Source: linux
Version: 5.19.6-1
Severity: important
Tags: patch upstream
X-Debbugs-Cc: stuart.a.hayhu...@gmail.com

Dear Maintainer,

The Samsung PM9B1 misreports its NID when resuming from sleep, causing the root 
filesystem to be unmounted, and the system left in an unstable state. Mostly 
this results in the device crashing, but if the device somehow continues 
running, it's incredibly unstable, where basically nothing works. It's an OEM 
drive found in some newer laptops (like my Lenovo Yoga 7 Gen 7)
There's a bug report and patch upstream for this, but personally I think it 
might be a good idea to include it in Debian until it's accepted, as machines 
with this drive are near-unusable.
Upstream issue: 
https://lore.kernel.org/all/20221116171727.4083-1-...@augustwikerfors.se/
I've tested the patch against the current Debian 6.1-rc5 kernel on my laptop, 
and this fixes the problem without any other issues.

Thanks :)

-- System Information:
Debian Release: bookworm/sid
  APT prefers unstable
  APT policy: (500, 'unstable'), (1, 'experimental')
Architecture: amd64 (x86_64)
Foreign Architectures: i386

Kernel: Linux 6.0.0-4-amd64 (SMP w/12 CPU threads; PREEMPT)
Kernel taint flags: TAINT_PROPRIETARY_MODULE, TAINT_OOT_MODULE, 
TAINT_UNSIGNED_MODULE
Locale: LANG=en_GB.UTF-8, LC_CTYPE=en_GB.UTF-8 (charmap=UTF-8), 
LANGUAGE=en_GB:en
Shell: /bin/sh linked to /usr/bin/dash
Init: systemd (via /run/systemd/system)
LSM: AppArmor: enabled

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