On Tue, 2011-05-31 at 15:37 +0200, Michal Simek wrote:
I briefly looked at it and it probably come from copy_thread function (process.c - line: childregs->msr |= MSR_IE;)
When context switch happen, childregs->msr value is loaded to MSR (machine status register) which caused that IE is enabled ( entry.S:~977 lwi r12, r11, CC_MSR; mts rmsr, r12)
NOTE: MSR stores flags for IE, i/d-cache ON/OFF, virtual memory/user mode etc.
This is no problem if context switch is done with irq on. But maybe there is another place which is causing some problems.
Ahh, no wonder I didn't find that ;-)
Where exactly should be IRQ reenable after context switch?
the tail end of finish_lock_switch(), where it does:
raw_spin_unlock_irq(&rq->lock).
I would like to also check some things.
1. When schedule should be called from arch specific code?
Currently we are calling schedule after syscall/exception/interrupt happen.
Is there any place where schedule should/shouldn't be called?
It should be called on the return to userspace path when
TIF_NEED_RESCHED is set.
contexts like non-zero preempt_count or IRQ-disabled.
[ with the exception of CONFIG_PREEMPT which calls preempt_schedule()
which checks both those things ]
2. For syscall and exception handling - interrupt is ON but it is only masked.
I'm having trouble understanding: on but masked.
When schedule is called from that any code has to enable IRQ if generic code doesn't do that. Not sure if it does.
generic code isn't supposed to call schedule() with IRQs disabled (and
doesn't afaik)