commit ccbfcac05866ebe6eb3bc6d07b51d4ed4fcde436 upstream. The recent addition of a sanity check for a too low start tick time seems breaking some applications that uses aloop with a certain slave timer setup. They may have the initial resolution 0, hence it's treated as if it were a too low value. Relax and skip the check for the slave timer instance for addressing the regression. Fixes: 4a63bd179fa8 ("ALSA: timer: Set lower bound of start tick time") Cc: <stable@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Link: https://github.com/raspberrypi/linux/issues/6294 Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20240810084833.10939-1-tiwai@xxxxxxx Signed-off-by: Takashi Iwai <tiwai@xxxxxxx> --- Greg, this is a backport for 6.6.y and older stable kernels that failed to cherry-pick the original one. sound/core/timer.c | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/sound/core/timer.c b/sound/core/timer.c index a0b515981ee9..230babace502 100644 --- a/sound/core/timer.c +++ b/sound/core/timer.c @@ -556,7 +556,7 @@ static int snd_timer_start1(struct snd_timer_instance *timeri, /* check the actual time for the start tick; * bail out as error if it's way too low (< 100us) */ - if (start) { + if (start && !(timer->hw.flags & SNDRV_TIMER_HW_SLAVE)) { if ((u64)snd_timer_hw_resolution(timer) * ticks < 100000) { result = -EINVAL; goto unlock; -- 2.43.0