Re: [RFC PATCH 1/2] mac80211: make max_network_latency notifieratomic safe
From: Florian Mickler
Date: Wed Jun 09 2010 - 11:38:09 EST
On Wed, 09 Jun 2010 14:27:05 +0200
Johannes Berg <johannes@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On Wed, 2010-06-09 at 14:16 +0200, Florian Mickler wrote:
>
> > That was also my first idea, but then I thought about qos and thought
> > atomic notification are necessary.
> > Do you see any value in having atomic notification?
> >
> > I have the following situation before my eyes:
> >
> > Driver A gets an interrupt and needs (to service that
> > interrupt) the cpu to guarantee a latency of X because the
> > device is a bit icky.
> >
> > Now, in that situation, if we don't immediately (without scheduling in
> > between) notify the system to be in that latency-mode the driver won't
> > function properly. Is this a realistic scene?
> >
> > At the moment we only have process context notification and only 2
> > listeners.
> >
> > I think providing for atomic as well as "relaxed" notification could be
> > useful.
> >
> > If atomic notification is deemed unnecessary, I have no
> > problems to just use schedule_work() in update request.
> > Anyway, it is probably best to split this. I.e. first make
> > update_request callable from atomic contexts with doing the
> > schedule_work in update_request and then
> > as an add on provide for constraints_objects with atomic notifications.
>
> Well I remember http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.linux.kernel/979935 where
> Mark renamed things to "request" which seems to imply to me more of a
> "please do this" than "I NEED IT NOW!!!!!".
>
> johannes
Yes. I just posted a version which uses schedule_work().
Just FYI, James has also posted his version which uses either a blocking
or an atomic notifier chain.
http://article.gmane.org/gmane.linux.kernel/996813
Cheers,
Flo
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