On 12/04/2018 14:23, Greg Kroah-Hartman wrote:
On Thu, Apr 12, 2018 at 02:17:50PM +0200, Thierry Escande wrote:
Hi Greg,
On 07/04/2018 08:11, Greg Kroah-Hartman wrote:
On Fri, Apr 06, 2018 at 05:25:24PM -0500, Dan Rue wrote:
On Fri, Apr 06, 2018 at 03:22:41PM +0200, Greg Kroah-Hartman wrote:
This is the start of the stable review cycle for the 4.9.93 release.
There are 102 patches in this series, all will be posted as a response
to this one. If anyone has any issues with these being applied, please
let me know.
Responses should be made by Sun Apr 8 08:42:55 UTC 2018.
Anything received after that time might be too late.
Results from Linaro’s test farm.
No regressions on arm64, arm and x86_64.
There is a new test failure on dragonboard 410c (arm64) in
kselftest/cpu-on-off-test. However, it looks like the test was failing
but giving a false "PASS" on previous versions of 4.9. This -RC seems to
have changed the behavior enough to cause the test to actually mark a
failure.
In any event, this looks like a db410c-specific pre-existing issue that we have
already escalated to our Qualcomm team. Details can be found at
https://bugs.linaro.org/show_bug.cgi?id=3723 for those interested.
Thanks for testing these and letting me know.
The test failure on dragonboard 410c comes from [1] to fix a possible
deadlock related to the hotplug rework. It's been reverted in v4.12 by [2]
because the cpu hotplug rework was not ready yet at that time. Since the
hotplug rework has not been backported to v4.9.y, the splat cannot be
reproduced and so [1] can be reverted or [2] applied on v4.9.y.
[1] https://lkml.org/lkml/2018/3/23/452
[2] https://lkml.org/lkml/2017/5/7/124
Hm, so I need to drop some patch, but what one? lkml.org does not work
for me, please be specific and use the git commit ids, or at the
very-least, the subject of the patches. Never make someone have to rely
on the existance of a random web site not under kernel developer's
control to figure out what to do...
So the commit to be reverted is [1], introduced in v4.9.90. Or you can
apply [2] from v4.12 that actually reverts [1].
[1] 18dd7b964c01ac44497471f4ea3f4c0c663eab55
[2] 51d638b1f56a0bfd9219800620994794a1a2b219
Regards,
Thierry