On 04/08/2020 16:37, Johannes Thumshirn wrote: > On 04/08/2020 16:34, Coly Li wrote: >> On 2020/8/4 22:31, Johannes Thumshirn wrote: >>> On 04/08/2020 16:23, Coly Li wrote: >>>> This is the procedure to reproduce the panic, >>>> # modprobe scsi_debug delay=0 dev_size_mb=2048 max_queue=1 >>>> # losetup -f /dev/nvme0n1 --direct-io=on >>>> # blkdiscard /dev/loop0 -o 0 -l 0x200 >>> >>> losetup -f /dev/sdX isn't it? >>> >> >> In my case, I use a NVMe SSD as the backing device of the loop device. >> Because I don't have a scsi lun. >> >> And loading scsi_debug module seems necessary, otherwise the discard >> process just hang and I cannot see the kernel panic (I don't know why yet). > > OK, now that's highly interesting. Does it also happen if you back loop with > a file? loop_config_discard() has different cases for the different backing devices/files. S > Damn I didn't want to hit sent.... Does this (untested) change make a difference: diff --git a/drivers/block/loop.c b/drivers/block/loop.c index 475e1a738560..8a07a89d702e 100644 --- a/drivers/block/loop.c +++ b/drivers/block/loop.c @@ -895,6 +895,9 @@ static void loop_config_discard(struct loop_device *lo) blk_queue_max_write_zeroes_sectors(q, backingq->limits.max_write_zeroes_sectors); + q->limits.discard_granularity = + backingq->limits.discard_granularity; + /* * We use punch hole to reclaim the free space used by the * image a.k.a. discard. However we do not support discard if