So when I looked at the kernel source to see when the change from version 2.11.3-k to 2.12.1-k happened, it turned out that this was part of 3.14. Which, if I read the comment right, would mean all kernel versions >=3.14 are ok. And that would mean for us that any release past Trusty should be ok. Can we get confirmation for that from those affected?
If that were true it would at least simplify the effort to figure out a fix since the delta between 3.13 and 3.14 (without checking whether any of those might be already part of stable) was only around 14 instead of around 75. And even better would be if Intel could be bothered to make the upstream Linux driver at least following the standalone driver...
So when I looked at the kernel source to see when the change from version 2.11.3-k to 2.12.1-k happened, it turned out that this was part of 3.14. Which, if I read the comment right, would mean all kernel versions >=3.14 are ok. And that would mean for us that any release past Trusty should be ok. Can we get confirmation for that from those affected?
If that were true it would at least simplify the effort to figure out a fix since the delta between 3.13 and 3.14 (without checking whether any of those might be already part of stable) was only around 14 instead of around 75. And even better would be if Intel could be bothered to make the upstream Linux driver at least following the standalone driver...