Dear Linux folks,
For the first time, I wanted to transfer a 2 MB PDF file from a Dell
Latitude E7250 with Debian sid/unstable with Linux 5.16-rc1 to a Nokia
N9 (MeeGo/Harmattan). Using the package *bluez-obexd* 5.61-1 and GNOME
41, the device was found, and paired fine. Then I selected to transfer
the 2 MB file, and after starting for a second, it timed out after the
progress bar moves forward ones and failed.
The systemd journal contains:
obexd[21139]: Transfer(0x56243fe4f790) Error: Timed out waiting for
response
Testing with a a 5 byte test text file, worked fine. Also testing with a
Galaly M32, both files were transferred without problems (though slowly
with 32 KB/s.)
Trying to connect to the device with bluetoothctl failed for me, and the
journal contained, it failed.
$ bluetoothctl
Agent registered
[bluetooth]# connect 40:98:4E:5B:CE:XX
Attempting to connect to 40:98:4E:5B:CE:XX
Failed to connect: org.bluez.Error.Failed
bluetoothd[21104]: src/service.c:btd_service_connect() a2dp-source
profile connect failed for 40:98:4E:5B:CE:B3: Protocol not available
As the Nokia N9 was once pretty popular in the Linux community, I am
pretty sure, it used to work fine in the past, and there is some
regression. It’d be great, if you could give me some hints how to
further debug the issue.
Kind regards,
Paul
Hi Paul,
On Wed, Dec 1, 2021 at 9:39 AM Paul Menzel <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Dear Linux folks,
>
>
> For the first time, I wanted to transfer a 2 MB PDF file from a Dell
> Latitude E7250 with Debian sid/unstable with Linux 5.16-rc1 to a Nokia
> N9 (MeeGo/Harmattan). Using the package *bluez-obexd* 5.61-1 and GNOME
> 41, the device was found, and paired fine. Then I selected to transfer
> the 2 MB file, and after starting for a second, it timed out after the
> progress bar moves forward ones and failed.
>
> The systemd journal contains:
>
> obexd[21139]: Transfer(0x56243fe4f790) Error: Timed out waiting for
> response
>
> Testing with a a 5 byte test text file, worked fine. Also testing with a
> Galaly M32, both files were transferred without problems (though slowly
> with 32 KB/s.)
>
> Trying to connect to the device with bluetoothctl failed for me, and the
> journal contained, it failed.
>
> $ bluetoothctl
> Agent registered
> [bluetooth]# connect 40:98:4E:5B:CE:XX
> Attempting to connect to 40:98:4E:5B:CE:XX
> Failed to connect: org.bluez.Error.Failed
>
> bluetoothd[21104]: src/service.c:btd_service_connect() a2dp-source
> profile connect failed for 40:98:4E:5B:CE:B3: Protocol not available
>
> As the Nokia N9 was once pretty popular in the Linux community, I am
> pretty sure, it used to work fine in the past, and there is some
> regression. It’d be great, if you could give me some hints how to
> further debug the issue.
We will need some logs, obexd and btmon, if possible.
Dear Luiz,
Thank you for your quick reply.
Am 01.12.21 um 19:29 schrieb Luiz Augusto von Dentz:
> On Wed, Dec 1, 2021 at 9:39 AM Paul Menzel <[email protected]> wrote:
>> For the first time, I wanted to transfer a 2 MB PDF file from a Dell
>> Latitude E7250 with Debian sid/unstable with Linux 5.16-rc1 to a Nokia
>> N9 (MeeGo/Harmattan). Using the package *bluez-obexd* 5.61-1 and GNOME
>> 41, the device was found, and paired fine. Then I selected to transfer
>> the 2 MB file, and after starting for a second, it timed out after the
>> progress bar moves forward ones and failed.
>>
>> The systemd journal contains:
>>
>> obexd[21139]: Transfer(0x56243fe4f790) Error: Timed out waiting for response
>>
>> Testing with a a 5 byte test text file, worked fine. Also testing with a
>> Galaly M32, both files were transferred without problems (though slowly
>> with 32 KB/s.)
>>
>> Trying to connect to the device with bluetoothctl failed for me, and the
>> journal contained, it failed.
