On 16.11.21 10:02, Orlando Chamberlain wrote: >> Bluetooth maintainers, what's the status here? The proposed patch is >> fixing a regression. It's not a recent one (it afaics was introduced in >> v5.11-rc1). Nevertheless it would be good to get this finally resolved. >> But this thread seems inactive for more than a week now. Or was progress >> made, but is only visible somewhere else? > > I think the best solution is getting broadcom to update their firmware, > I've just sent them a message through a form on their website, I couldn't > seem to get it to tell me "Your message has been sent", so it's possible > that it didn't submit (more likely I've sent the same message several times). > > If I hear back from them I'll send something here. Thx for that. But FWIW: from the point of the regression tracker that's not the best solution, as according to your report this is a regression. IOW: we deal with something that used to up to a certain kernel version and was broken by a change to the kernel. That is something frown upon in Linux kernel development, hence changes introducing regression are often quickly reverted, if they can't get fixed by follow up change quickly. That sentence has two "quickly", as we want to prevent more people running into the issue, resulting in a loss of trust. But that's what will happen if we wait for a firmware update to get developed, tested, published, and rolled out. And even then we can't expect users to have the latest firmware installed when they switch to a new kernel. Hence the best solution *afaics* might be: fix this in the kernel somehow now with a workaround; once the firmware update is out, change the kernel again to only apply the workaround if the old firmware is in use. At least that's how it looks to me from the outside. But as mentioned earlier already: as a Linux kernel regression tracker I'm getting a lot of reports on my table. I can only look briefly into most of them. Therefore I unfortunately will get things wrong or miss something important. I hope that's not the case here; if you think it is, don't hesitate to tell me about it in a public reply. That's in everyone's interest, as what I wrote above might be misleading to everyone reading this, which is something I'd like to avoid. Ciao, Thorsten (carrying his Linux kernel regression tracker hat)