nvme-pci: mark Kingston SKC2000 as not supporting the deepest power state
authorZoltán Böszörményi <zboszor@gmail.com>
Sun, 21 Feb 2021 05:12:16 +0000 (06:12 +0100)
committerChristoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Fri, 5 Mar 2021 12:41:03 +0000 (13:41 +0100)
My 2TB SKC2000 showed the exact same symptoms that were provided
in 538e4a8c57 ("nvme-pci: avoid the deepest sleep state on
Kingston A2000 SSDs"), i.e. a complete NVME lockup that needed
cold boot to get it back.

According to some sources, the A2000 is simply a rebadged
SKC2000 with a slightly optimized firmware.

Adding the SKC2000 PCI ID to the quirk list with the same workaround
as the A2000 made my laptop survive a 5 hours long Yocto bootstrap
buildfest which reliably triggered the SSD lockup previously.

Signed-off-by: Zoltán Böszörményi <zboszor@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
drivers/nvme/host/pci.c

index 65e01c3..8c5c3b5 100644 (file)
@@ -3266,6 +3266,8 @@ static const struct pci_device_id nvme_id_table[] = {
                .driver_data = NVME_QUIRK_DISABLE_WRITE_ZEROES, },
        { PCI_DEVICE(0x1d97, 0x2263),   /* SPCC */
                .driver_data = NVME_QUIRK_DISABLE_WRITE_ZEROES, },
+       { PCI_DEVICE(0x2646, 0x2262),   /* KINGSTON SKC2000 NVMe SSD */
+               .driver_data = NVME_QUIRK_NO_DEEPEST_PS, },
        { PCI_DEVICE(0x2646, 0x2263),   /* KINGSTON A2000 NVMe SSD  */
                .driver_data = NVME_QUIRK_NO_DEEPEST_PS, },
        { PCI_DEVICE(PCI_VENDOR_ID_AMAZON, 0x0061),