On Thu, Aug 11, 2011 at 8:05 PM, Sarah Sharp <sarah.a.sharp@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Thu, Aug 11, 2011 at 07:27:15PM +0200, Daniel Mack wrote: >> On Thu, Aug 11, 2011 at 6:45 PM, Sarah Sharp >> <sarah.a.sharp@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> > On Thu, Aug 11, 2011 at 02:57:41AM +0200, Daniel Mack wrote: >> >> On Thu, Aug 11, 2011 at 1:15 AM, Sarah Sharp >> >> <sarah.a.sharp@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> > On Wed, Aug 10, 2011 at 05:33:02PM +0200, Daniel Mack wrote: >> >> >> On 08/10/2011 04:32 PM, Alan Stern wrote: >> >> >> >Looking at the driver's current code, it appears that your patch >> >> >> >does not fix the bug properly. Using discontiguous regions in the >> >> >> >transfer buffer is perfectly okay. The real problem is later on, >> >> >> >where you do: >> >> >> > >> >> >> >if (send_it) { out->number_of_packets = FRAMES_PER_URB; >> >> >> > >> >> >> >This should be >> >> >> > >> >> >> >out->number_of_packets = outframe; >> >> >> > >> >> >> >The way it is now, the USB stack will try to use data from all the >> >> >> >frame descriptors, and the last few will be stale because the loop >> >> >> >doesn't set them. >> >> >> >> >> >> That's actually true, even though it doesn't seem to cause any trouble. >> >> >> I tested everything here of course, and the output URBs return back from >> >> >> the USB stack with their length fields zeroed out, which then >> >> >> causes the stack to send packets with zero-length fields at the end. >> >> > >> >> > Actually, it causes system hangs when the driver is loaded on a device >> >> > attached to a USB 3.0 port, as Alan Stern pointed out: >> >> > >> >> > https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=40702 >> >> >> >> Yes, I've noticed this. >> >> >> >> > Please don't submit zero-length transfers. The xHCI driver just isn't >> >> > able to handle it. Arguably, it probably should have just rejected your >> >> > URB when it found a zero length buffer, so I'll probably be submitting a >> >> > patch to fix that. >> >> >> >> According to the spec, sending zero-length frames should be fine, no? >> >> Is there any particular reason why XCHI can't handle this while EHCI >> >> can? And does my patch fix the driver for XHCI? >> > >> > Ok, yes, you're correct that the xHCI spec allows the transfer length to >> > be set to zero. In the case where the frame buffer is zero-length, is >> > the buffer pointer still valid? It's not clear from the spec whether it >> > needs to be. >> >> Well, the buffer pointer is set in the URB, not in its individual iso >> subframes which just denotes them via the offset field. So yes, it is >> valid in my case. But it doesn't matter anymore, as the code which >> does that is now gone :) > > Do you mean it was removed with this patch: > > http://git.kernel.org/?p=linux/kernel/git/tiwai/sound-2.6.git;a=commitdiff;h=15439b > > Because according to Matej, he applied that patch, plus my patch to > reject zero-length buffers[1], and he saw debugging that indicated he > *did* see zero-length buffers. Is there any chance your driver might > submit a zero-length buffer in the middle of the isochronous URB > transfer array? Hmm, judging from the code, this can only ever happen if we receive an inbound iso frame which has a valid status and an actual_length of zero. Also, it was not neccessary to catch this case for EHCI. Maetj, does this patch make any difference? Daniel diff --git a/sound/usb/caiaq/audio.c b/sound/usb/caiaq/audio.c index aa52b3e..b48adb9 100644 --- a/sound/usb/caiaq/audio.c +++ b/sound/usb/caiaq/audio.c @@ -633,6 +634,10 @@ static void read_completed(struct urb *urb) continue; len = urb->iso_frame_desc[outframe].actual_length; + + if (len == 0) + continue; + out->iso_frame_desc[outframe].length = len; out->iso_frame_desc[outframe].actual_length = 0; out->iso_frame_desc[outframe].offset = offset; -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-usb" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html