Author: Kailang Yang <[email protected]> Date: Fri Jan 23 15:21:36 2026 +0800 ALSA: hda/realtek - fixed speaker no sound [ Upstream commit 630fbc6e870eb06c5126cc97a3abecbe012272c8 ] If it play a 5s above silence media stream, it will cause silence detection trigger. Speaker will make no sound when you use another app to play a stream. Add this patch will solve this issue. GPIO2: Mute Hotkey GPIO3: Mic Mute LED Enable this will turn on hotkey and LED support. Signed-off-by: Kailang Yang <[email protected]> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/[email protected] Signed-off-by: Takashi Iwai <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <[email protected]>
Author: Zhang Heng <[email protected]> Date: Mon Jan 26 15:35:08 2026 +0800 ALSA: hda/realtek: Add quirk for Inspur S14-G1 [ Upstream commit 9e18920e783d0bcd4c127a7adc66565243ab9655 ] Inspur S14-G1 is equipped with ALC256. Enable "power saving mode" and Enable "headset jack mode". Signed-off-by: Zhang Heng <[email protected]> Link: https://patch.msgid.link/[email protected] Signed-off-by: Takashi Iwai <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <[email protected]>
Author: Breno Baptista <[email protected]> Date: Wed Feb 4 23:43:41 2026 -0300 ALSA: hda/realtek: Enable headset mic for Acer Nitro 5 [ Upstream commit 51db05283f7c9c95a3e6853a3044cd04226551bf ] Add quirk to support microphone input through headphone jack on Acer Nitro 5 AN515-57 (ALC295). Signed-off-by: Breno Baptista <[email protected]> Link: https://patch.msgid.link/[email protected] Signed-off-by: Takashi Iwai <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <[email protected]>
Author: Tim Guttzeit <[email protected]> Date: Mon Jan 19 16:15:55 2026 +0100 ALSA: hda/realtek: Fix headset mic for TongFang X6AR55xU [ Upstream commit b48fe9af1e60360baf09ca6b7a3cd6541f16e611 ] Add a PCI quirk to enable microphone detection on the headphone jack of TongFang X6AR55xU devices. Signed-off-by: Tim Guttzeit <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Werner Sembach <[email protected]> Link: https://patch.msgid.link/[email protected] Signed-off-by: Takashi Iwai <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <[email protected]>
Author: Anatolii Shirykalov <[email protected]> Date: Mon Jan 19 15:56:18 2026 +0100 ASoC: amd: yc: Add ASUS ExpertBook PM1503CDA to quirks list [ Upstream commit 018b211b1d321a52ed8d8de74ce83ce52a2e1224 ] Add ASUS ExpertBook PM1503CDA to the DMI quirks table to enable internal DMIC support via the ACP6x machine driver. Signed-off-by: Anatolii Shirykalov <[email protected]> Link: https://patch.msgid.link/[email protected] Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <[email protected]>
Author: Dirk Su <[email protected]> Date: Thu Jan 29 14:50:19 2026 +0800 ASoC: amd: yc: Add quirk for HP 200 G2a 16 [ Upstream commit 611c7d2262d5645118e0b3a9a88475d35a8366f2 ] Fix the missing mic on HP 200 G2a 16 by adding quirk with the board ID 8EE4 Signed-off-by: Dirk Su <[email protected]> Link: https://patch.msgid.link/[email protected] Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <[email protected]>
Author: Ricardo Rivera-Matos <[email protected]> Date: Thu Jan 15 19:25:10 2026 +0000 ASoC: cs35l45: Corrects ASP_TX5 DAPM widget channel [ Upstream commit 6dd0fdc908c02318c28ec2c0979661846ee0a9f7 ] ASP_TX5 was incorrectly mapped to a channel value of 3 corrects, the channel value of 4. Reviewed-by: Charles Keepax <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Ricardo Rivera-Matos <[email protected]> Link: https://patch.msgid.link/[email protected] Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <[email protected]>
Author: Charles Keepax <[email protected]> Date: Fri Jan 30 15:09:27 2026 +0000 ASoC: cs42l43: Correct handling of 3-pole jack load detection [ Upstream commit e77a4081d7e324dfa876a9560b2a78969446ba82 ] The load detection process for 3-pole jacks requires slightly updated reference values to ensure an accurate result. Update the code to apply different tunings for the 3-pole and 4-pole cases. This also updates the thresholds overall so update the relevant comments to match. Signed-off-by: Charles Keepax <[email protected]> Link: https://patch.msgid.link/[email protected] Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <[email protected]>
Author: Ziyi Guo <[email protected]> Date: Mon Feb 2 17:41:12 2026 +0000 ASoC: fsl_xcvr: fix missing lock in fsl_xcvr_mode_put() [ Upstream commit f514248727606b9087bc38a284ff686e0093abf1 ] fsl_xcvr_activate_ctl() has lockdep_assert_held(&card->snd_card->controls_rwsem), but fsl_xcvr_mode_put() calls it without acquiring this lock. Other callers of fsl_xcvr_activate_ctl() in fsl_xcvr_startup() and fsl_xcvr_shutdown() properly acquire the lock with down_read()/up_read(). Add the missing down_read()/up_read() calls around fsl_xcvr_activate_ctl() in fsl_xcvr_mode_put() to fix the lockdep assertion and prevent potential race conditions when multiple userspace threads access the control. Signed-off-by: Ziyi Guo <[email protected]> Link: https://patch.msgid.link/[email protected] Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <[email protected]>
Author: Tagir Garaev <[email protected]> Date: Sun Feb 1 15:17:28 2026 +0300 ASoC: Intel: sof_es8336: Add DMI quirk for Huawei BOD-WXX9 [ Upstream commit 6b641122d31f9d33e7d60047ee0586d1659f3f54 ] Add DMI entry for Huawei Matebook D (BOD-WXX9) with HEADPHONE_GPIO and DMIC quirks. This device has ES8336 codec with: - GPIO 16 (headphone-enable) for headphone amplifier control - GPIO 17 (speakers-enable) for speaker amplifier control - GPIO 269 for jack detection IRQ - 2-channel DMIC Hardware investigation shows that both GPIO 16 and 17 are required for proper audio routing, as headphones and speakers share the same physical output (HPOL/HPOR) and are separated only via amplifier enable signals. RFC: Seeking advice on GPIO control issue: GPIO values change in driver (gpiod_get_value() shows logical value changes) but not physically (debugfs gpio shows no change). The same gpiod_set_value_cansleep() calls work correctly in probe context with msleep(), but fail when called from DAPM event callbacks. Context information from diagnostics: - in_atomic=0, in_interrupt=0, irqs_disabled=0 - Process context: pipewire - GPIO 17 (speakers): changes in driver, no physical change - GPIO 16 (headphone): changes in driver, no physical change In Windows, audio switching works without visible GPIO changes, suggesting possible ACPI/firmware involvement. Any suggestions on how to properly control these GPIOs from DAPM events would be appreciated. Signed-off-by: Tagir Garaev <[email protected]> Link: https://patch.msgid.link/[email protected] Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <[email protected]>
Author: Michael Chan <[email protected]> Date: Thu Apr 17 10:24:45 2025 -0700 bnxt_en: Change FW message timeout warning commit 0fcad44a86bdc2b5f202d91ba1eeeee6fceb7b25 upstream. The firmware advertises a "hwrm_cmd_max_timeout" value to the driver for NVRAM and coredump related functions that can take tens of seconds to complete. The driver polls for the operation to complete under mutex and may trigger hung task watchdog warning if the wait is too long. To warn the user about this, the driver currently prints a warning if this advertised value exceeds 40 seconds: Device requests max timeout of %d seconds, may trigger hung task watchdog Initially, we chose 40 seconds, well below the kernel's default CONFIG_DEFAULT_HUNG_TASK_TIMEOUT (120 seconds) to avoid triggering the hung task watchdog. But 60 seconds is the timeout on most production FW and cannot be reduced further. Change the driver's warning threshold to 60 seconds to avoid triggering this warning on all production devices. We also print the warning if the value exceeds CONFIG_DEFAULT_HUNG_TASK_TIMEOUT which may be set to architecture specific defaults as low as 10 seconds. Reviewed-by: Kalesh AP <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Pavan Chebbi <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Andy Gospodarek <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Michael Chan <[email protected]> Link: https://patch.msgid.link/[email protected] Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>
