On Wed, Oct 14, 2015 at 5:18 AM, Qais Yousef <qais.yousef@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Hi,devicetree-spec would be more appropriate list for something like this.
This is an attempt to revive a discussion on the right list this time with
all the correct people hopefully on CC.
While trying to upstream a driver, Thomas and Marc Zyngier pointed out theWhat is INT_SPEC and "2"? A drawing of the h/w connections and then
need for a generic IPI support in the kernel to allow driver to reserve and
send ones. Hopefully my latest RFC patch will help to clarify what's being
done.
https://lkml.org/lkml/2015/10/13/227
We need a generic DT binding support to accompany that to allow a driver to
reserve an IPI using this new mechanism.
MarcZ had the following suggestion:
https://lkml.org/lkml/2015/8/24/628
Which in summary is
mydevice@f0000000 {
interrupt-source = <&intc INT_SPEC 2 &inttarg1 &inttarg1>;
what the binding looks like would be helpful.
};What is HWAFFINITY1? I want to be able to see if say this value is 1,
inttarg1: mydevice@f1000000 {
interrupt-sink = <&intc HWAFFINITY1>;
then the affinity is for cpu0.
};Could we use the existing interrupts binding for interrupt-sink?
inttarg2: cpu@1 {
interrupt-sink = <&intc HWAFFINITY2>;
};
interrupt-sink requests to reserve an IPI that it will receive at HWAFFINITY
cpumask. interrupt-source will not do any reservation. It will simply
connect an IPI reserved by interrupt-sink to the device that will be
responsible for generating that IPI. This description should allow
connecting any 2 devices.
Correct me Marc if I got it wrong please.
I suggested a simplification by assuming that IPIs will only be between host
OS and a coprocessor which would gives us this form which I think is easier
to deal with
coprocessor {
interrupt-source = <&intc INT_SPEC COP_HWAFFINITY>;
interrupt-sink = <&intc INT_SPEC CPU_HWAFFINITY>;
}
interrupt-source here reserves an IPI to be sent from host OS to coprocessor
at COP_HWAFFINITY. interrupt-sink will reserve an IPI to be received by host
OS at CPU_HWAFFINITY. Less generic but I don't know how important it is for
host OS to setup IPIs between 2 external coprocessors and whether it should
really be doing that.
What do the DT experts think? Any preference or a better suggestion?Depends how you would assign coproc to coproc IPIs in a system. It may
be fixed in firmware, or more complex coprocs may read the dtb.