I have a readily reproducible USB oops when resuming from an APM suspend
on my IBM Thinkpad 390E (CONFIG_APM_ALLOW_INTS=y, usb modular). This
report is for 2.5.26 vanilla, although I have seen the same problem for
several kernel releases, at least going back to 2.5.23. At boot time, the
following information is syslog'd:
usb.c: registered new driver usbfs
usb.c: registered new driver hub
uhci-hcd.c: USB Universal Host Controller Interface driver v2.0
PCI: Found IRQ 11 for device 00:02.2
hcd-pci.c: uhci-hcd @ 00:02.2, Intel Corp. 82371AB PIIX4 USB
hcd-pci.c: irq 11, io base 0000fca0
hcd.c: new USB bus registered, assigned bus number 1
hub.c: USB hub found at /
hub.c: 2 ports detected
[...]
apm: BIOS version 1.2 Flags 0x03 (Driver version 1.16)
Looks fine. Works great! Upon the first APM suspend:
hcd-pci.c: suspend 00:02.2 to state 3
hcd-pci.c: resume 00:02.2
usb.c: USB disconnect on device 1
Uh oh. The disconnect notice has me a bit worried...
*** Aside ***
-------------
The system is now already in a deranged state, as unloading the usb
modules will, for example, cause rmmod to segfault and a kernel oops:
Jul 18 19:11:05 gromit kernel: Unable to handle kernel NULL pointer
Jul 18 19:11:05 gromit kernel: c01122b9
Jul 18 19:11:05 gromit kernel: *pde = 00000000
Jul 18 19:11:05 gromit kernel: Oops: 0002
Jul 18 19:11:05 gromit kernel: CPU: 0
Jul 18 19:11:05 gromit kernel: EIP: 0010:[<c01122b9>] Not tainted
Using defaults from ksymoops -t elf32-i386 -a i386
Jul 18 19:11:05 gromit kernel: EFLAGS: 00010286
Jul 18 19:11:05 gromit kernel: eax: ffffffff ebx: cbc01824 ecx:
cba6b020 e
Jul 18 19:11:05 gromit kernel: esi: c5929420 edi: c5929760 ebp:
c5929720 e
Jul 18 19:11:05 gromit kernel: ds: 0018 es: 0018 ss: 0018
Jul 18 19:11:05 gromit kernel: Stack: 00000008 c1215cf0 c9561580 00000100
cba6b0
Jul 18 19:11:05 gromit kernel: 00000011 c9561060 c011264e 00000011
c95610
Jul 18 19:11:05 gromit kernel: 0000000e c13fb2e0 c9561580 c13f1ee0
c13fb0
Jul 18 19:11:05 gromit kernel: Call Trace: [<c011264e>] [<c010811a>]
[<c0105985>
Jul 18 19:11:05 gromit kernel: Code: ff 40 14 8b 4c 24 10 89 01 83 c1 04
>>EIP; c01122b9 <copy_files+179/260> <=====
Trace; c011264e <do_fork+2ae/760>
Trace; c010811a <handle_IRQ_event+3a/70>
Trace; c0105985 <sys_fork+15/30>
Code; c01122b9 <copy_files+179/260>
00000000 <_EIP>:
Code; c01122b9 <copy_files+179/260> <=====
0: ff 40 14 incl 0x14(%eax) <=====
Code; c01122bc <copy_files+17c/260>
3: 8b 4c 24 10 mov 0x10(%esp,1),%ecx
Code; c01122c0 <copy_files+180/260>
7: 89 01 mov %eax,(%ecx)
Code; c01122c2 <copy_files+182/260>
9: 83 c1 04 add $0x4,%ecx
Okay... back to the original problem. Even if we had left the system
alone and simply suspended again, upon the next resume:
hcd-pci.c: suspend 00:02.2 to state 3
