On Thu, Dec 28, 2023 at 10:46:57AM +0100, Sven Peter wrote: > > On Dec 27, 2023, at 11:30, Johan Hovold <johan@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > The commit you tracked this down to restored the original semantics for > > HCI_QUIRK_USE_BDADDR_PROPERTY, which means that it should only be set > > for devices with an invalid address. > > > > The Broadcom BCM4377 driver has so far been setting this flag > > unconditionally which now potentially results in also valid addresses > > being marked as invalid. > > > > I've just sent a patch that makes sure to only mark invalid addresses as > > invalid: > > > > https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20231227101003.10534-1-johan+linaro@xxxxxxxxxx/ > > > > Note however that the flag still needs to be set in case your device > > lacks storage for a unique device address so you cannot simply drop it > > for some device classes as you do below (unless you are certain that > > these devices will always have a valid address). > We do know that though. > > BCM4377 is present on Apple’s x86 Macs and always has internal storage > for the address. If the board comes up without an address there’s nothing > much we can do because the address isn’t provided by ACPI or anything > else and setting the invalid address quirk for that situation seems appropriate. > > BCM4378/4387 is present on Apple’s ARM Macs and never has internal storage. > The address is always provided by our bootloader in the device tree. > These should always unconditionally set HCI_QUIRK_USE_BDADDR_PROPERTY > just like this patch does. Ok, good, then this patch and the one I posted are mostly equivalent assuming that the BCM4378/4387 return an invalid address during setup. This patch may be preferred as it does not need to rely on such assumptions, though. Johan