Author: Arnd Bergmann <[email protected]> Date: Wed Apr 23 18:28:21 2025 +0200 bnxt_en: hide CONFIG_DETECT_HUNG_TASK specific code commit 8ff6175139967cd17b2a62bca4b2de2559942b7e upstream. The CONFIG_DEFAULT_HUNG_TASK_TIMEOUT setting is only available when the hung task detection is enabled, otherwise the code now produces a build failure: drivers/net/ethernet/broadcom/bnxt/bnxt.c:10188:21: error: use of undeclared identifier 'CONFIG_DEFAULT_HUNG_TASK_TIMEOUT' 10188 | max_tmo_secs > CONFIG_DEFAULT_HUNG_TASK_TIMEOUT) { Enclose this warning logic in an #ifdef to ensure this builds. Fixes: 0fcad44a86bd ("bnxt_en: Change FW message timeout warning") Signed-off-by: Arnd Bergmann <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Michael Chan <[email protected]> Link: https://patch.msgid.link/[email protected] Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>
Author: Gui-Dong Han <[email protected]> Date: Fri Feb 13 11:12:19 2026 -0500 bus: fsl-mc: fix use-after-free in driver_override_show() [ Upstream commit 148891e95014b5dc5878acefa57f1940c281c431 ] The driver_override_show() function reads the driver_override string without holding the device_lock. However, driver_override_store() uses driver_set_override(), which modifies and frees the string while holding the device_lock. This can result in a concurrent use-after-free if the string is freed by the store function while being read by the show function. Fix this by holding the device_lock around the read operation. Fixes: 1f86a00c1159 ("bus/fsl-mc: add support for 'driver_override' in the mc-bus") Cc: [email protected] Signed-off-by: Gui-Dong Han <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Ioana Ciornei <[email protected]> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/[email protected] Signed-off-by: Christophe Leroy (CS GROUP) <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>
Author: Chelsy Ratnawat <[email protected]> Date: Fri Feb 13 11:12:18 2026 -0500 bus: fsl-mc: Replace snprintf and sprintf with sysfs_emit in sysfs show functions [ Upstream commit a50522c805a6c575c80f41b04706e084d814e116 ] Use sysfs_emit() instead of snprintf()/sprintf() when writing to sysfs buffers, as recommended by the kernel documentation. Signed-off-by: Chelsy Ratnawat <[email protected]> Acked-by: Ioana Ciornei <[email protected]> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/[email protected] Signed-off-by: Christophe Leroy <[email protected]> Stable-dep-of: 148891e95014 ("bus: fsl-mc: fix use-after-free in driver_override_show()") Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>
Author: Chen Ridong <[email protected]> Date: Wed Jan 14 01:51:29 2026 +0000 cpuset: Fix missing adaptation for cpuset_is_populated Commit b1bcaed1e39a ("cpuset: Treat cpusets in attaching as populated") was backported to the long‑term support (LTS) branches. However, because commit d5cf4d34a333 ("cgroup/cpuset: Don't track # of local child partitions") was not backported, a corresponding adaptation to the backported code is still required. To ensure correct behavior, replace cgroup_is_populated with cpuset_is_populated in the partition_is_populated function. Cc: [email protected] # 6.1+ Fixes: b1bcaed1e39a ("cpuset: Treat cpusets in attaching as populated") Cc: Waiman Long <[email protected]> Cc: Tejun Heo <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Chen Ridong <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>
Author: Melissa Wen <[email protected]> Date: Mon Dec 8 22:44:15 2025 -0100 drm/amd/display: extend delta clamping logic to CM3 LUT helper [ Upstream commit d25b32aa829a3ed5570138e541a71fb7805faec3 ] Commit 27fc10d1095f ("drm/amd/display: Fix the delta clamping for shaper LUT") fixed banding when using plane shaper LUT in DCN10 CM helper. The problem is also present in DCN30 CM helper, fix banding by extending the same bug delta clamping fix to CM3. Signed-off-by: Melissa Wen <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Harry Wentland <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Alex Deucher <[email protected]> (cherry picked from commit 0274a54897f356f9c78767c4a2a5863f7dde90c6) Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <[email protected]>
Author: Melissa Wen <[email protected]> Date: Fri Jan 16 12:50:49 2026 -0300 drm/amd/display: remove assert around dpp_base replacement [ Upstream commit 84962445cd8a83dc5bed4c8ad5bbb2c1cdb249a0 ] There is nothing wrong if in_shaper_func type is DISTRIBUTED POINTS. Remove the assert placed for a TODO to avoid misinterpretations. Signed-off-by: Melissa Wen <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Alex Hung <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Alex Deucher <[email protected]> (cherry picked from commit 1714dcc4c2c53e41190896eba263ed6328bcf415) Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <[email protected]>
Author: Brahmajit Das <[email protected]> Date: Tue Sep 2 02:50:20 2025 +0530 drm/tegra: hdmi: sor: Fix error: variable ‘j’ set but not used [ Upstream commit 1beee8d0c263b3e239c8d6616e4f8bb700bed658 ] The variable j is set, however never used in or outside the loop, thus resulting in dead code. Building with GCC 16 results in a build error due to -Werror=unused-but-set-variable= enabled by default. This patch clean up the dead code and fixes the build error. Example build log: drivers/gpu/drm/tegra/sor.c:1867:19: error: variable ‘j’ set but not used [-Werror=unused-but-set-variable=] 1867 | size_t i, j; | ^ Signed-off-by: Brahmajit Das <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Thierry Reding <[email protected]> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/[email protected] Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <[email protected]>
Author: Yongpeng Yang <[email protected]> Date: Tue Feb 17 10:19:06 2026 -0500 f2fs: fix IS_CHECKPOINTED flag inconsistency issue caused by concurrent atomic commit and checkpoint writes [ Upstream commit 7633a7387eb4d0259d6bea945e1d3469cd135bbc ] During SPO tests, when mounting F2FS, an -EINVAL error was returned from f2fs_recover_inode_page. The issue occurred under the following scenario Thread A Thread B f2fs_ioc_commit_atomic_write - f2fs_do_sync_file // atomic = true - f2fs_fsync_node_pages : last_folio = inode folio : schedule before folio_lock(last_folio) f2fs_write_checkpoint - block_operations// writeback last_folio - schedule before f2fs_flush_nat_entries : set_fsync_mark(last_folio, 1) : set_dentry_mark(last_folio, 1) : folio_mark_dirty(last_folio) - __write_node_folio(last_folio) : f2fs_down_read(&sbi->node_write)//block - f2fs_flush_nat_entries : {struct nat_entry}->flag |= BIT(IS_CHECKPOINTED) - unblock_operations : f2fs_up_write(&sbi->node_write) f2fs_write_checkpoint//return : f2fs_do_write_node_page() f2fs_ioc_commit_atomic_write//return SPO Thread A calls f2fs_need_dentry_mark(sbi, ino), and the last_folio has already been written once. However, the {struct nat_entry}->flag did not have the IS_CHECKPOINTED set, causing set_dentry_mark(last_folio, 1) and write last_folio again after Thread B finishes f2fs_write_checkpoint. After SPO and reboot, it was detected that {struct node_info}->blk_addr was not NULL_ADDR because Thread B successfully write the checkpoint. This issue only occurs in atomic write scenarios. For regular file fsync operations, the folio must be dirty. If block_operations->f2fs_sync_node_pages successfully submit the folio write, this path will not be executed. Otherwise, the f2fs_write_checkpoint will need to wait for the folio write submission to complete, as sbi->nr_pages[F2FS_DIRTY_NODES] > 0. Therefore, the situation where f2fs_need_dentry_mark checks that the {struct nat_entry}->flag /wo the IS_CHECKPOINTED flag, but the folio write has already been submitted, will not occur. Therefore, for atomic file fsync, sbi->node_write should be acquired through __write_node_folio to ensure that the IS_CHECKPOINTED flag correctly indicates that the checkpoint write has been completed. Fixes: 608514deba38 ("f2fs: set fsync mark only for the last dnode") Cc: [email protected] Signed-off-by: Sheng Yong <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Jinbao Liu <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Yongpeng Yang <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Chao Yu <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Jaegeuk Kim <[email protected]> [ folio => page ] Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>
