP path, which caused the
> whole thing to explode in the first place. I had no time to figure out
> why, but moving the del_timer_sync above the
> if (!test_and_clear_bit(HCI_UP, &hdev->flags)) solved it.

Oops. Hit send too fast.

Then it broke the resume on Keith machine and reverting just the hunk
which disarms the timer in the

if (hdev->sent_cmd) {

path made both scenarios working. So there are two problems:

1) Why do we need the del_timer_sync() above the !HCI_UP check

2) Why gets the timer rearmed after that

Thanks,

tglx
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