Re: [RFC PATCH 0/6] DRIVERS: IRQCHIP: Add support for crossbar IP
From: Santosh Shilimkar
Date: Tue Oct 01 2013 - 09:57:58 EST
On Tuesday 01 October 2013 09:48 AM, Rob Herring wrote:
> On 10/01/2013 06:13 AM, Sricharan R wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> On Monday 30 September 2013 08:39 PM, Rob Herring wrote:
>>> On 09/30/2013 08:59 AM, Sricharan R wrote:
>>>> Some socs have a large number of interrupts requests to service
>>>> the needs of its many peripherals and subsystems. All of the interrupt
>>>> requests lines from the subsystems are not needed at the same
>>>> time, so they have to be muxed to the controllers appropriately.
>>>> In such places a interrupt controllers are preceded by an
>>>> IRQ CROSSBAR that provides flexibility in muxing the device interrupt
>>>> requests to the controller inputs.
>>>>
>>>> This series models the peripheral interrupts that can be routed through
>>>> the crossbar to the GIC as 'routable-irqs'. The routable irqs are added
>>>> in a separate linear domain inside the GIC. The registered routable domain's
>>>> callback are invoked as a part of the GIC's callback, which in turn should
>>>> allocate a free irq line and configure the IP accordingly. So every peripheral
>>>> in the dts files mentions the fixed crossbar number as its interrupt. A free
>>>> gic line for that gets allocated and configured when the peripheral's interrupt
>>>> is mapped.
>>>>
>>>> The minimal crossbar driver to track and allocate free GIC lines and configure the
>>>> crossbar is added here, along with the DT bindings.
>>> Seems like interrupt-map property is what you need here.
>>>
>>> http://devicetree.org/Device_Tree_Usage#Advanced_Interrupt_Mapping
>>>
>>> Versatile Express also has an example.
>> OK, but the idea was not to tie up the crossbar<->interrupt numbers at the
>> DTS level, but to assign it dynamically during runtime. This was one of the
>> comments that came up with first crossbar support patches, which was assigning a
>> interrupt line to crossbar number in the DTS and setting it up in crossbar probe.
>
> Is there an actual usecase on a single h/w design that you run out of
> interrupts and it is a user decision which interrupts to use?
>
Yes. There are 240 peripheral interrupts connected out of which 160 can
be used in this specific case.
> You could fill in the interrupt-map at run-time. It would have to be
> early (bootloader or early kernel init) and can't be at request_irq time.
>
Well all options are tried before coming up to the $subject solution.
It was suggested by Thomas in the last review.
>> https://lkml.org/lkml/2013/7/18/416
>>
>> Since this approach of assigning in DTS was opposed, we moved to IRQCHIP and
>> that did not go as well. Finally was asked to handle this as a part of GIC driver with
>> a separate domain.
>>
>> http://www.spinics.net/lists/linux-omap/msg97085.html
>
> This has nothing to do with the GIC, so it does not belong there.
>
Well the router makes connections from peripheral to GIC. Thomas can
better explain it but I think since its doing irq routing for GIC on
a given hardware, I don't see any issue having some generic map/unmap
function in GIC. The actual implementation is still outside of GIC.
Regards,
Sasntosh
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