Author: Yongpeng Yang <[email protected]> Date: Wed Jan 7 10:33:46 2026 +0800 f2fs: fix out-of-bounds access in sysfs attribute read/write commit 98ea0039dbfdd00e5cc1b9a8afa40434476c0955 upstream. Some f2fs sysfs attributes suffer from out-of-bounds memory access and incorrect handling of integer values whose size is not 4 bytes. For example: vm:~# echo 65537 > /sys/fs/f2fs/vde/carve_out vm:~# cat /sys/fs/f2fs/vde/carve_out 65537 vm:~# echo 4294967297 > /sys/fs/f2fs/vde/atgc_age_threshold vm:~# cat /sys/fs/f2fs/vde/atgc_age_threshold 1 carve_out maps to {struct f2fs_sb_info}->carve_out, which is a 8-bit integer. However, the sysfs interface allows setting it to a value larger than 255, resulting in an out-of-range update. atgc_age_threshold maps to {struct atgc_management}->age_threshold, which is a 64-bit integer, but its sysfs interface cannot correctly set values larger than UINT_MAX. The root causes are: 1. __sbi_store() treats all default values as unsigned int, which prevents updating integers larger than 4 bytes and causes out-of-bounds writes for integers smaller than 4 bytes. 2. f2fs_sbi_show() also assumes all default values are unsigned int, leading to out-of-bounds reads and incorrect access to integers larger than 4 bytes. This patch introduces {struct f2fs_attr}->size to record the actual size of the integer associated with each sysfs attribute. With this information, sysfs read and write operations can correctly access and update values according to their real data size, avoiding memory corruption and truncation. Fixes: b59d0bae6ca3 ("f2fs: add sysfs support for controlling the gc_thread") Cc: [email protected] Signed-off-by: Jinbao Liu <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Yongpeng Yang <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Chao Yu <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Jaegeuk Kim <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>
Author: Zhiguo Niu <[email protected]> Date: Fri Dec 26 10:56:04 2025 +0800 f2fs: fix to add gc count stat in f2fs_gc_range commit 761dac9073cd67d4705a94cd1af674945a117f4c upstream. It missed the stat count in f2fs_gc_range. Cc: [email protected] Fixes: 9bf1dcbdfdc8 ("f2fs: fix to account gc stats correctly") Signed-off-by: Zhiguo Niu <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Chao Yu <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Jaegeuk Kim <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>
Author: Chao Yu <[email protected]> Date: Tue Jan 13 14:22:29 2026 +0800 f2fs: fix to avoid mapping wrong physical block for swapfile commit 5c145c03188bc9ba1c29e0bc4d527a5978fc47f9 upstream. Xiaolong Guo reported a f2fs bug in bugzilla [1] [1] https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=220951 Quoted: "When using stress-ng's swap stress test on F2FS filesystem with kernel 6.6+, the system experiences data corruption leading to either: 1 dm-verity corruption errors and device reboot 2 F2FS node corruption errors and boot hangs The issue occurs specifically when: 1 Using F2FS filesystem (ext4 is unaffected) 2 Swapfile size is less than F2FS section size (2MB) 3 Swapfile has fragmented physical layout (multiple non-contiguous extents) 4 Kernel version is 6.6+ (6.1 is unaffected) The root cause is in check_swap_activate() function in fs/f2fs/data.c. When the first extent of a small swapfile (< 2MB) is not aligned to section boundaries, the function incorrectly treats it as the last extent, failing to map subsequent extents. This results in incorrect swap_extent creation where only the first extent is mapped, causing subsequent swap writes to overwrite wrong physical locations (other files' data). Steps to Reproduce 1 Setup a device with F2FS-formatted userdata partition 2 Compile stress-ng from https://github.com/ColinIanKing/stress-ng 3 Run swap stress test: (Android devices) adb shell "cd /data/stressng; ./stress-ng-64 --metrics-brief --timeout 60 --swap 0" Log: 1 Ftrace shows in kernel 6.6, only first extent is mapped during second f2fs_map_blocks call in check_swap_activate(): stress-ng-swap-8990: f2fs_map_blocks: ino=11002, file offset=0, start blkaddr=0x43143, len=0x1 (Only 4KB mapped, not the full swapfile) 2 in kernel 6.1, both extents are correctly mapped: stress-ng-swap-5966: f2fs_map_blocks: ino=28011, file offset=0, start blkaddr=0x13cd4, len=0x1 stress-ng-swap-5966: f2fs_map_blocks: ino=28011, file offset=1, start blkaddr=0x60c84b, len=0xff The problematic code is in check_swap_activate(): if ((pblock - SM_I(sbi)->main_blkaddr) % blks_per_sec || nr_pblocks % blks_per_sec || !f2fs_valid_pinned_area(sbi, pblock)) { bool last_extent = false; not_aligned++; nr_pblocks = roundup(nr_pblocks, blks_per_sec); if (cur_lblock + nr_pblocks > sis->max) nr_pblocks -= blks_per_sec; /* this extent is last one */ if (!nr_pblocks) { nr_pblocks = last_lblock - cur_lblock; last_extent = true; } ret = f2fs_migrate_blocks(inode, cur_lblock, nr_pblocks); if (ret) { if (ret == -ENOENT) ret = -EINVAL; goto out; } if (!last_extent) goto retry; } When the first extent is unaligned and roundup(nr_pblocks, blks_per_sec) exceeds sis->max, we subtract blks_per_sec resulting in nr_pblocks = 0. The code then incorrectly assumes this is the last extent, sets nr_pblocks = last_lblock - cur_lblock (entire swapfile), and performs migration. After migration, it doesn't retry mapping, so subsequent extents are never processed. " In order to fix this issue, we need to lookup block mapping info after we migrate all blocks in the tail of swapfile. Cc: [email protected] Fixes: 9703d69d9d15 ("f2fs: support file pinning for zoned devices") Cc: Daeho Jeong <[email protected]> Reported-and-tested-by: Xiaolong Guo <[email protected]> Closes: https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=220951 Signed-off-by: Chao Yu <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Jaegeuk Kim <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>
Author: Chao Yu <[email protected]> Date: Tue Feb 17 10:19:55 2026 -0500 f2fs: fix to avoid UAF in f2fs_write_end_io() [ Upstream commit ce2739e482bce8d2c014d76c4531c877f382aa54 ] As syzbot reported an use-after-free issue in f2fs_write_end_io(). It is caused by below race condition: loop device umount - worker_thread - loop_process_work - do_req_filebacked - lo_rw_aio - lo_rw_aio_complete - blk_mq_end_request - blk_update_request - f2fs_write_end_io - dec_page_count - folio_end_writeback - kill_f2fs_super - kill_block_super - f2fs_put_super : free(sbi) : get_pages(, F2FS_WB_CP_DATA) accessed sbi which is freed In kill_f2fs_super(), we will drop all page caches of f2fs inodes before call free(sbi), it guarantee that all folios should end its writeback, so it should be safe to access sbi before last folio_end_writeback(). Let's relocate ckpt thread wakeup flow before folio_end_writeback() to resolve this issue. Cc: [email protected] Fixes: e234088758fc ("f2fs: avoid wait if IO end up when do_checkpoint for better performance") Reported-by: [email protected] Closes: https://syzkaller.appspot.com/bug?extid=b4444e3c972a7a124187 Signed-off-by: Chao Yu <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Jaegeuk Kim <[email protected]> [ folio => page ] Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>
Author: Chao Yu <[email protected]> Date: Tue Jan 6 14:31:17 2026 +0800 f2fs: fix to check sysfs filename w/ gc_pin_file_thresh correctly commit 0eda086de85e140f53c6123a4c00662f4e614ee4 upstream. Sysfs entry name is gc_pin_file_thresh instead of gc_pin_file_threshold, fix it. Cc: [email protected] Fixes: c521a6ab4ad7 ("f2fs: fix to limit gc_pin_file_threshold") Signed-off-by: Chao Yu <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Jaegeuk Kim <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>
Author: Guangshuo Li <[email protected]> Date: Sun Dec 7 15:25:32 2025 +0800 fbdev: rivafb: fix divide error in nv3_arb() commit 0209e21e3c372fa2da04c39214bec0b64e4eb5f4 upstream. A userspace program can trigger the RIVA NV3 arbitration code by calling the FBIOPUT_VSCREENINFO ioctl on /dev/fb*. When doing so, the driver recomputes FIFO arbitration parameters in nv3_arb(), using state->mclk_khz (derived from the PRAMDAC MCLK PLL) as a divisor without validating it first. In a normal setup, state->mclk_khz is provided by the real hardware and is non-zero. However, an attacker can construct a malicious or misconfigured device (e.g. a crafted/emulated PCI device) that exposes a bogus PLL configuration, causing state->mclk_khz to become zero. Once nv3_get_param() calls nv3_arb(), the division by state->mclk_khz in the gns calculation causes a divide error and crashes the kernel. Fix this by checking whether state->mclk_khz is zero and bailing out before doing the division. The following log reveals it: rivafb: setting virtual Y resolution to 2184 divide error: 0000 [#1] PREEMPT SMP KASAN PTI CPU: 0 PID: 2187 Comm: syz-executor.0 Not tainted 5.18.0-rc1+ #1 Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (i440FX + PIIX, 1996), BIOS rel-1.12.0-59-gc9ba5276e321-prebuilt.qemu.org 04/01/2014 RIP: 0010:nv3_arb drivers/video/fbdev/riva/riva_hw.c:439 [inline] RIP: 0010:nv3_get_param+0x3ab/0x13b0 drivers/video/fbdev/riva/riva_hw.c:546 Call Trace: nv3CalcArbitration.constprop.0+0x255/0x460 drivers/video/fbdev/riva/riva_hw.c:603 nv3UpdateArbitrationSettings drivers/video/fbdev/riva/riva_hw.c:637 [inline] CalcStateExt+0x447/0x1b90 drivers/video/fbdev/riva/riva_hw.c:1246 riva_load_video_mode+0x8a9/0xea0 drivers/video/fbdev/riva/fbdev.c:779 rivafb_set_par+0xc0/0x5f0 drivers/video/fbdev/riva/fbdev.c:1196 fb_set_var+0x604/0xeb0 drivers/video/fbdev/core/fbmem.c:1033 do_fb_ioctl+0x234/0x670 drivers/video/fbdev/core/fbmem.c:1109 fb_ioctl+0xdd/0x130 drivers/video/fbdev/core/fbmem.c:1188 __x64_sys_ioctl+0x122/0x190 fs/ioctl.c:856 Fixes: 1da177e4c3f4 ("Linux-2.6.12-rc2") Cc: [email protected] Signed-off-by: Guangshuo Li <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Helge Deller <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>
