On 4/3/24 13:54, Greg KH wrote:
On Wed, Apr 03, 2024 at 01:50:09PM -0400, Joseph Salisbury wrote:
Hi Christoph,
A kernel bug report was opened against Ubuntu [0]. This bug is a regression introduced in mainline version v5.17-rc1 and made it's way into v5.15 stable updates.
The following commit was identified as the cause of the regression in 5.15:
c6ce1c5dd327 ("block: rename GENHD_FL_NO_PART_SCAN to GENHD_FL_NO_PART")
How is renaming a define a "regression"?
The "regression" is experienced after upgrading to the kernel to the version that introduced this commit. The v5.15.131 kernel works as expected, upgrading the kernel to v5.15.132 breaks behavior that worked in a prior kernel version. Reverting commit c6ce1c5dd327 in v5.15.132 allows the experience to be as before in v5.15.131.
I was hoping to get your feedback, since you are the patch author. Is the best approach to revert this commit, since many third parties rely on the name being GENHD_FL_NO_PART_SCAN in kernel headers?
External kernel modules are never an issue. Is this a userspace thing?
Is there a specific need that you know of that requires this commit in the 5.15 and earlier stable kernels?
Yes. And Christoph did not do the backport, so I doubt he cares :)
Again, what in-kernel issue is caused by this?
Third party code that relies on the kernel-headers will no longer compile due to the name change. Should we not care if we break things, even in userspace?
thanks,
greg k-h