[v3.11][Regression] HID: hyperv: convert alloc+memcpy to memdup

Joseph Salisbury joseph.salisbury at canonical.com
Tue Sep 24 18:25:09 UTC 2013


On 09/24/2013 05:29 AM, Jiri Kosina wrote:
> On Mon, 16 Sep 2013, Joseph Salisbury wrote:
>
>>>> Can you explain a little further?  Mark commit a4a23f6 as bad?  An
>>>> initial bisect already reported that was the first bad commit, so it
>>>> can't be marked bad.  The oops on memcpy() happens after commit a4a23f6
>>>> is reverted.  The oops on memcpy() did not happen before a4a23f6 was
>>>> committed, so I assume this new oops was introduced by a change later.
>>>>
>>>> Right now I'm bisecting down the oops on memcpy() by updating the bisect
>>>> with good or bad, depending if the test kernel hit the oops.  I then
>>>> revert a4a23f6, so that revert is the HEAD of the tree each time before
>>>> building the kernel again(As long as the commit spit out by bisect is
>>>> after when a4a23f6 was introduced).
>>> Yep.  Please continue bisecting the memcpy() oops.
>>>
>>> kmemdup() is just a kzalloc() followed by a memcpy().  When we split it
>>> apart by reverting the patch then we would expect the oops to move to
>>> the memcpy() part.  Somehow "desc" is a bogus pointer, but I don't
>>> immediately see how that is possible.
>>>
>>> regards,
>>> dan carpenter
>> Thanks for the details.  We'll continue the bisect and let you know how
>> it goes.
> Did this please yield any useful result?
>
> Thanks,
>

We also tested the 3.12-rc2 kernel, but it also produces an oops and
lockup.  In case it's of use, the 3.12-rc2 oops can be seen at:
https://launchpadlibrarian.net/151359441/kern.log


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