Author: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]> Date: Sun Dec 28 14:17:03 2025 +0100 fbdev: smscufx: properly copy ioctl memory to kernelspace commit 120adae7b42faa641179270c067864544a50ab69 upstream. The UFX_IOCTL_REPORT_DAMAGE ioctl does not properly copy data from userspace to kernelspace, and instead directly references the memory, which can cause problems if invalid data is passed from userspace. Fix this all up by correctly copying the memory before accessing it within the kernel. Reported-by: Tianchu Chen <[email protected]> Cc: stable <[email protected]> Cc: Steve Glendinning <[email protected]> Cc: Helge Deller <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Helge Deller <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>
Author: Xuewen Yan <[email protected]> Date: Mon Jan 26 17:42:09 2026 +0800 gpio: sprd: Change sprd_gpio lock to raw_spin_lock [ Upstream commit 96313fcc1f062ba239f4832c9eff685da6c51c99 ] There was a lockdep warning in sprd_gpio: [ 6.258269][T329@C6] [ BUG: Invalid wait context ] [ 6.258270][T329@C6] 6.18.0-android17-0-g30527ad7aaae-ab00009-4k #1 Tainted: G W OE [ 6.258272][T329@C6] ----------------------------- [ 6.258273][T329@C6] modprobe/329 is trying to lock: [ 6.258275][T329@C6] ffffff8081c91690 (&sprd_gpio->lock){....}-{3:3}, at: sprd_gpio_irq_unmask+0x4c/0xa4 [gpio_sprd] [ 6.258282][T329@C6] other info that might help us debug this: [ 6.258283][T329@C6] context-{5:5} [ 6.258285][T329@C6] 3 locks held by modprobe/329: [ 6.258286][T329@C6] #0: ffffff808baca108 (&dev->mutex){....}-{4:4}, at: __driver_attach+0xc4/0x204 [ 6.258295][T329@C6] #1: ffffff80965e7240 (request_class#4){+.+.}-{4:4}, at: __setup_irq+0x1cc/0x82c [ 6.258304][T329@C6] #2: ffffff80965e70c8 (lock_class#4){....}-{2:2}, at: __setup_irq+0x21c/0x82c [ 6.258313][T329@C6] stack backtrace: [ 6.258314][T329@C6] CPU: 6 UID: 0 PID: 329 Comm: modprobe Tainted: G W OE 6.18.0-android17-0-g30527ad7aaae-ab00009-4k #1 PREEMPT 3ad5b0f45741a16e5838da790706e16ceb6717df [ 6.258316][T329@C6] Tainted: [W]=WARN, [O]=OOT_MODULE, [E]=UNSIGNED_MODULE [ 6.258317][T329@C6] Hardware name: Unisoc UMS9632-base Board (DT) [ 6.258318][T329@C6] Call trace: [ 6.258318][T329@C6] show_stack+0x20/0x30 (C) [ 6.258321][T329@C6] __dump_stack+0x28/0x3c [ 6.258324][T329@C6] dump_stack_lvl+0xac/0xf0 [ 6.258326][T329@C6] dump_stack+0x18/0x3c [ 6.258329][T329@C6] __lock_acquire+0x824/0x2c28 [ 6.258331][T329@C6] lock_acquire+0x148/0x2cc [ 6.258333][T329@C6] _raw_spin_lock_irqsave+0x6c/0xb4 [ 6.258334][T329@C6] sprd_gpio_irq_unmask+0x4c/0xa4 [gpio_sprd 814535e93c6d8e0853c45c02eab0fa88a9da6487] [ 6.258337][T329@C6] irq_startup+0x238/0x350 [ 6.258340][T329@C6] __setup_irq+0x504/0x82c [ 6.258342][T329@C6] request_threaded_irq+0x118/0x184 [ 6.258344][T329@C6] devm_request_threaded_irq+0x94/0x120 [ 6.258347][T329@C6] sc8546_init_irq+0x114/0x170 [sc8546_charger 223586ccafc27439f7db4f95b0c8e6e882349a99] [ 6.258352][T329@C6] sc8546_charger_probe+0x53c/0x5a0 [sc8546_charger 223586ccafc27439f7db4f95b0c8e6e882349a99] [ 6.258358][T329@C6] i2c_device_probe+0x2c8/0x350 [ 6.258361][T329@C6] really_probe+0x1a8/0x46c [ 6.258363][T329@C6] __driver_probe_device+0xa4/0x10c [ 6.258366][T329@C6] driver_probe_device+0x44/0x1b4 [ 6.258369][T329@C6] __driver_attach+0xd0/0x204 [ 6.258371][T329@C6] bus_for_each_dev+0x10c/0x168 [ 6.258373][T329@C6] driver_attach+0x2c/0x3c [ 6.258376][T329@C6] bus_add_driver+0x154/0x29c [ 6.258378][T329@C6] driver_register+0x70/0x10c [ 6.258381][T329@C6] i2c_register_driver+0x48/0xc8 [ 6.258384][T329@C6] init_module+0x28/0xfd8 [sc8546_charger 223586ccafc27439f7db4f95b0c8e6e882349a99] [ 6.258389][T329@C6] do_one_initcall+0x128/0x42c [ 6.258392][T329@C6] do_init_module+0x60/0x254 [ 6.258395][T329@C6] load_module+0x1054/0x1220 [ 6.258397][T329@C6] __arm64_sys_finit_module+0x240/0x35c [ 6.258400][T329@C6] invoke_syscall+0x60/0xec [ 6.258402][T329@C6] el0_svc_common+0xb0/0xe4 [ 6.258405][T329@C6] do_el0_svc+0x24/0x30 [ 6.258407][T329@C6] el0_svc+0x54/0x1c4 [ 6.258409][T329@C6] el0t_64_sync_handler+0x68/0xdc [ 6.258411][T329@C6] el0t_64_sync+0x1c4/0x1c8 This is because the spin_lock would change to rt_mutex in PREEMPT_RT, however the sprd_gpio->lock would use in hard-irq, this is unsafe. So change the spin_lock_t to raw_spin_lock_t to use the spinlock in hard-irq. Signed-off-by: Xuewen Yan <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Baolin Wang <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Sebastian Andrzej Siewior <[email protected]> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/[email protected] [Bartosz: tweaked the commit message] Signed-off-by: Bartosz Golaszewski <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <[email protected]>
Author: Alban Bedel <[email protected]> Date: Thu Jan 29 15:59:44 2026 +0100 gpiolib: acpi: Fix gpio count with string references [ Upstream commit c62e0658d458d8f100445445c3ddb106f3824a45 ] Since commit 9880702d123f2 ("ACPI: property: Support using strings in reference properties") it is possible to use strings instead of local references. This work fine with single GPIO but not with arrays as acpi_gpio_package_count() didn't handle this case. Update it to handle strings like local references to cover this case as well. Signed-off-by: Alban Bedel <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Mika Westerberg <[email protected]> Link: https://patch.msgid.link/[email protected] Signed-off-by: Bartosz Golaszewski <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <[email protected]>
Author: Danilo Krummrich <[email protected]> Date: Wed Jan 21 15:12:01 2026 +0100 iommu/arm-smmu-qcom: do not register driver in probe() commit ed1ac3c977dd6b119405fa36dd41f7151bd5b4de upstream. Commit 0b4eeee2876f ("iommu/arm-smmu-qcom: Register the TBU driver in qcom_smmu_impl_init") intended to also probe the TBU driver when CONFIG_ARM_SMMU_QCOM_DEBUG is disabled, but also moved the corresponding platform_driver_register() call into qcom_smmu_impl_init() which is called from arm_smmu_device_probe(). However, it neither makes sense to register drivers from probe() callbacks of other drivers, nor does the driver core allow registering drivers with a device lock already being held. The latter was revealed by commit dc23806a7c47 ("driver core: enforce device_lock for driver_match_device()") leading to a deadlock condition described in [1]. Additionally, it was noted by Robin that the current approach is potentially racy with async probe [2]. Hence, fix this by registering the qcom_smmu_tbu_driver from module_init(). Unfortunately, due to the vendoring of the driver, this requires an indirection through arm-smmu-impl.c. Reported-by: Mark Brown <[email protected]> Closes: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/[email protected]/ Link: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/[email protected]/ [1] Link: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/[email protected]/ [2] Fixes: dc23806a7c47 ("driver core: enforce device_lock for driver_match_device()") Fixes: 0b4eeee2876f ("iommu/arm-smmu-qcom: Register the TBU driver in qcom_smmu_impl_init") Acked-by: Robin Murphy <[email protected]> Tested-by: Bjorn Andersson <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Bjorn Andersson <[email protected]> Acked-by: Konrad Dybcio <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]> Tested-by: Ioana Ciornei <[email protected]> #LX2160ARDB Tested-by: Wang Jiayue <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Wang Jiayue <[email protected]> Tested-by: Mark Brown <[email protected]> Acked-by: Joerg Roedel <[email protected]> Link: https://patch.msgid.link/[email protected] Signed-off-by: Danilo Krummrich <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>
