On Oct 1, 2013, at 9:51 PM, Guenter Roeck <linux@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Tue, Oct 01, 2013 at 07:09:26PM -0600, Chris Murphy wrote:
On Oct 1, 2013, at 10:24 AM, Guenter Roeck <linux@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Tue, Oct 01, 2013 at 09:33:13AM -0600, Chris Murphy wrote:Only requirement is that it also includes the previous patch, so it would be
On Oct 1, 2013, at 9:19 AM, Guenter Roeck <linux@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Tue, Oct 01, 2013 at 12:55:26PM +0200, Henrik Rydberg wrote:Chris,Warning message triggered with 3.12.0-0.rc3.git0.1.fc21.x86_64.
[ 10.886016] applesmc: key count changed from 261 to 1174405121
Explains the crash, but the new key count is very wrong. 1174405121 = 0x46000001.
Which I guess explains the subsequent memory allocation error in the log.
Henrik, any idea what might be going on ? Is it possible that the previous
command failure leaves some state machine in a bad state ?
I seem to recall a report on another similar state problem on newer
machines, so maybe, yes. Older machines seem fine, I have never
encountered the problem myself. Here is a patch to test that
theory. It has been tested to be pretty harmless on two different
generations.
I really really do not want to add an 'if (value is insane)' check ;-)
any chance you can load this patch on an affected machine so we can get
test feedback ? This one is too experimental to submit upstream without
knowing that it really fixes the problem.
Yes. What kernel.org source version should I apply it against? I'd use the non-debug config file from an equivalent version Fedora kernel, unless asked otherwise. And also should I test it on other vintages? I have here MBP4,1(2008); MBP8,2(2011), and MBP10,2(2012).
optimal if you can apply it on top of the previous image.
Patch added on top of 3.12.0-0.rc3.git0.1.fc20.x86_64 and built. But after ~dozen reboots, I'm not triggering the problem. The only items in dmesg with smc in it:
[ 13.799819] applesmc: key=261 fan=2 temp=14 index=14 acc=1 lux=2 kbd=1
[ 13.833402] input: applesmc as /devices/platform/applesmc.768/input/input10
Hi Chris,
That only means that you did not hit the problem. There may be some secondary
trigger (cold boot ? coffee on the cpu ?).
One thing I have seen in all logs is the earlier "send_byte fail" message, so
I think that is a pre-requisite.
I have no idea how to trigger it. I have tried cold and warm boots. Boots between linux and OS X to linux. *shrug* I'll keep trying as I'm doing other testing, maybe I'll stumble onto it.