On Tue, 27 Mar 2012 11:24:51 -0700, David Daney<david.daney@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:On 03/26/2012 06:56 PM, Rob Herring wrote:On 03/26/2012 02:31 PM, David Daney wrote:[...]From: David Daney<david.daney@xxxxxxxxxx>+static int octeon_irq_ciu_map(struct irq_domain *d,
+ unsigned int virq, irq_hw_number_t hw)
+{
+ unsigned int line = hw>> 6;
+ unsigned int bit = hw& 63;
+
+ if (virq>= 256)
+ return -EINVAL;
Drop this. You should not care what the virq numbers are.
I care that they don't overflow the width of octeon_irq_ciu_to_irq (a u8).
So really I want to say:
if (virq>= (1<< sizeof (octeon_irq_ciu_to_irq[0][0]))) {
WARN(...);
return -EINVAL;
}
I need a map external to any one irq_domain. The irq handling code
handles sources that come from two separate irq_domains, as well as irqs
that are not part of any domain.
You can get past this limitation by using the struct irq_data .hwirq and
.domain members for the irq ==> hwirq translation, and for hwirq ==>
irq the code should already have the context to know which user it is.
For the irqs that are not covered by an irq_domain, the driver is free
to set the .hwirq value directly. Ultimately however, it will
probably be best to add an irq domain for those users also.
...
Howver, I don't understand where the risk is in overflowing
octeon_irq_ciu_to_irq[][]. From what I can see, the virq value isn't
used at all to calculate the array dereference. line and bit are
calculated from the hwirq value. What am I missing?
g.