Author: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]> Date: Thu Feb 19 16:29:56 2026 +0100 Linux 6.12.74 Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/[email protected] Tested-by: Florian Fainelli <[email protected]> Tested-by: Peter Schneider <[email protected]> Tested-by: Jon Hunter <[email protected]> Tested-by: Salvatore Bonaccorso <[email protected]> Tested-by: Brett A C Sheffield <[email protected]> Tested-by: Pavel Machek (CIP) <[email protected]> Tested-by: Francesco Dolcini <[email protected]> Tested-by: Mark Brown <[email protected]> Tested-by: Ron Economos <[email protected]> Tested-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <[email protected]> Tested-by: Miguel Ojeda <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>
Author: Tiezhu Yang <[email protected]> Date: Tue Feb 10 19:31:17 2026 +0800 LoongArch: Rework KASAN initialization for PTW-enabled systems commit 5ec5ac4ca27e4daa234540ac32f9fc5219377d53 upstream. kasan_init_generic() indicates that kasan is fully initialized, so it should be put at end of kasan_init(). Otherwise bringing up the primary CPU failed when CONFIG_KASAN is set on PTW-enabled systems, here are the call chains: kernel_entry() start_kernel() setup_arch() kasan_init() kasan_init_generic() The reason is PTW-enabled systems have speculative accesses which means memory accesses to the shadow memory after kasan_init() may be executed by hardware before. However, accessing shadow memory is safe only after kasan fully initialized because kasan_init() uses a temporary PGD table until we have populated all levels of shadow page tables and writen the PGD register. Moving kasan_init_generic() later can defer the occasion of kasan_enabled(), so as to avoid speculative accesses on shadow pages. After moving kasan_init_generic() to the end, kasan_init() can no longer call kasan_mem_to_shadow() for shadow address conversion because it will always return kasan_early_shadow_page. On the other hand, we should keep the current logic of kasan_mem_to_shadow() for both the early and final stage because there may be instrumentation before kasan_init(). To solve this, we factor out a new mem_to_shadow() function from current kasan_mem_to_shadow() for the shadow address conversion in kasan_init(). Cc: [email protected] Signed-off-by: Tiezhu Yang <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Huacai Chen <[email protected]> [ Huacai: To backport from upstream to 6.6 & 6.12, kasan_enabled() is replaced with kasan_arch_is_ready() and kasan_init_generic() is replaced with "kasan_early_stage = false". ] Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>
Author: Jane Chu <[email protected]> Date: Mon Sep 15 18:45:20 2025 -0600 mm/hugetlb: fix copy_hugetlb_page_range() to use ->pt_share_count commit 14967a9c7d247841b0312c48dcf8cd29e55a4cc8 upstream. commit 59d9094df3d79 ("mm: hugetlb: independent PMD page table shared count") introduced ->pt_share_count dedicated to hugetlb PMD share count tracking, but omitted fixing copy_hugetlb_page_range(), leaving the function relying on page_count() for tracking that no longer works. When lazy page table copy for hugetlb is disabled, that is, revert commit bcd51a3c679d ("hugetlb: lazy page table copies in fork()") fork()'ing with hugetlb PMD sharing quickly lockup - [ 239.446559] watchdog: BUG: soft lockup - CPU#75 stuck for 27s! [ 239.446611] RIP: 0010:native_queued_spin_lock_slowpath+0x7e/0x2e0 [ 239.446631] Call Trace: [ 239.446633] <TASK> [ 239.446636] _raw_spin_lock+0x3f/0x60 [ 239.446639] copy_hugetlb_page_range+0x258/0xb50 [ 239.446645] copy_page_range+0x22b/0x2c0 [ 239.446651] dup_mmap+0x3e2/0x770 [ 239.446654] dup_mm.constprop.0+0x5e/0x230 [ 239.446657] copy_process+0xd17/0x1760 [ 239.446660] kernel_clone+0xc0/0x3e0 [ 239.446661] __do_sys_clone+0x65/0xa0 [ 239.446664] do_syscall_64+0x82/0x930 [ 239.446668] ? count_memcg_events+0xd2/0x190 [ 239.446671] ? syscall_trace_enter+0x14e/0x1f0 [ 239.446676] ? syscall_exit_work+0x118/0x150 [ 239.446677] ? arch_exit_to_user_mode_prepare.constprop.0+0x9/0xb0 [ 239.446681] ? clear_bhb_loop+0x30/0x80 [ 239.446684] ? clear_bhb_loop+0x30/0x80 [ 239.446686] entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x76/0x7e There are two options to resolve the potential latent issue: 1. warn against PMD sharing in copy_hugetlb_page_range(), 2. fix it. This patch opts for the second option. While at it, simplify the comment, the details are not actually relevant anymore. Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/[email protected] Fixes: 59d9094df3d7 ("mm: hugetlb: independent PMD page table shared count") Signed-off-by: Jane Chu <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Harry Yoo <[email protected]> Acked-by: Oscar Salvador <[email protected]> Acked-by: David Hildenbrand <[email protected]> Cc: Jann Horn <[email protected]> Cc: Liu Shixin <[email protected]> Cc: Muchun Song <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: David Hildenbrand (Arm) <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>
Author: David Hildenbrand (Red Hat) <[email protected]> Date: Tue Dec 23 22:40:37 2025 +0100 mm/hugetlb: fix excessive IPI broadcasts when unsharing PMD tables using mmu_gather commit 8ce720d5bd91e9dc16db3604aa4b1bf76770a9a1 upstream. As reported, ever since commit 1013af4f585f ("mm/hugetlb: fix huge_pmd_unshare() vs GUP-fast race") we can end up in some situations where we perform so many IPI broadcasts when unsharing hugetlb PMD page tables that it severely regresses some workloads. In particular, when we fork()+exit(), or when we munmap() a large area backed by many shared PMD tables, we perform one IPI broadcast per unshared PMD table. There are two optimizations to be had: (1) When we process (unshare) multiple such PMD tables, such as during exit(), it is sufficient to send a single IPI broadcast (as long as we respect locking rules) instead of one per PMD table. Locking prevents that any of these PMD tables could get reused before we drop the lock. (2) When we are not the last sharer (> 2 users including us), there is no need to send the IPI broadcast. The shared PMD tables cannot become exclusive (fully unshared) before an IPI will be broadcasted by the last sharer. Concurrent GUP-fast could walk into a PMD table just before we unshared it. It could then succeed in grabbing a page from the shared page table even after munmap() etc succeeded (and supressed an IPI). But there is not difference compared to GUP-fast just sleeping for a while after grabbing the page and re-enabling IRQs. Most importantly, GUP-fast will never walk into page tables that are no-longer shared, because the last sharer will issue an IPI broadcast. (if ever required, checking whether the PUD changed in GUP-fast after grabbing the page like we do in the PTE case could handle this) So let's rework PMD sharing TLB flushing + IPI sync to use the mmu_gather infrastructure so we can implement these optimizations and demystify the code at least a bit. Extend the mmu_gather infrastructure to be able to deal with our special hugetlb PMD table sharing implementation. To make initialization of the mmu_gather easier when working on a single VMA (in particular, when dealing with hugetlb), provide tlb_gather_mmu_vma(). We'll consolidate the handling for (full) unsharing of PMD tables in tlb_unshare_pmd_ptdesc() and tlb_flush_unshared_tables(), and track in "struct mmu_gather" whether we had (full) unsharing of PMD tables. Because locking is very special (concurrent unsharing+reuse must be prevented), we disallow deferring flushing to tlb_finish_mmu() and instead require an explicit earlier call to tlb_flush_unshared_tables(). From hugetlb code, we call huge_pmd_unshare_flush() where we make sure that the expected lock protecting us from concurrent unsharing+reuse is still held. Check with a VM_WARN_ON_ONCE() in tlb_finish_mmu() that tlb_flush_unshared_tables() was properly called earlier. Document it all properly. Notes about tlb_remove_table_sync_one() interaction with unsharing: There are two fairly tricky things: (1) tlb_remove_table_sync_one() is a NOP on architectures without CONFIG_MMU_GATHER_RCU_TABLE_FREE. Here, the assumption is that the previous TLB flush would send an IPI to all relevant CPUs. Careful: some architectures like x86 only send IPIs to all relevant CPUs when tlb->freed_tables is set. The relevant architectures should be selecting MMU_GATHER_RCU_TABLE_FREE, but x86 might not do that in stable kernels and it might have been problematic before this patch. Also, the arch flushing behavior (independent of IPIs) is different when tlb->freed_tables is set. Do we have to