hcd-pci.c: resume 00:02.2
and then another ooops immediately follows:
Unable to handle kernel paging request at virtual address 00002000
ccaaf95d
*pde = 09c5d067
Oops: 0000
CPU: 0
EIP: 0010:[<ccaaf95d>] Not tainted
Using defaults from ksymoops -t elf32-i386 -a i386
EFLAGS: 00010246
eax: 00000000 ebx: 0000fca0 ecx: 000003e8 edx: 0000fca8
esi: 0000fca0 edi: cbdd4800 ebp: 00000001 esp: ca44dea4
ds: 0018 es: 0018 ss: 0018
Stack: cbdd4800 fffffff0 c11d1800 ccab016d cbdd4800 cbdd4800 c11d1800
cbdd4800
cca9f7a2 cbdd4800 c11d1800 cbdd487c c11d1800 00000000 c11d1808
c11df734
c11df720 c016d11b c11d1800 c016d209 c11d1800 c11df720 00000000
00000003
Call Trace: [<ccab016d>] [<cca9f7a2>] [<c016d11b>] [<c016d209>]
[<c016d2ff>]
[<c016d34d>] [<c0120086>] [<c0120146>] [<ccad1853>] [<ccad1f1b>]
[<c011a264>]
[<c01173eb>] [<c0117324>] [<c013e5a7>] [<c01082cc>] [<c0106cd7>]
Code: 8b 80 00 20 00 00 ef b8 c1 00 00 00 89 da 66 ef 5b 5e 5f c3
>>EIP; ccaaf95d <[uhci-hcd]start_hc+5d/80> <=====
Trace; ccab016d <[uhci-hcd]uhci_resume+1d/30>
Trace; cca9f7a2 <[usbcore]usb_hcd_pci_resume+72/a0>
Trace; c016d11b <pci_pm_resume_device+1b/20>
Trace; c016d209 <pci_pm_resume_bus+29/60>
Trace; c016d2ff <pci_pm_resume+1f/30>
Trace; c016d34d <pci_pm_callback+3d/40>
Trace; c0120086 <pm_send+46/80>
Trace; c0120146 <pm_send_all+46/a0>
Trace; ccad1853 <[apm]suspend+a3/f0>
Trace; ccad1f1b <[apm]do_ioctl+cb/160>
Trace; c011a264 <timer_bh+24/270>
Trace; c01173eb <bh_action+1b/50>
Trace; c0117324 <tasklet_hi_action+44/70>
Trace; c013e5a7 <sys_ioctl+1f7/210>
Trace; c01082cc <do_IRQ+9c/b0>
Trace; c0106cd7 <syscall_call+7/b>
Code; ccaaf95d <[uhci-hcd]start_hc+5d/80>
00000000 <_EIP>:
Code; ccaaf95d <[uhci-hcd]start_hc+5d/80> <=====
0: 8b 80 00 20 00 00 mov 0x2000(%eax),%eax <=====
Code; ccaaf963 <[uhci-hcd]start_hc+63/80>
6: ef out %eax,(%dx)
Code; ccaaf964 <[uhci-hcd]start_hc+64/80>
7: b8 c1 00 00 00 mov $0xc1,%eax
Code; ccaaf969 <[uhci-hcd]start_hc+69/80>
c: 89 da mov %ebx,%edx
Code; ccaaf96b <[uhci-hcd]start_hc+6b/80>
e: 66 ef out %ax,(%dx)
Code; ccaaf96d <[uhci-hcd]start_hc+6d/80>
10: 5b pop %ebx
Code; ccaaf96e <[uhci-hcd]start_hc+6e/80>
11: 5e pop %esi
Code; ccaaf96f <[uhci-hcd]start_hc+6f/80>
12: 5f pop %edi
Code; ccaaf970 <[uhci-hcd]start_hc+70/80>
13: c3 ret
If I unload all the USB stuff before any APM suspends, the system is
perfectly happy upon resume, every time.
Incidentally, the usb-uhci-hcd driver did the same thing, though the oops
was in a different place in the driver init code. Not that it matters so
much now... :) BTW, kernel 2.4, all releases, work fine.
Full kernel config is at...
http://loke.as.arizona.edu/~ckulesa/kernel/rmap-vm/misc/2.5.26-config
Craig Kulesa
Steward Observatory
Univ. of Arizona
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