On Wed, Sep 25, 2019 at 02:31:58PM -0400, Alan Stern wrote: > On Wed, 25 Sep 2019, Piergiorgio Sartor wrote: > > > On Mon, Aug 26, 2019 at 07:38:33PM +0200, Piergiorgio Sartor wrote: > > > On Tue, Aug 20, 2019 at 06:37:22PM +0200, Piergiorgio Sartor wrote: > > > > On Tue, Aug 20, 2019 at 09:23:26AM +0200, Christoph Hellwig wrote: > > > > > On Mon, Aug 19, 2019 at 10:14:25AM -0400, Alan Stern wrote: > > > > > > Let's bring this to the attention of some more people. > > > > > > > > > > > > It looks like the bug that was supposed to be fixed by commit > > > > > > d74ffae8b8dd ("usb-storage: Add a limitation for > > > > > > blk_queue_max_hw_sectors()"), which is part of 5.2.5, but apparently > > > > > > the bug still occurs. > > > > > > > > > > Piergiorgio, > > > > > > > > > > can you dump the content of max_hw_sectors_kb file for your USB storage > > > > > device and send that to this thread? > > > > > > > > Hi all, > > > > > > > > for both kernels, 5.1.20 (working) and 5.2.8 (not working), > > > > the content of /sys/dev/x:y/queue/max_hw_sectors_kb is 512 > > > > for USB storage devices (2.0 and 3.0). > > > > > > > > This is for the PC showing the issue. > > > > > > > > In an other PC, which does not show the issus at the moment, > > > > the values are 120, for USB2.0, and 256, for USB3.0. > > > > > > Hi again, > > > > > > any news on this? > > > > > > Is there anything I can do to help? > > > > > > Should I report this somewhere else too? > > > > > > Currently this is quite a huge problem for me, > > > since the only working external storage is an > > > old 1394 HDD... > > > > Hi all, > > > > I'm now on kernel 5.2.16, from Fedora, and still I > > see the same issue. > > > > I guess it is not a chipset quirk, since there > > are two involved here. > > For the USB 2.0 I've (with "lspci"): > > > > USB controller: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. [AMD/ATI] SB7x0/SB8x0/SB9x0 USB EHCI Controller (prog-if 20 [EHCI]) > > > > For USB 3.0 I've: > > > > USB controller: ASMedia Technology Inc. ASM1042 SuperSpeed USB Host Controller (prog-if 30 [XHCI]) > > > > Any idea on how to proceed? > > > > Thanks a lot. > > One thing you can try is git bisect from 5.1.20 (or maybe just 5.1.0) > to 5.2.8. If you can identify a particular commit which caused the > problem to start, that would help. OK, I tried a bisect (2 days compilations...). Assuming I've done everything correctly (how to test this? How to remove the guilty patch?), this was the result: 09324d32d2a0843e66652a087da6f77924358e62 is the first bad commit commit 09324d32d2a0843e66652a087da6f77924358e62 Author: Christoph Hellwig <hch@xxxxxx> Date: Tue May 21 09:01:41 2019 +0200 block: force an unlimited segment size on queues with a virt boundary We currently fail to update the front/back segment size in the bio when deciding to allow an otherwise gappy segement to a device with a virt boundary. The reason why this did not cause problems is that devices with a virt boundary fundamentally don't use segments as we know it and thus don't care. Make that assumption formal by forcing an unlimited segement size in this case. Fixes: f6970f83ef79 ("block: don't check if adjacent bvecs in one bio can be mergeable") Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@xxxxxx> Reviewed-by: Ming Lei <ming.lei@xxxxxxxxxx> Reviewed-by: Hannes Reinecke <hare@xxxxxxxx> Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@xxxxxxxxx> :040000 040000 57ba04a02f948022c0f6ba24bfa36f3b565b2440 8c925f71ce75042529c001bf244b30565d19ebf3 M block What to do now? Thanks, bye, -- piergiorgio