On Wed, Jul 29, 2020 at 06:43:48PM +0200, Martin Kepplinger wrote: > > > Am 29. Juli 2020 17:44:42 MESZ schrieb James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>: > >On Wed, 2020-07-29 at 17:40 +0200, Martin Kepplinger wrote: > >> On 29.07.20 16:53, James Bottomley wrote: > >> > On Wed, 2020-07-29 at 07:46 -0700, James Bottomley wrote: > >> > > On Wed, 2020-07-29 at 10:32 -0400, Alan Stern wrote: > >[...] > >> > > > This error report comes from the SCSI layer, not the block > >> > > > layer. > >> > > > >> > > That sense code means "NOT READY TO READY CHANGE, MEDIUM MAY HAVE > >> > > CHANGED" so it sounds like it something we should be > >> > > ignoring. Usually this signals a problem, like you changed the > >> > > medium manually (ejected the CD). But in this case you can tell > >> > > us to expect this by setting > >> > > > >> > > sdev->expecting_cc_ua > >> > > > >> > > And we'll retry. I think you need to set this on all resumed > >> > > devices. > >> > > >> > Actually, it's not quite that easy, we filter out this ASC/ASCQ > >> > combination from the check because we should never ignore medium > >> > might have changed events on running devices. We could ignore it > >> > if we had a flag to say the power has been yanked (perhaps an > >> > additional sdev flag you set on resume) but we would still miss the > >> > case where you really had powered off the drive and then changed > >> > the media ... if you can regard this as the user's problem, then we > >> > might have a solution. > >> > > >> > James > >> > > >> > >> oh I see what you mean now, thanks for the ellaboration. > >> > >> if I do the following change, things all look normal and runtime pm > >> works. I'm not 100% sure if just setting expecting_cc_ua in resume() > >> is "correct" but that looks like it is what you're talking about: > >> > >> (note that this is of course with the one block layer diff applied > >> that Alan posted a few emails back) > >> > >> > >> --- a/drivers/scsi/scsi_error.c > >> +++ b/drivers/scsi/scsi_error.c > >> @@ -554,16 +554,8 @@ int scsi_check_sense(struct scsi_cmnd *scmd) > >> * so that we can deal with it there. > >> */ > >> if (scmd->device->expecting_cc_ua) { > >> - /* > >> - * Because some device does not queue unit > >> - * attentions correctly, we carefully check > >> - * additional sense code and qualifier so as > >> - * not to squash media change unit attention. > >> - */ > >> - if (sshdr.asc != 0x28 || sshdr.ascq != 0x00) > >> { > >> - scmd->device->expecting_cc_ua = 0; > >> - return NEEDS_RETRY; > >> - } > >> + scmd->device->expecting_cc_ua = 0; > >> + return NEEDS_RETRY; > > > >Well, yes, but you can't do this because it would lose us media change > >events in the non-suspend/resume case which we really don't want. > >That's why I was suggesting a new flag. > > > >James > > also if I set expecting_cc_ua in resume() only, like I did? That wouldn't make any difference. The information sent by your card reader has sshdr.asc == 0x28 and sshdr.ascq == 0x00 (you can see it in the log). So because of the code here in scsi_check_sense(), which you can't change, the Unit Attention sent by the card reader would not be retried even if you do set the flag in resume(). Alan Stern