Re: [PATCH] irq: Start the transition of irq_chip methods taking a desc

From: Eric W. Biederman
Date: Sun Mar 21 2010 - 20:33:08 EST


Thomas Gleixner <tglx@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes:

> Eric,
>
> On Sun, 21 Mar 2010, Eric W. Biederman wrote:
>>
>> With SPARSE_IRQ irq_to_desc becomes an unnecessary lookup operation on
>> the fast path of dispatching irqs to their handlers. We can avoid
>> this cost by passing an irq_desc pointer instead of using an integer
>> irq token to the irq_chip methods.
>>
>> A single patch to convert all of the architectures is an unreviewable
>> 2000+ line patch. A gradual transition scenario with two sets of
>> irq_chip methods in irq_chip is an unmanageable mess in kernel/irq.
>>
>> So instead I define some macros so the generic irq code in kernel/irq/
>> can compile either way based on a boolean Kconfig variable
>> CONFIG_CHIP_PARAM_DESC. This allows us to convert one architecture at
>> a time, reducing the follow on patches to manageable proportions. It
>> is a little bit ugly but it is much better than the alternatives, and
>> as soon as we finish the transition we can kill the macros.
>>
>> I introduce the macros CHIP_ARG, CHIP_VAR, and CHIP_PARAM where
>> appropriate. I change a few declarations of irq as int to unsigned
>> int. I normalize the variables names in the functions that call
>> chip methods to ensure that I have the variables irq and desc present
>> allowing CHIP_ARG to work properly. Most importantly none of the irq
>> logic changes with this patch.
>
> I like that approach very much. Is the output binary equivivalent?

Depends on what you mean.
- If you are concerned about ABI changes, non exist.
- If the question is will the compiler generate the same instruction sequences,
I don't expect it will.

In particular the bug fixes to use unsigned int instead of int should affect
the tests used in the for_each_irq_desc. Of less avoid-ability is the change
to ack_bad to use desc->irq instead of cached irq value.

Since this is the only patch in the entire series that could
possibly be binary equivalent I don't find it a particularly
interesting test.

Eric

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