On Wed, Apr 03, 2024 at 08:40:00PM +0200, Greg KH wrote: > On Wed, Apr 03, 2024 at 02:06:28PM -0400, Joseph Salisbury wrote: > > > > > > On 4/3/24 13:54, Greg KH wrote: > > > On Wed, Apr 03, 2024 at 01:50:09PM -0400, Joseph Salisbury wrote: > > > > Hi Christoph, > > > > > > > > A kernel bug report was opened against Ubuntu [0]. This bug is a regression > > > > introduced in mainline version v5.17-rc1 and made it's way into v5.15 stable > > > > updates. > > > > > > > > The following commit was identified as the cause of the regression in 5.15: > > > > > > > > c6ce1c5dd327 ("block: rename GENHD_FL_NO_PART_SCAN to GENHD_FL_NO_PART") > > > How is renaming a define a "regression"? > > The "regression" is experienced after upgrading to the kernel to the version > > that introduced this commit. > > The v5.15.131 kernel works as expected, upgrading the kernel to v5.15.132 > > breaks behavior that worked in a prior kernel version. > > Reverting commit c6ce1c5dd327 in v5.15.132 allows the experience to be as > > before in v5.15.131. > > What "experience" are you talking about here? Please be specific. What > exactly "broke", what is the build error that happens? > > > > > I was hoping to get your feedback, since you are the patch author. Is the > > > > best approach to revert this commit, since many third parties rely on the > > > > name being GENHD_FL_NO_PART_SCAN in kernel headers? > > > External kernel modules are never an issue. Is this a userspace thing? > > > > > > > Is there a specific need that you know of that requires this commit > > > > in the 5.15 and earlier stable kernels? > > > Yes. And Christoph did not do the backport, so I doubt he cares :) > > > > > > Again, what in-kernel issue is caused by this? > > > > Third party code that relies on the kernel-headers will no longer compile > > due to the name change. Should we not care if we break things, even in > > userspace? > > Is this userspace, or is it kernel drivers? > > If kernel drivers, you know that there s no stable kernel api, we > rename and change things all the time, even in stable kernel trees, for > good reasons (see the set of patches that were applied that contained > this change.) Do you want to have unfixed security issues, or do you > want a secure kernel that happens to rename variables at times? Given the lack of response, I am going to assume that this means you are referring to out-of-tree kernel code and this is not a real "regression" at all. greg k-h