>>
>> $ bluetoothctl
>> Agent registered
>> [bluetooth]# connect 40:98:4E:5B:CE:XX
>> Attempting to connect to 40:98:4E:5B:CE:XX
>> Failed to connect: org.bluez.Error.Failed
>>
>> bluetoothd[21104]: src/service.c:btd_service_connect() a2dp-source profile connect failed for 40:98:4E:5B:CE:B3: Protocol not available
>>
>> As the Nokia N9 was once pretty popular in the Linux community, I am
>> pretty sure, it used to work fine in the past, and there is some
>> regression. It’d be great, if you could give me some hints how to
>> further debug the issue.
>
> We will need some logs, obexd and btmon, if possible.
I only managed to get the btmon trace [1]. I did `sudo modprobe -r
btusb` and `sudo btmon -w /dev/shm/trace.log`.
Linux messages:
[29880.100381] calling btusb_driver_init+0x0/0x1000 [btusb] @ 28716
[29880.239603] usbcore: registered new interface driver btusb
[29880.239608] initcall btusb_driver_init+0x0/0x1000 [btusb]
returned 0 after 135952 usecs
[29880.240706] Bluetooth: hci0: unexpected event for opcode 0x0500
[29880.241598] Bluetooth: hci0: Legacy ROM 2.5 revision 1.0 build 3
week 17 2014
[29880.241605] Bluetooth: hci0: Intel device is already patched.
patch num: 32
From the system journal:
Dez 01 22:52:19 ersatz obexd[21139]: Transfer(0x56243fe53dd0)
Error: Timed out waiting for response
Kind regards,
Paul
[1]: https://owww.molgen.mpg.de/~pmenzel/trace.log.7z
Dear Luiz,
Am 01.12.21 um 23:07 schrieb Paul Menzel:
> Am 01.12.21 um 19:29 schrieb Luiz Augusto von Dentz:
>
>> On Wed, Dec 1, 2021 at 9:39 AM Paul Menzel <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>> For the first time, I wanted to transfer a 2 MB PDF file from a Dell
>>> Latitude E7250 with Debian sid/unstable with Linux 5.16-rc1 to a Nokia
>>> N9 (MeeGo/Harmattan). Using the package *bluez-obexd* 5.61-1 and GNOME
>>> 41, the device was found, and paired fine. Then I selected to transfer
>>> the 2 MB file, and after starting for a second, it timed out after the
>>> progress bar moves forward ones and failed.
>>>
>>> The systemd journal contains:
>>>
>>> obexd[21139]: Transfer(0x56243fe4f790) Error: Timed out waiting
>>> for response
>>>
>>> Testing with a a 5 byte test text file, worked fine. Also testing with a
>>> Galaly M32, both files were transferred without problems (though slowly
>>> with 32 KB/s.)
>>>
>>> Trying to connect to the device with bluetoothctl failed for me, and the
>>> journal contained, it failed.
>>>
>>> $ bluetoothctl
>>> Agent registered
>>> [bluetooth]# connect 40:98:4E:5B:CE:XX
>>> Attempting to connect to 40:98:4E:5B:CE:XX
>>> Failed to connect: org.bluez.Error.Failed
>>>
>>> bluetoothd[21104]: src/service.c:btd_service_connect()
>>> a2dp-source profile connect failed for 40:98:4E:5B:CE:B3: Protocol
>>> not available
>>>
>>> As the Nokia N9 was once pretty popular in the Linux community, I am
>>> pretty sure, it used to work fine in the past, and there is some
>>> regression. It’d be great, if you could give me some hints how to
>>> further debug the issue.
>>
>> We will need some logs, obexd and btmon, if possible.
>
> I only managed to get the btmon trace [1]. I did `sudo modprobe -r
> btusb` and `sudo btmon -w /dev/shm/trace.log`.
>
> Linux messages:
>
> [29880.100381] calling btusb_driver_init+0x0/0x1000 [btusb] @ 28716
> [29880.239603] usbcore: registered new interface driver btusb
> [29880.239608] initcall btusb_driver_init+0x0/0x1000 [btusb] returned 0 after 135952 usecs
> [29880.240706] Bluetooth: hci0: unexpected event for opcode 0x0500
> [29880.241598] Bluetooth: hci0: Legacy ROM 2.5 revision 1.0 build 3 week 17 2014
> [29880.241605] Bluetooth: hci0: Intel device is already patched. patch num: 32
>
> From the system journal:
>
> Dez 01 22:52:19 ersatz obexd[21139]: Transfer(0x56243fe53dd0) Error: Timed out waiting for response
Were you able to see anything in the attached logs? If the obexd logs
are missing, can you please tell how I should capture them?