enlighten them to also take care of tlb->unshared_tables? So far we didn't care, so hopefully we are fine. Of course, we could be setting tlb->freed_tables as well, but that might then unnecessarily flush too much, because the semantics of tlb->freed_tables are a bit fuzzy. This patch changes nothing in this regard. (2) tlb_remove_table_sync_one() is not a NOP on architectures with CONFIG_MMU_GATHER_RCU_TABLE_FREE that actually don't need a sync. Take x86 as an example: in the common case (!pv, !X86_FEATURE_INVLPGB) we still issue IPIs during TLB flushes and don't actually need the second tlb_remove_table_sync_one(). This optimized can be implemented on top of this, by checking e.g., in tlb_remove_table_sync_one() whether we really need IPIs. But as described in (1), it really must honor tlb->freed_tables then to send IPIs to all relevant CPUs. Notes on TLB flushing changes: (1) Flushing for non-shared PMD tables We're converting from flush_hugetlb_tlb_range() to tlb_remove_huge_tlb_entry(). Given that we properly initialize the MMU gather in tlb_gather_mmu_vma() to be hugetlb aware, similar to __unmap_hugepage_range(), that should be fine. (2) Flushing for shared PMD tables We're converting from various things (flush_hugetlb_tlb_range(), tlb_flush_pmd_range(), flush_tlb_range()) to tlb_flush_pmd_range(). tlb_flush_pmd_range() achieves the same that tlb_remove_huge_tlb_entry() would achieve in these scenarios. Note that tlb_remove_huge_tlb_entry() also calls __tlb_remove_tlb_entry(), however that is only implemented on powerpc, which does not support PMD table sharing. Similar to (1), tlb_gather_mmu_vma() should make sure that TLB flushing keeps on working as expected. Further, note that the ptdesc_pmd_pts_dec() in huge_pmd_share() is not a concern, as we are holding the i_mmap_lock the whole time, preventing concurrent unsharing. That ptdesc_pmd_pts_dec() usage will be removed separately as a cleanup later. There are plenty more cleanups to be had, but they have to wait until this is fixed. [[email protected]: fix kerneldoc] Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/[email protected] Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/[email protected] Fixes: 1013af4f585f ("mm/hugetlb: fix huge_pmd_unshare() vs GUP-fast race") Signed-off-by: David Hildenbrand (Red Hat) <[email protected]> Reported-by: "Uschakow, Stanislav" <[email protected]> Closes: https://lore.kernel.org/all/[email protected]/ Tested-by: Laurence Oberman <[email protected]> Acked-by: Harry Yoo <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Lorenzo Stoakes <[email protected]> Cc: Lance Yang <[email protected]> Cc: Liu Shixin <[email protected]> Cc: Oscar Salvador <[email protected]> Cc: Rik van Riel <[email protected]> Cc: <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: David Hildenbrand (Arm) <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>
Author: David Hildenbrand (Red Hat) <[email protected]> Date: Tue Dec 23 22:40:34 2025 +0100 mm/hugetlb: fix hugetlb_pmd_shared() commit ca1a47cd3f5f4c46ca188b1c9a27af87d1ab2216 upstream. Patch series "mm/hugetlb: fixes for PMD table sharing (incl. using mmu_gather)", v3. One functional fix, one performance regression fix, and two related comment fixes. I cleaned up my prototype I recently shared [1] for the performance fix, deferring most of the cleanups I had in the prototype to a later point. While doing that I identified the other things. The goal of this patch set is to be backported to stable trees "fairly" easily. At least patch #1 and #4. Patch #1 fixes hugetlb_pmd_shared() not detecting any sharing Patch #2 + #3 are simple comment fixes that patch #4 interacts with. Patch #4 is a fix for the reported performance regression due to excessive IPI broadcasts during fork()+exit(). The last patch is all about TLB flushes, IPIs and mmu_gather. Read: complicated There are plenty of cleanups in the future to be had + one reasonable optimization on x86. But that's all out of scope for this series. Runtime tested, with a focus on fixing the performance regression using the original reproducer [2] on x86. This patch (of 4): We switched from (wrongly) using the page count to an independent shared count. Now, shared page tables have a refcount of 1 (excluding speculative references) and instead use ptdesc->pt_share_count to identify sharing. We didn't convert hugetlb_pmd_shared(), so right now, we would never detect a shared PMD table as such, because sharing/unsharing no longer touches the refcount of a PMD table. Page migration, like mbind() or migrate_pages() would allow for migrating folios mapped into such shared PMD tables, even though the folios are not exclusive. In smaps we would account them as "private" although they are "shared", and we would be wrongly setting the PM_MMAP_EXCLUSIVE in the pagemap interface. Fix it by properly using ptdesc_pmd_is_shared() in hugetlb_pmd_shared(). Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/[email protected] Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/[email protected] Link: https://lore.kernel.org/all/[email protected]/ [1] Link: https://lore.kernel.org/all/[email protected]/ [2] Fixes: 59d9094df3d7 ("mm: hugetlb: independent PMD page table shared count") Signed-off-by: David Hildenbrand (Red Hat) <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Rik van Riel <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Lance Yang <[email protected]> Tested-by: Lance Yang <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Harry Yoo <[email protected]> Tested-by: Laurence Oberman <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Lorenzo Stoakes <[email protected]> Acked-by: Oscar Salvador <[email protected]> Cc: Liu Shixin <[email protected]> Cc: "Uschakow, Stanislav" <[email protected]> Cc: <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: David Hildenbrand (Arm) <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>
Author: David Hildenbrand (Red Hat) <[email protected]> Date: Tue Dec 23 22:40:35 2025 +0100 mm/hugetlb: fix two comments related to huge_pmd_unshare() commit 3937027caecb4f8251e82dd857ba1d749bb5a428 upstream. Ever since we stopped using the page count to detect shared PMD page tables, these comments are outdated. The only reason we have to flush the TLB early is because once we drop the i_mmap_rwsem, the previously shared page table could get freed (to then get reallocated and used for other purpose). So we really have to flush the TLB before that could happen. So let's simplify the comments a bit. The "If we unshared PMDs, the TLB flush was not recorded in mmu_gather." part introduced as in commit a4a118f2eead ("hugetlbfs: flush TLBs correctly after huge_pmd_unshare") was confusing: sure it is recorded in the mmu_gather, otherwise tlb_flush_mmu_tlbonly() wouldn't do anything. So let's drop that comment while at it as well. We'll centralize these comments in a single helper as we rework the code next. Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/[email protected] Fixes: 59d9094df3d7 ("mm: hugetlb: independent PMD page table shared count") Signed-off-by: David Hildenbrand (Red Hat) <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Rik van Riel <[email protected]> Tested-by: Laurence Oberman <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Lorenzo Stoakes <[email protected]> Acked-by: Oscar Salvador <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Harry Yoo <[email protected]> Cc: Liu Shixin <[email protected]> Cc: Lance Yang <[email protected]> Cc: "Uschakow, Stanislav" <[email protected]> Cc: <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: David Hildenbrand (Arm) <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>
Author: gongqi <[email protected]> Date: Thu Jan 22 23:55:00 2026 +0800 platform/x86/amd/pmc: Add quirk for MECHREVO Wujie 15X Pro [ Upstream commit 2b4e00d8e70ca8736fda82447be6a4e323c6d1f5 ] The MECHREVO Wujie 15X Pro suffers from spurious IRQ issues related to the AMD PMC. Add it to the quirk list to use the spurious_8042 fix. Signed-off-by: gongqi <[email protected]> Link: https://patch.msgid.link/[email protected] Signed-off-by: Ilpo Järvinen <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <[email protected]>
