Well, that "They keep pumping out more and more devices with the same
breakage" and the "new device" comment from Pankaj below bear the
question: should we stop trying to play "whack a mole" with all those
quirk entries and handle devices with duplicate ids just like Windows does?
As far as I can tell Windows completely ignores the IDs. Which, looking
back, I'd love to be able to do as well, but they are already used
by udev for the /dev/disk/by-id/ links. Those are usually not used
on desktop systems, as they use the file system labels and UUIDs, but
that doesn't work for non-file system uses.
And all this has been working really well with the good old enterprise
SSDs, it's just that the cheap consumer devices keep fucking it up.
If we'd take it away now we'd break existing users, which puts us between
a rock and a hard place.
Maybe the compromise would be to add a modparam that tells the driver
to ignore it altogether (like allow_bogus_identifiers) that would
default to false. Then people can just workaround the problem instead
of having the back-and-fourth with the vendor?
Module parameters do not work on a per-device basis, sorry. This isn't
the 1990's anymore, please do not attempt to add new ones :)