I also tested with Ubuntu 20.04 (*linux-image-5.11.0-27-generic*) and
21.10 (*linux-image-5.13.0-19-generic*) live systems booted from a USB
storage device, and transferring `/usr/bin/systemctl`
(`/lib/systemd/systemd`) with size of 1.8 MB worked fine.
Could there be a regression in that area? Unfortunately, it’s not easy
for me to do a bisection on the device at hand.
(Would it be possible to do with QEMU and USB controller and Bluetooth
device passthrough? How can I transfer the file on the command line so I
wouldn’t need to install a desktop environment?)
Kind regards,
Paul
> [1]: https://owww.molgen.mpg.de/~pmenzel/trace.log.7z
Dear Thorsten, dear Luiz,
Am 28.01.22 um 11:36 schrieb Thorsten Leemhuis:
> Hi, this is your Linux kernel regression tracker speaking.
Thorsten, thank you for following up on this.
> On 16.01.22 14:27, Paul Menzel wrote:
>> #regzbot introduced: 81be03e026dc0c16dc1c64e088b2a53b73caa895
>
> thx for getting regzbot involved, much appreciated!
>
>> Dear Luiz,
>>
>> It turns out there was a regression in Linux 5.16-rc1.
>
> @bt-maintaners, what's the status here? Paul reported that over ten days
> ago and there wasn't a single reply. Or did the discussion move
> somewhere else?
>
> @Paul: just wondering, did you give 5.17-rc1 a try? Might be worth a
> shot, if only to confirm the issue is still present.
I just tried with 5.17-rc3, and the issue is still present.
Kind regards,
Paul
>> Am 20.12.21 um 22:31 schrieb Paul Menzel:
>>
>>> Am 01.12.21 um 23:07 schrieb Paul Menzel:
>>>
>>>> Am 01.12.21 um 19:29 schrieb Luiz Augusto von Dentz:
>>>>
>>>>> On Wed, Dec 1, 2021 at 9:39 AM Paul Menzel <[email protected]>
>>>>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>>> For the first time, I wanted to transfer a 2 MB PDF file from a Dell
>>>>>> Latitude E7250 with Debian sid/unstable with Linux 5.16-rc1 to a Nokia
>>>>>> N9 (MeeGo/Harmattan). Using the package *bluez-obexd* 5.61-1 and GNOME
>>>>>> 41, the device was found, and paired fine. Then I selected to transfer
>>>>>> the 2 MB file, and after starting for a second, it timed out after the
>>>>>> progress bar moves forward ones and failed.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The systemd journal contains:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> obexd[21139]: Transfer(0x56243fe4f790) Error: Timed out
>>>>>> waiting for response
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Testing with a a 5 byte test text file, worked fine. Also testing
>>>>>> with a
>>>>>> Galaly M32, both files were transferred without problems (though
>>>>>> slowly
>>>>>> with 32 KB/s.)
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Trying to connect to the device with bluetoothctl failed for me,
>>>>>> and the
>>>>>> journal contained, it failed.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> $ bluetoothctl
>>>>>> Agent registered
>>>>>> [bluetooth]# connect 40:98:4E:5B:CE:XX
>>>>>> Attempting to connect to 40:98:4E:5B:CE:XX
>>>>>> Failed to connect: org.bluez.Error.Failed
>>>>>>
>>>>>> bluetoothd[21104]: src/service.c:btd_service_connect()
>>>>>> a2dp-source profile connect failed for 40:98:4E:5B:CE:B3: Protocol
>>>>>> not available
>>>>>>
>>>>>> As the Nokia N9 was once pretty popular in the Linux community, I am
>>>>>> pretty sure, it used to work fine in the past, and there is some
>>>>>> regression. It’d be great, if you could give me some hints how to
>>>>>> further debug the issue.
>>>>>
>>>>> We will need some logs, obexd and btmon, if possible.
>>>>
>>>> I only managed to get the btmon trace [1]. I did `sudo modprobe -r
>>>> btusb` and `sudo btmon -w /dev/shm/trace.log`.
