On 07.08.23 06:38, Mario Limonciello wrote: > On 8/6/23 13:20, Hans de Goede wrote: >> On 8/6/23 19:13, Mario Limonciello wrote: >>> On 8/6/23 10:14, Hans de Goede wrote: >>>> Commit a9c4a912b7dc ("ACPI: resource: Remove "Zen" specific match and >>>> quirks") is causing keyboard problems for quite a log of AMD based >>>> laptop users, leading to many bug reports. >>>> >>>> Revert this change for now, until we can come up with >>>> a better fix for the PS/2 IRQ trigger-type/polarity problems >>>> on some x86 laptops. >>> >>> Reverting it is going to help a bunch of machines but cause >>> regressions for others. How do you prioritize which to fix when it >>> comes to a regression? It's up to Linus in the end, but to echo what Hans already said: I guess Linus stance in this case would be along the lines of "let's get back to a known state, even if we known that state has problems as well". And that state is the mainline release 6.4 . Sure, Greg picked this up for stable, but apart from that things boil down to "we tried something in 6.5-rc1, it did work well, so let's revert this until we work our a proper solution that can be applied in a later cycle, no harm done". > We haven't even given a try to fixing it; I think the revert is still > hasty. Some urgency is required, as (a) the patch made it into a stable release (b) get closer to the end of the merge window and want to avoid last minute changes. > [...] > Can we perhaps see if that works instead for some affected people? > [...] I'd say: it would be best to resolve this now with a revert, then we might even reach the next stable-rc release (Greg unusually releases those on Mon/Tue/Wed) and thus the next stable release. But let's please definitely resolve this this week in mainline before -rc6. Ciao, Thorsten (wearing his 'the Linux kernel's regression tracker' hat) -- Everything you wanna know about Linux kernel regression tracking: https://linux-regtracking.leemhuis.info/about/#tldr If I did something stupid, please tell me, as explained on that page.