OOPS in idescsi_end_request

From: Brian King (brking@charter.net)
Date: Tue Jan 21 2003 - 22:41:11 EST


While burning a CD tonight I ended up taking an oops on my system. I had
the lkcd patch applied to my 2.4.19 kernel, so I was able to look at the
  oops after my system rebooted. After digging into it a little and
looking at the ide-scsi code I think I found the problem but am not
sure. How can idescsi_reset simply return SCSI_RESET_SUCCESS to the scsi
mid layer? I think what is happening is that a command times out,
idescsi_abort is called, which returns SCSI_ABORT_SNOOZE. Later on
idescsi_reset gets called, which returns SCSI_RESET_SUCCESS. At this
point the scsi mid-layer owns the scsi_cmnd and returns the failure back
up the chain. Later on, the command gets run through
idescsi_end_request, which then tries to access the scsi_cmnd structure
which is it no longer owns.

Any help is appreciated. I have a complete lkcd dump of the failure if
anyone would like more information...

-Brian King

Here is the last bit in the log buffer:

     <4>scsi : aborting command due to timeout : pid 2534304, scsi0,
channel 0, id 1, lun 0 Write (10) 00 00 01 1e 91 00 00 1b 00
     <4>hdk: timeout waiting for DMA
     <4>ide_dmaproc: chipset supported ide_dma_timeout func only: 14
     <4>hdk: status timeout: status=0xd8 { Busy }
     <4>hdk: drive not ready for command
     <4>hdk: ATAPI reset complete
     <4>hdk: irq timeout: status=0x80 { Busy }
     <4>hdk: ATAPI reset complete
     <4>hdk: irq timeout: status=0x80 { Busy }
     <1>Unable to handle kernel NULL pointer dereference at virtual
address 00000184
     <4> printing eip:
     <4>e0fd22f1
     <1>*pde = 00000000
     <4>Oops: 0002
     <4>CPU: 0
     <4>EIP: 0010:[<e0fd22f1>] Tainted: PF
     <4>EFLAGS: 00010046
     <4>eax: 00000000 ebx: 00000000 ecx: dfef8000 edx: c75bcbc0
     <4>esi: 00000080 edi: c0491938 ebp: d5908000 esp: c0435ea4
     <4>ds: 0018 es: 0018 ss: 0018
     <4>Process swapper (pid: 0, stackpage=c0435000)
     <4>Stack: c0491938 00000000 00000000 c0491938 00000088 000001f4
c03349e2 c75bcbc0
     <4> ce0a3b80 c0491938 00000080 00000080 c75bcbc0 c0222d6c
00000000 c1671580
     <4> 00000080 c04918f4 c0491938 c0434000 c1671580 e0fd2550
c0223b30 c0491938
     <4>Call Trace: [<c0222d6c>] [<e0fd2550>] [<c0223b30>]
[<c0223990>] [<c0127af0>]
     <4> [<c01233d4>] [<c01232a6>] [<c01230ed>] [<c010a97f>]
[<c010d173>] [<c0106f80>]
     <4> [<c0106fa3>] [<c0107012>] [<c0105000>]
     <4>
     <4>Code: c7 80 84 01 00 00 00 00 07 00 75 72 9c 5e fa bb 00 e0 ff ff

 From lkcd:

================================================================
STACK TRACE FOR TASK: 0xc0434000 (swapper)

  0 [ide-scsi]idescsi_end_request+129 [0xe0fd22f1]
TRACE ERROR 0x800000000
================================================================

-
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