Author: Rafael J. Wysocki <[email protected]> Date: Mon Jan 26 21:02:40 2026 +0100 platform/x86: classmate-laptop: Add missing NULL pointer checks [ Upstream commit fe747d7112283f47169e9c16e751179a9b38611e ] In a few places in the Classmate laptop driver, code using the accel object may run before that object's address is stored in the driver data of the input device using it. For example, cmpc_accel_sensitivity_store_v4() is the "show" method of cmpc_accel_sensitivity_attr_v4 which is added in cmpc_accel_add_v4(), before calling dev_set_drvdata() for inputdev->dev. If the sysfs attribute is accessed prematurely, the dev_get_drvdata(&inputdev->dev) call in in cmpc_accel_sensitivity_store_v4() returns NULL which leads to a NULL pointer dereference going forward. Moreover, sysfs attributes using the input device are added before initializing that device by cmpc_add_acpi_notify_device() and if one of them is accessed before running that function, a NULL pointer dereference will occur. For example, cmpc_accel_sensitivity_attr_v4 is added before calling cmpc_add_acpi_notify_device() and if it is read prematurely, the dev_get_drvdata(&acpi->dev) call in cmpc_accel_sensitivity_show_v4() returns NULL which leads to a NULL pointer dereference going forward. Fix this by adding NULL pointer checks in all of the relevant places. Signed-off-by: Rafael J. Wysocki <[email protected]> Link: https://patch.msgid.link/[email protected] Reviewed-by: Ilpo Järvinen <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Ilpo Järvinen <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <[email protected]>
Author: Rafael J. Wysocki <[email protected]> Date: Tue Jan 20 16:43:44 2026 +0100 platform/x86: panasonic-laptop: Fix sysfs group leak in error path [ Upstream commit 43b0b7eff4b3fb684f257d5a24376782e9663465 ] The acpi_pcc_hotkey_add() error path leaks sysfs group pcc_attr_group if platform_device_register_simple() fails for the "panasonic" platform device. Address this by making it call sysfs_remove_group() in that case for the group in question. Signed-off-by: Rafael J. Wysocki <[email protected]> Link: https://patch.msgid.link/[email protected] Reviewed-by: Ilpo Järvinen <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Ilpo Järvinen <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <[email protected]>
Author: Daniel Borkmann <[email protected]> Date: Mon Feb 16 22:31:13 2026 +0100 Revert "wireguard: device: enable threaded NAPI" This reverts commit 933466fc50a8e4eb167acbd0d8ec96a078462e9c which is commit db9ae3b6b43c79b1ba87eea849fd65efa05b4b2e upstream. We have had three independent production user reports in combination with Cilium utilizing WireGuard as encryption underneath that k8s Pod E/W traffic to certain peer nodes fully stalled. The situation appears as follows: - Occurs very rarely but at random times under heavy networking load. - Once the issue triggers the decryption side stops working completely for that WireGuard peer, other peers keep working fine. The stall happens also for newly initiated connections towards that particular WireGuard peer. - Only the decryption side is affected, never the encryption side. - Once it triggers, it never recovers and remains in this state, the CPU/mem on that node looks normal, no leak, busy loop or crash. - bpftrace on the affected system shows that wg_prev_queue_enqueue fails, thus the MAX_QUEUED_PACKETS (1024 skbs!) for the peer's rx_queue is reached. - Also, bpftrace shows that wg_packet_rx_poll for that peer is never called again after reaching this state for that peer. For other peers wg_packet_rx_poll does get called normally. - Commit db9ae3b ("wireguard: device: enable threaded NAPI") switched WireGuard to threaded NAPI by default. The default has not been changed for triggering the issue, neither did CPU hotplugging occur (i.e. 5bd8de2 ("wireguard: queueing: always return valid online CPU in wg_cpumask_choose_online()")). - The issue has been observed with stable kernels of v5.15 as well as v6.1. It was reported to us that v5.10 stable is working fine, and no report on v6.6 stable either (somewhat related discussion in [0] though). - In the WireGuard driver the only material difference between v5.10 stable and v5.15 stable is the switch to threaded NAPI by default. [0] https://lore.kernel.org/netdev/CA+wXwBTT74RErDGAnj98PqS=wvdh8eM1pi4q6tTdExtjnokKqA@mail.gmail.com/ Breakdown of the problem: 1) skbs arriving for decryption are enqueued to the peer->rx_queue in wg_packet_consume_data via wg_queue_enqueue_per_device_and_peer. 2) The latter only moves the skb into the MPSC peer queue if it does not surpass MAX_QUEUED_PACKETS (1024) which is kept track in an atomic counter via wg_prev_queue_enqueue. 3) In case enqueueing was successful, the skb is also queued up in the device queue, round-robin picks a next online CPU, and schedules the decryption worker. 4) The wg_packet_decrypt_worker, once scheduled, picks these up from the queue, decrypts the packets and once done calls into wg_queue_enqueue_per_peer_rx. 5) The latter updates the state to PACKET_STATE_CRYPTED on success and calls napi_schedule on the per peer->napi instance. 6) NAPI then polls via wg_packet_rx_poll. wg_prev_queue_peek checks on the peer->rx_queue. It will wg_prev_queue_dequeue if the queue->peeked skb was not cached yet, or just return the latter otherwise. (wg_prev_queue_drop_peeked later clears the cache.) 7) From an ordering perspective, the peer->rx_queue has skbs in order while the device queue with the per-CPU worker threads from a global ordering PoV can finish the decryption and signal the skb PACKET_STATE_CRYPTED out of order. 8) A situation can be observed that the first packet coming in will be stuck waiting for the decryption worker to be scheduled for a longer time when the system is under pressure. 9) While this is the case, the other CPUs in the meantime finish decryption and call into napi_schedule. 10) Now in wg_packet_rx_poll it picks up the first in-order skb from the peer->rx_queue and sees that its state is still PACKET_STATE_UNCRYPTED. The NAPI poll routine then exits early with work_done = 0 and calls napi_complete_done, signalling it "finished" processing. 11) The assumption in wg_packet_decrypt_worker is that when the decryption finished the subsequent napi_schedule will always lead to a later invocation of wg_packet_rx_poll to pick up the finished packet. 12) However, it appears that a later napi_schedule does /not/ schedule a later poll and thus no wg_packet_rx_poll. 13) If this situation happens exactly for the corner case where the decryption worker of the first packet is stuck and waiting to be scheduled, and the network load for WireGuard is very high then the queue can build up to MAX_QUEUED_PACKETS. 14) If this situation occurs, then no new decryption worker will be scheduled and also no new napi_schedule to make forward progress. 15) This means the peer->rx_queue stops processing packets completely and they are indefinitely stuck waiting for a new NAPI poll on that peer which never happens. New packets for that peer are then dropped due to full queue, as it has been observed on the production machines. Technically, the backport of commit db9ae3b6b43c ("wireguard: device: enable threaded NAPI") to stable should not have happened since it is more of an optimization rather than a pure fix and addresses a NAPI situation with utilizing many WireGuard tunnel devices in parallel. Revert it from stable given the backport triggers a regression for mentioned kernels. Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <[email protected]> Acked-by: Jason A. Donenfeld <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>
Author: Deepanshu Kartikey <[email protected]> Date: Tue Jan 13 14:10:37 2026 +0530 romfs: check sb_set_blocksize() return value [ Upstream commit ab7ad7abb3660c58ffffdf07ff3bb976e7e0afa0 ] romfs_fill_super() ignores the return value of sb_set_blocksize(), which can fail if the requested block size is incompatible with the block device's configuration. This can be triggered by setting a loop device's block size larger than PAGE_SIZE using ioctl(LOOP_SET_BLOCK_SIZE, 32768), then mounting a romfs filesystem on that device. When sb_set_blocksize(sb, ROMBSIZE) is called with ROMBSIZE=4096 but the device has logical_block_size=32768, bdev_validate_blocksize() fails because the requested size is smaller than the device's logical block size. sb_set_blocksize() returns 0 (failure), but romfs ignores this and continues mounting. The superblock's block size remains at the device's logical block size (32768). Later, when sb_bread() attempts I/O with this oversized block size, it triggers a kernel BUG in folio_set_bh(): kernel BUG at fs/buffer.c:1582! BUG_ON(size > PAGE_SIZE); Fix by checking the return value of sb_set_blocksize() and failing the mount with -EINVAL if it returns 0. Reported-by: [email protected] Closes: https://syzkaller.appspot.com/bug?extid=9c4e33e12283d9437c25 Signed-off-by: Deepanshu Kartikey <[email protected]> Link: https://patch.msgid.link/[email protected] Signed-off-by: Christian Brauner <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <[email protected]>