>>>>
>>>> Linux messages:
>>>>
>>>> [29880.100381] calling btusb_driver_init+0x0/0x1000 [btusb] @
>>>> 28716
>>>> [29880.239603] usbcore: registered new interface driver btusb
>>>> [29880.239608] initcall btusb_driver_init+0x0/0x1000 [btusb]
>>>> returned 0 after 135952 usecs
>>>> [29880.240706] Bluetooth: hci0: unexpected event for opcode 0x0500
>>>> [29880.241598] Bluetooth: hci0: Legacy ROM 2.5 revision 1.0
>>>> build 3 week 17 2014
>>>> [29880.241605] Bluetooth: hci0: Intel device is already patched.
>>>> patch num: 32
>>>>
>>>> From the system journal:
>>>>
>>>> Dez 01 22:52:19 ersatz obexd[21139]: Transfer(0x56243fe53dd0)
>>>> Error: Timed out waiting for response
>>>
>>> Were you able to see anything in the attached logs? If the obexd logs
>>> are missing, can you please tell how I should capture them?
>>>
>>> I also tested with Ubuntu 20.04 (*linux-image-5.11.0-27-generic*) and
>>> 21.10 (*linux-image-5.13.0-19-generic*) live systems booted from a USB
>>> storage device, and transferring `/usr/bin/systemctl`
>>> (`/lib/systemd/systemd`) with size of 1.8 MB worked fine.
>>>
>>> Could there be a regression in that area? Unfortunately, it’s not easy
>>> for me to do a bisection on the device at hand.
>>>
>>> (Would it be possible to do with QEMU and USB controller and Bluetooth
>>> device passthrough? How can I transfer the file on the command line so
>>> I wouldn’t need to install a desktop environment?)
>>
>> Turns out, that is indeed possible [2], but turned out to be cumbersome,
>> as I hit the regression [3], which seems to have been fixed by commit
>> 95655456e7ce (Bluetooth: btintel: Fix broken LED quirk for legacy ROM
>> devices) merged in the current Linux 5.17 cycle this week.
>>
>> As a work around, I applied a hunk from Takashi’s patch.
>>
>> - { USB_DEVICE(0x8087, 0x0a2a), .driver_info =
>> BTUSB_INTEL_COMBINED },
>> + { USB_DEVICE(0x8087, 0x0a2a), .driver_info = BTUSB_INTEL_COMBINED |
>> + BTUSB_INTEL_BROKEN_INITIAL_NCMD },
>>
>> My problem with the Nokia N9 is still present in Linus’ master branch.
>>
>> Then I built a minimal Linux kernel for QEMU, and ran:
>>
>> qemu-system-x86_64 -cpu host -m 2G -enable-kvm \
>> -usb -device usb-host,vendorid=0x8087,productid=0x0a2a \
>> -drive file=/dev/shm/debian-64.img,format=raw,if=virtio \
>> -net nic -net user,hostfwd=tcp::22223-:22 \
>> -kernel /dev/shm/bzImage -append "root=/dev/vda1 rw quiet"
>>
>> In the Debian sid/unstable VM, I used
>>
>> ssh root@localhost -p 22223
>>
>> I once had to pair the VM with the Nokia N9 in bluetoothctl, and then
>> started `/usr/libexec/bluetooth/obexd`, and ran `obexctl`, and connected
>> first with `connect`, and then ran `send /lib/systemd/systemd` to
>> transfer the file. In the problematic cases it stopped/hung after the
>> first progress message.
