I've posted more details here for userspace diagnosis/workaround,
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/377225
Some (older?) BT adapters don't support the commands 'Read Default Link
Policy Settings'
'Write Default Link Policy Settings'
as shown by # hciconfig hci0 commands
This appears be one cause of the infamous kernel message: hci0: command
tx timeout. This in turn causes bluetoothd to give up and take down the
interface.
If you kill bluetoothd, and manually # hciconfig hci0 up, you can
discover and inq devices no problem.
I made a patch to disable the offending command, and the above mentioned
bug report I gave instructions to gather data on adapter BT version,
supported features, and supported commands. Hopefully some user reports
can be used to make use of the command conditional on actual adapter
support.
The question for kernel side is, regression, or corrected behaviour?
--
Jeremy Jackson
Coplanar Networks
(519)489-4903
http://www.coplanar.net
[email protected]
Hi Marcel,
On Fri, 18 Dec 2009 13:53:26 -0800
Marcel Holtmann <[email protected]> wrote:
> > The question for kernel side is, regression, or corrected behaviour?
>
> this is basically a bluetoothd issue. We should be reading the list of
> supported commands and then either issue or not issue this command. Feel
> free to write a patch for that.
This sounded like fun, and because I had nothing better to do, I wanted
to take a shot at that.
The result looks something like that (not to be applied,
whitespace-damaged!):
diff --git a/src/adapter.c b/src/adapter.c
index 2e43662..2690227 100644
--- a/src/adapter.c
+++ b/src/adapter.c
@@ -2121,6 +2121,7 @@ int adapter_start(struct btd_adapter *adapter)
struct hci_dev_info di;
struct hci_version ver;
uint8_t features[8];
+ uint8_t cmds[64];
int dd, err;
char mode[14], address[18];
@@ -2203,8 +2204,16 @@ int adapter_start(struct btd_adapter *adapter)
}
setup:
- hci_send_cmd(dd, OGF_LINK_POLICY, OCF_READ_DEFAULT_LINK_POLICY,
- 0, NULL);
+ if (hci_read_local_commands(dd, cmds, 1000) < 0) {
+ error("Can't read supported commands on %s: %s (%d)\n",
+ adapter->path, strerror(errno), errno);
+ }
+
+ /* bit 43 is "Read Default Link Policy Settings" command support */
+ if (cmds[5] & (1 << 3))
+ hci_send_cmd(dd, OGF_LINK_POLICY,
+ OCF_READ_DEFAULT_LINK_POLICY, 0, NULL);
+
hci_close_dev(dd);
adapter->current_cod = 0;
One question I faced was, if we should error out if
hci_read_local_commands fails? I'm generally against it since it might
introduce an
But then I noticed that we are not even reading the answer to this
command (or is there no answer? would seem strange for a "read"
command), so I concluded that the best way to fix the problem would
probably be to just revert commit 8563b779 which added this command.
Is my conclusion correct or did I overlook something?
Have fun,
seife
--
Stefan Seyfried
"Any ideas, John?"
"Well, surrounding them's out."
Hi Jeremy,
> I've posted more details here for userspace diagnosis/workaround,
>
> https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/377225
>
> Some (older?) BT adapters don't support the commands 'Read Default Link
> Policy Settings'
> 'Write Default Link Policy Settings'
>
> as shown by # hciconfig hci0 commands
>
> This appears be one cause of the infamous kernel message: hci0: command
> tx timeout. This in turn causes bluetoothd to give up and take down the
> interface.
>
> If you kill bluetoothd, and manually # hciconfig hci0 up, you can
> discover and inq devices no problem.
>
> I made a patch to disable the offending command, and the above mentioned
> bug report I gave instructions to gather data on adapter BT version,
> supported features, and supported commands. Hopefully some user reports
> can be used to make use of the command conditional on actual adapter
> support.
>
> The question for kernel side is, regression, or corrected behaviour?
this is basically a bluetoothd issue. We should be reading the list of
supported commands and then either issue or not issue this command. Feel
free to write a patch for that.
Regards
Marcel