On 25/07/18 12:24, Christoph Hellwig wrote:
On Wed, Jul 25, 2018 at 12:18:39PM +0100, Marc Zyngier wrote:
This feels odd. It means that you cannot have the following sequence:
local_irq_disable();
enable_irq(x); // where x is owned by a remote hart
as smp_call_function_single() requires interrupts to be enabled.
More fundamentally, why are you trying to make these interrupts look
global while they aren't? arm/arm64 have similar restrictions with GICv2
and earlier, and treats these interrupts as per-cpu.
Given that the drivers that deal with drivers connected to the per-hart
irqchip are themselves likely to be aware of the per-cpu aspect, it
would make sense to align things (we've been through that same
discussion about the clocksource driver a few weeks back).
Right now the only direct consumers are said clocksource, the PLIC
driver later in this series and the RISC-V arch IPI code. None of them
is going to do a manual enable_irq, so I guess the remote case of the
code is simply dead code. I'll take a look at converting them to
per-cpu. I guess the GICv2 driver is the best template?
I think you can do a much better job than the GICv2 driver ;-). You have
the chance of a clean slate, and no legacy (or ACPI) junk to deal with!
I think this is just a matter of moving the HLIC declaration in DT to be
outside of the cpu nodes (you just have a single HLIC node that is valid
for all the CPUs in the system), and making the interrupts percpu_devid
in your mapping function (see gic_irq_domain_map for reference).
Thanks,
M.