Re: console=ttyS1 breaks ttyS1 termios and prevents me from logging in

From: Peter Hurley
Date: Wed Apr 08 2015 - 22:09:16 EST


On 04/08/2015 09:49 PM, Andy Lutomirski wrote:
> On Wed, Apr 8, 2015 at 5:45 PM, Andy Lutomirski <luto@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> On Wed, Apr 8, 2015 at 4:32 PM, Peter Hurley <peter@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>> On 04/08/2015 05:40 PM, Andy Lutomirski wrote:
>>>> On Wed, Apr 8, 2015 at 2:29 PM, Peter Hurley <peter@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>>>> Hi Andy,
>>>>>
>>>>> On 04/08/2015 05:17 PM, Andy Lutomirski wrote:
>>>>>> Something strange seems to have happened to my serial console setup.
>>>>>> I boot with console=ttyS1,115200n8 and I have a getty running on
>>>>>> /dev/ttyS1.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> On older kernels, or if I remove the console= boot parameter, then my
>>>>>> getty works fine. On 3.19.3 with the console= parameter, something's
>>>>>> wrong with termios and I can't log in. Running:
>>>>>
>>>>> Thanks for the report.
>>>>> 1. Please attach your dmesg.
>>>>> 2. Is this behavior new to 3.19.3? (iow, what was the last version
>>>>> that you noticed didn't do this)
>>>>
>>>> I didn't have the problem before I reinstalled this box, upgraded from
>>>> 3.15 to 3.19.3, and updated by Dell iDRAC7 firmware. Booting into
>>>> 3.13-something does *not* fix the problem, so I'm not at all convinced
>>>> that the kernel version matters much. I'll try reverting the iDRAC7
>>>> thing, but I don't see why that would make any difference at all to
>>>> Linux.
>>>
>>> I think this is related to DRAC; maybe upgrading the firmware reset
>>> the Serial communication settings in the system bios?
>>>
>>
>> The DRAC pretends to be a 16550, so I don't understand how it could
>> prevent Linux from reprogramming the line discipline. Also, if I
>> remove console=ttyS1,115200 from the kernel command line, it starts
>> working again.

I didn't realize from your initial report that input with getty was
working, otherwise I wouldn't have asked for the line settings.


>>> 1. What's your getty command line?
>>
>> /sbin/getty -8 115200 ttyS1
>>
>>
>>> 2. Contents of /proc/tty/driver/serial when you think getty is running
>>> and waiting for login (shows line signals).
>>
>> With getty running:
>>
>> serinfo:1.0 driver revision:
>> 0: uart:16550A port:000003F8 irq:4 tx:0 rx:0
>> 1: uart:16550A port:000002F8 irq:3 tx:19828 rx:2 RTS|CTS|DTR
>> 2: uart:unknown port:000003E8 irq:4
>> 3: uart:unknown port:000002E8 irq:3
>> 4: uart:unknown port:00000000 irq:0
>>
>> (getty itself works fine)
>>
>> When I type a username, I get:
>>
>> serinfo:1.0 driver revision:
>> 0: uart:16550A port:000003F8 irq:4 tx:0 rx:0
>> 1: uart:16550A port:000002F8 irq:3 tx:19848 rx:10 RTS|CTS|DTR
>> 2: uart:unknown port:000003E8 irq:4
>> 3: uart:unknown port:000002E8 irq:3
>> 4: uart:unknown port:00000000 irq:0
>>
>> at that point, login is running, and it's login that doesn't work.
>>
>>>
>>> Something to test is if you set getty to local line, does it work then.
>>> I use agetty so my command line is:
>>> /sbin/getty --noreset -8L 115200 ttyS0 vt102
>>
>> I tried:
>>
>> # /sbin/getty --noreset -8L 115200 ttyS1 vt102
>>
>> it has exactly the same problem.
>>
>> By adding a whole bunch of printks, I see that both ttyS0 and ttyS1
>> make it into uart_set_termios. But now it's time to home...
>
> OMFG I hate [insert long string of expletives] userspace bugs.
>
> Some piece of crap user code regressed in some recent Ubuntu update
> and left all the termios lock flags set on the console device,
> presumably read from /proc/console.

Either /dev/console or it found the console from
/sys/devices/virtual/tty/console/active.

I suspected the termios locking because that's really the only way
termios settings don't get set, but I couldn't imagine why login
would be flagging those. I hadn't considered that something would
leave them on for later processes.

> So... false alarm, except that the kernel should maybe considering
> disallowing such daft behavior or at least warning. Now I get to
> figure out *which* userspace program regressed. I'm reasonably sure
> it's either Plymouth or some horrendously buggy Debian/Ubuntu script
> that controls it.

Some weekend I'm going to package a NoPlymouth.

Regards,
Peter Hurley
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