>>
>> # obexctl
>> [NEW] Client /org/bluez/obex
>> [obex]# connect 40:98:4E:5B:CE:XX
>> Attempting to connect to 40:98:4E:5B:CE:XX
>> [NEW] Session /org/bluez/obex/client/session0 [default]
>> [NEW] ObjectPush /org/bluez/obex/client/session0
>> Connection successful
>> [40:98:4E:5B:CE:XX]# send /lib/systemd/systemd
>> Attempting to send /lib/systemd/systemd to
>> /org/bluez/obex/client/session0
>> [NEW] Transfer /org/bluez/obex/client/session0/transfer0
>> Transfer /org/bluez/obex/client/session0/transfer0
>> Status: queued
>> Name: systemd
>> Size: 1841712
>> Filename: /lib/systemd/systemd
>> Session: /org/bluez/obex/client/session0
>> [CHG] Transfer /org/bluez/obex/client/session0/transfer0 Status: active
>> [CHG] Transfer /org/bluez/obex/client/session0/transfer0
>> Transferred: 32737 (@32KB/s 00:55)
>> [CHG] Transfer /org/bluez/obex/client/session0/transfer0 Status: error
>> [DEL] Transfer /org/bluez/obex/client/session0/transfer0
>>
>> Some manual bisection of Linux releases, verified, that the regression
>> was introduced in Linux 5.16-rc1. (Lucky me, I started using Bluetooth
>> with the Nokia with Linux 5.16-rc1.) Then I verified it was introduced
>> by the Bluetooth pull request for Linux 5.16. Then I picked commit
>> 81be03e026dc0c16dc1c64e088b2a53b73caa895 due to the commit message, and
>> bisected from there, and it turns out, that this commit is actually
>> introducing the regression.
>>
>> $ git bisect good
>> 81be03e026dc0c16dc1c64e088b2a53b73caa895 is the first bad commit
>> commit 81be03e026dc0c16dc1c64e088b2a53b73caa895
>> Author: Luiz Augusto von Dentz <[email protected]>
>> Date: Fri Sep 3 15:27:32 2021 -0700
>>
>> Bluetooth: RFCOMM: Replace use of memcpy_from_msg with
>> bt_skb_sendmmsg
>>
>> This makes use of bt_skb_sendmmsg instead using memcpy_from_msg
>> which
>> is not considered safe to be used when lock_sock is held.
>>
>> Also make rfcomm_dlc_send handle skb with fragments and queue
>> them all
>> atomically.
>>
>> Signed-off-by: Luiz Augusto von Dentz <[email protected]>
>> Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <[email protected]>
>>
>> net/bluetooth/rfcomm/core.c | 50
>> ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-------
>> net/bluetooth/rfcomm/sock.c | 46
>> +++++++++--------------------------------
>> 2 files changed, 53 insertions(+), 43 deletions(-)
>>
>> Unfortunately, the patch does not cleanly revert, so users have to wait
>> until an expert can take a look, and come up with a fix.
>>
>>
>> Kind regards,
>>
>> Paul
>>
>>
>> PS: For the records:
>>
>> $ git bisect log
>> # bad: [81be03e026dc0c16dc1c64e088b2a53b73caa895] Bluetooth: RFCOMM:
>> Replace use of memcpy_from_msg with bt_skb_sendmmsg
>> # good: [49d8a5606428ca0962d09050a5af81461ff90fbb] Bluetooth: fix
>> init and cleanup of sco_conn.timeout_work
>> git bisect start '81be03e026dc0' 'HEAD^'
>> # good: [904c139a2517191e48f9cb1bb2d611ae59434009] Bluetooth: Add
>> support for msbc coding format
>> git bisect good 904c139a2517191e48f9cb1bb2d611ae59434009
>> # good: [8bba13b1d08d42e2e8308924fa5c1551a7b2b011] Bluetooth:
>> btintel: Fix incorrect out of memory check
>> git bisect good 8bba13b1d08d42e2e8308924fa5c1551a7b2b011
>> # good: [38f64f650dc0e44c146ff88d15a7339efa325918] Bluetooth: Add
>> bt_skb_sendmsg helper
>> git bisect good 38f64f650dc0e44c146ff88d15a7339efa325918
>> # good: [0771cbb3b97d3c1d68eecd7f00055f599954c34e] Bluetooth: SCO:
>> Replace use of memcpy_from_msg with bt_skb_sendmsg
>> git bisect good 0771cbb3b97d3c1d68eecd7f00055f599954c34e
>> # first bad commit: [81be03e026dc0c16dc1c64e088b2a53b73caa895]
>> Bluetooth: RFCOMM: Replace use of memcpy_from_msg with bt_skb_sendmmsg
>>
>>
>> Kind regards,
>>
>> Paul
>>
>>
>>>> [1]: https://owww.molgen.mpg.de/~pmenzel/trace.log.7z
>> [2]:
>> https://lore.kernel.org/linux-bluetooth/[email protected]/T/#u
>>
>> [3]:
>> https://lore.kernel.org/linux-bluetooth/[email protected]/
>>
>>
>>