Author: Anil Gurumurthy <[email protected]> Date: Wed Dec 10 15:46:03 2025 +0530 scsi: qla2xxx: Fix bsg_done() causing double free commit c2c68225b1456f4d0d393b5a8778d51bb0d5b1d0 upstream. Kernel panic observed on system, [5353358.825191] BUG: unable to handle page fault for address: ff5f5e897b024000 [5353358.825194] #PF: supervisor write access in kernel mode [5353358.825195] #PF: error_code(0x0002) - not-present page [5353358.825196] PGD 100006067 P4D 0 [5353358.825198] Oops: 0002 [#1] PREEMPT SMP NOPTI [5353358.825200] CPU: 5 PID: 2132085 Comm: qlafwupdate.sub Kdump: loaded Tainted: G W L ------- --- 5.14.0-503.34.1.el9_5.x86_64 #1 [5353358.825203] Hardware name: HPE ProLiant DL360 Gen11/ProLiant DL360 Gen11, BIOS 2.44 01/17/2025 [5353358.825204] RIP: 0010:memcpy_erms+0x6/0x10 [5353358.825211] RSP: 0018:ff591da8f4f6b710 EFLAGS: 00010246 [5353358.825212] RAX: ff5f5e897b024000 RBX: 0000000000007090 RCX: 0000000000001000 [5353358.825213] RDX: 0000000000001000 RSI: ff591da8f4fed090 RDI: ff5f5e897b024000 [5353358.825214] RBP: 0000000000010000 R08: ff5f5e897b024000 R09: 0000000000000000 [5353358.825215] R10: ff46cf8c40517000 R11: 0000000000000001 R12: 0000000000008090 [5353358.825216] R13: ff591da8f4f6b720 R14: 0000000000001000 R15: 0000000000000000 [5353358.825218] FS: 00007f1e88d47740(0000) GS:ff46cf935f940000(0000) knlGS:0000000000000000 [5353358.825219] CS: 0010 DS: 0000 ES: 0000 CR0: 0000000080050033 [5353358.825220] CR2: ff5f5e897b024000 CR3: 0000000231532004 CR4: 0000000000771ef0 [5353358.825221] PKRU: 55555554 [5353358.825222] Call Trace: [5353358.825223] <TASK> [5353358.825224] ? show_trace_log_lvl+0x1c4/0x2df [5353358.825229] ? show_trace_log_lvl+0x1c4/0x2df [5353358.825232] ? sg_copy_buffer+0xc8/0x110 [5353358.825236] ? __die_body.cold+0x8/0xd [5353358.825238] ? page_fault_oops+0x134/0x170 [5353358.825242] ? kernelmode_fixup_or_oops+0x84/0x110 [5353358.825244] ? exc_page_fault+0xa8/0x150 [5353358.825247] ? asm_exc_page_fault+0x22/0x30 [5353358.825252] ? memcpy_erms+0x6/0x10 [5353358.825253] sg_copy_buffer+0xc8/0x110 [5353358.825259] qla2x00_process_vendor_specific+0x652/0x1320 [qla2xxx] [5353358.825317] qla24xx_bsg_request+0x1b2/0x2d0 [qla2xxx] Most routines in qla_bsg.c call bsg_done() only for success cases. However a few invoke it for failure case as well leading to a double free. Validate before calling bsg_done(). Cc: [email protected] Signed-off-by: Anil Gurumurthy <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Nilesh Javali <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Himanshu Madhani <[email protected]> Link: https://patch.msgid.link/[email protected] Signed-off-by: Martin K. Petersen <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>
Author: Deepanshu Kartikey <[email protected]> Date: Fri Jan 30 21:22:15 2026 +0530 tracing/dma: Cap dma_map_sg tracepoint arrays to prevent buffer overflow [ Upstream commit daafcc0ef0b358d9d622b6e3b7c43767aa3814ee ] The dma_map_sg tracepoint can trigger a perf buffer overflow when tracing large scatter-gather lists. With devices like virtio-gpu creating large DRM buffers, nents can exceed 1000 entries, resulting in: phys_addrs: 1000 * 8 bytes = 8,000 bytes dma_addrs: 1000 * 8 bytes = 8,000 bytes lengths: 1000 * 4 bytes = 4,000 bytes Total: ~20,000 bytes This exceeds PERF_MAX_TRACE_SIZE (8192 bytes), causing: WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 5497 at kernel/trace/trace_event_perf.c:405 perf buffer not large enough, wanted 24620, have 8192 Cap all three dynamic arrays at 128 entries using min() in the array size calculation. This ensures arrays are only as large as needed (up to the cap), avoiding unnecessary memory allocation for small operations while preventing overflow for large ones. The tracepoint now records the full nents/ents counts and a truncated flag so users can see when data has been capped. Changes in v2: - Use min(nents, DMA_TRACE_MAX_ENTRIES) for dynamic array sizing instead of fixed DMA_TRACE_MAX_ENTRIES allocation (feedback from Steven Rostedt) - This allocates only what's needed up to the cap, avoiding waste for small operations Reported-by: [email protected] Closes: https://syzkaller.appspot.com/bug?extid=28cea38c382fd15e751a Tested-by: [email protected] Signed-off-by: Deepanshu Kartikey <[email protected]> Reviwed-by: Sean Anderson <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Marek Szyprowski <[email protected]> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/[email protected] Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <[email protected]>
Author: Fabio Porcedda <[email protected]> Date: Fri Jan 23 16:19:16 2026 +0100 USB: serial: option: add Telit FN920C04 RNDIS compositions commit 509f403f3ccec14188036212118651bf23599396 upstream. Add the following compositions: 0x10a1: RNDIS + tty (AT/NMEA) + tty (AT) + tty (diag) T: Bus=01 Lev=01 Prnt=01 Port=00 Cnt=01 Dev#= 9 Spd=480 MxCh= 0 D: Ver= 2.00 Cls=00(>ifc ) Sub=00 Prot=00 MxPS=64 #Cfgs= 1 P: Vendor=1bc7 ProdID=10a1 Rev=05.15 S: Manufacturer=Telit Cinterion S: Product=FN920 S: SerialNumber=d128dba9 C: #Ifs= 5 Cfg#= 1 Atr=e0 MxPwr=500mA I: If#= 0 Alt= 0 #EPs= 1 Cls=ef(misc ) Sub=04 Prot=01 Driver=rndis_host E: Ad=82(I) Atr=03(Int.) MxPS= 8 Ivl=32ms I: If#= 1 Alt= 0 #EPs= 2 Cls=0a(data ) Sub=00 Prot=00 Driver=rndis_host E: Ad=01(O) Atr=02(Bulk) MxPS= 512 Ivl=0ms E: Ad=81(I) Atr=02(Bulk) MxPS= 512 Ivl=0ms I: If#= 2 Alt= 0 #EPs= 3 Cls=ff(vend.) Sub=ff Prot=60 Driver=option E: Ad=02(O) Atr=02(Bulk) MxPS= 512 Ivl=0ms E: Ad=83(I) Atr=02(Bulk) MxPS= 512 Ivl=0ms E: Ad=84(I) Atr=03(Int.) MxPS= 10 Ivl=32ms I: If#= 3 Alt= 0 #EPs= 3 Cls=ff(vend.) Sub=ff Prot=40 Driver=option E: Ad=03(O) Atr=02(Bulk) MxPS= 512 Ivl=0ms E: Ad=85(I) Atr=02(Bulk) MxPS= 512 Ivl=0ms E: Ad=86(I) Atr=03(Int.) MxPS= 10 Ivl=32ms I: If#= 4 Alt= 0 #EPs= 2 Cls=ff(vend.) Sub=ff Prot=30 Driver=option E: Ad=04(O) Atr=02(Bulk) MxPS= 512 Ivl=0ms E: Ad=87(I) Atr=02(Bulk) MxPS= 512 Ivl=0ms 0x10a6: RNDIS + tty (AT/NMEA) + tty (AT) + tty (diag) T: Bus=01 Lev=01 Prnt=01 Port=00 Cnt=01 Dev#= 10 Spd=480 MxCh= 0 D: Ver= 2.00 Cls=00(>ifc ) Sub=00 Prot=00 MxPS=64 #Cfgs= 1 P: Vendor=1bc7 ProdID=10a6 Rev=05.15 S: Manufacturer=Telit Cinterion S: Product=FN920 S: SerialNumber=d128dba9 C: #Ifs= 5 Cfg#= 1 Atr=e0 MxPwr=500mA I: If#= 0 Alt= 0 #EPs= 1 Cls=ef(misc ) Sub=04 Prot=01 Driver=rndis_host E: Ad=82(I) Atr=03(Int.) MxPS= 8 Ivl=32ms I: If#= 1 Alt= 0 #EPs= 2 Cls=0a(data ) Sub=00 Prot=00 Driver=rndis_host E: Ad=01(O) Atr=02(Bulk) MxPS= 512 Ivl=0ms E: Ad=81(I) Atr=02(Bulk) MxPS= 512 Ivl=0ms I: If#= 2 Alt= 0 #EPs= 3 Cls=ff(vend.) Sub=ff Prot=40 Driver=option E: Ad=02(O) Atr=02(Bulk) MxPS= 512 Ivl=0ms E: Ad=83(I) Atr=02(Bulk) MxPS= 512 Ivl=0ms E: Ad=84(I) Atr=03(Int.) MxPS= 10 Ivl=32ms I: If#= 3 Alt= 0 #EPs= 3 Cls=ff(vend.) Sub=ff Prot=40 Driver=option E: Ad=03(O) Atr=02(Bulk) MxPS= 512 Ivl=0ms E: Ad=85(I) Atr=02(Bulk) MxPS= 512 Ivl=0ms E: Ad=86(I) Atr=03(Int.) MxPS= 10 Ivl=32ms I: If#= 4 Alt= 0 #EPs= 2 Cls=ff(vend.) Sub=ff Prot=30 Driver=option E: Ad=04(O) Atr=02(Bulk) MxPS= 512 Ivl=0ms E: Ad=87(I) Atr=02(Bulk) MxPS= 512 Ivl=0ms 0x10ab: RNDIS + tty (AT) + tty (diag) + DPL (Data Packet Logging) + adb T: Bus=01 Lev=01 Prnt=01 Port=00 Cnt=01 Dev#= 11 Spd=480 MxCh= 0 D: Ver= 2.00 Cls=00(>ifc ) Sub=00 Prot=00 MxPS=64 #Cfgs= 1 P: Vendor=1bc7 ProdID=10ab Rev=05.15 S: Manufacturer=Telit Cinterion S: Product=FN920 S: SerialNumber=d128dba9 C: #Ifs= 6 Cfg#= 1 Atr=e0 MxPwr=500mA I: If#= 0 Alt= 0 #EPs= 1 Cls=ef(misc ) Sub=04 Prot=01 Driver=rndis_host E: Ad=82(I) Atr=03(Int.) MxPS= 8 Ivl=32ms I: If#= 1 Alt= 0 #EPs= 2 Cls=0a(data ) Sub=00 Prot=00 Driver=rndis_host E: Ad=01(O) Atr=02(Bulk) MxPS= 512 Ivl=0ms E: Ad=81(I) Atr=02(Bulk) MxPS= 512 Ivl=0ms I: If#= 2 Alt= 0 #EPs= 3 Cls=ff(vend.) Sub=ff Prot=40 Driver=option E: Ad=02(O) Atr=02(Bulk) MxPS= 512 Ivl=0ms E: Ad=83(I) Atr=02(Bulk) MxPS= 512 Ivl=0ms E: Ad=84(I) Atr=03(Int.) MxPS= 10 Ivl=32ms I: If#= 3 Alt= 0 #EPs= 2 Cls=ff(vend.) Sub=ff Prot=30 Driver=option E: Ad=03(O) Atr=02(Bulk) MxPS= 512 Ivl=0ms E: Ad=85(I) Atr=02(Bulk) MxPS= 512 Ivl=0ms I: If#= 4 Alt= 0 #EPs= 1 Cls=ff(vend.) Sub=ff Prot=80 Driver=(none) E: Ad=86(I) Atr=02(Bulk) MxPS= 512 Ivl=0ms I: If#= 5 Alt= 0 #EPs= 2 Cls=ff(vend.) Sub=42 Prot=01 Driver=(none) E: Ad=04(O) Atr=02(Bulk) MxPS= 512 Ivl=0ms E: Ad=87(I) Atr=02(Bulk) MxPS= 512 Ivl=0ms Cc: [email protected] Signed-off-by: Fabio Porcedda <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Johan Hovold <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>