Am Freitag, den 08.11.2019, 10:35 -0500 schrieb Alan Stern: > On Fri, 8 Nov 2019, Greg Kroah-Hartman wrote: > > > On Thu, Nov 07, 2019 at 12:32:45PM +0100, Oliver Neukum wrote: > > > Am Dienstag, den 05.11.2019, 17:38 +0100 schrieb Greg Kroah-Hartman: > > > > > > Given this information, perhaps you will decide that the revert is > > > > > > worthwhile. > > > > > > > > > > Damned if I do, damned if I do not. > > > > > Check for usbip and special case it? > > > > > > > > We should be able to do that in the host controller driver for usbip, > > > > right? What is the symptom if you use a UAS device with usbip and this > > > > commit? > > > > > > Yes, that patch should then also be applied. Then it will work. > > > Without it, commands will fail, as transfers will end prematurely. > > > > Ok, I'm confused now. I just checked, and I really have no idea what > > needs to be backported anymore. 3ae62a42090f ("UAS: fix alignment of > > scatter/gather segments") was backported to all of the stable kernels, > > and now we reverted it. > > > > So what else needs to be done here? > > In one sense, nothing needs to be done. 3ae62a42090f was intended to > fix a long-standing problem with USBIP, but people reported a OK, now I am a bit confused. AFAICT 3ae62a42090f actually did fix the issue. So if you simply revert it, the issue will reappear. > regression in performance. (Admittedly, the report was about the > correponding change to usb-storage, not the change to uas, but it's > reasonable to think the effect would be the same.) So in line with the Yes. > no-regressions policy, we only need to revert the commit -- which you > have already done. But that breaks UAS over USBIP, doesn't it? > On the other hand, the long-standing problem in USBIP can be fixed by > back-porting commit ea44d190764b. But since that commit isn't a > bug-fix (and since it's rather large), you may question whether it is > appropriate for the -stable kernel series. It certainly is large. But without it UAS won't work over USBIP, will it? I think that is the central question we need to answer here. Regards Oliver