Re: [PATCH -mm v4 6/9] atmel_serial: Split the interrupt handler
From: Haavard Skinnemoen
Date: Wed Jan 30 2008 - 04:41:30 EST
On Wed, 30 Jan 2008 00:12:23 +0100
michael <trimarchi@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> I'm testing this patch on an at91sam9260 on 2.6.24-rt. I'm using this
> patch with the tclib support for hrtimer and the clocksource pit_clk.
> These are the results:
>
> - Voluntary Kernel Preemption the system (crash)
> - Preemptible Kernel (crash)
Ouch. I'm assuming this is with DMA disabled?
> /*
> * Drop the lock here since it might end up calling
> * uart_start(), which takes the lock.
> spin_unlock(&port->lock);
> */
> tty_flip_buffer_push(port->info->tty);
> /*
> spin_lock(&port->lock);
> */
> The same code with this comments out runs
Now, _that_ is strange. I can't see anything that needs protection
across that call; in fact, I think we can lock a lot less than what we
currently do.
> Complete Preemption (Real-Time) ok but the serials is just unusable due
> to too many overruns (just using lrz)
Is it worse than before? IIRC Remy mentioned something about
IRQF_NODELAY being the reason for moving all this code to softirq
context in the first place; does the interrupt handler run in hardirq
context?
> The system is stable and doesn't crash reverting this patch.
> I don't test with the thread hardirqs active.
Ok.
> >> + ret = -ENOMEM;
> >> + data = kmalloc(ATMEL_SERIAL_RINGSIZE, GFP_KERNEL);
> >> + if (!data)
> >> + goto err_alloc_ring;
> >> + port->rx_ring.buf = data;
> >> +
> >> ret = uart_add_one_port(&atmel_uart, &port->uart);
> >>
> Is the kmalloc correct?
> maybe:
> data = kmalloc(ATMEL_SERIAL_RINGSIZE * sizeof(struct atmel_uart_char),
> GFP_KERNEL);
I think you're right. Can you change it and see if it helps?
I guess I didn't test it thoroughly enough with DMA
disabled...slub_debug ought to catch such things, but not until we
receive enough data to actually overflow the buffer.
> >> @@ -1033,6 +1165,9 @@ static int __devexit atmel_serial_remove(struct platform_device *pdev)
> >>
> >> ret = uart_remove_one_port(&atmel_uart, port);
> >>
> >> + tasklet_kill(&atmel_port->tasklet);
> >> + kfree(atmel_port->rx_ring.buf);
> >> +
> >>
> Why the tasklet_kill is not done in atmel_shutdown?
Why should it be? If it should, we must move the call to tasklet_init
into atmel_startup too, and I don't really see the point.
Haavard
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