Re: [RFC] genirq: prevent allocated_irqs from being smaller than NR_IRQS

From: Lars-Peter Clausen
Date: Thu Apr 02 2020 - 11:16:52 EST


On 4/2/20 5:08 PM, Marcelo Schmitt wrote:
Hi,

I was trying to understand IRQ initialization when suddenly got
intrigued about the declaration of the "allocated_irqs" bitmap at
kernel/irq/irqdesc.c. The size of allocated_irqs is defined by
IRQ_BITMAP_BITS, which in turn is passed to BITS_TO_LONGS to calculate
the actual number of IRQs the system may have. If I got it right, there
should be one entry at allocated_irqs for each possible IRQ line. At
kernel/irq/internals.h, IRQ_BITMAP_BITS is defined to be NR_IRQS (or
NR_IRQS plus a high constant in the case of sparse IRQs), which most
architectures seem to define as being the actual number of IRQs a board
has.

#ifdef CONFIG_SPARSE_IRQ
# define IRQ_BITMAP_BITS (NR_IRQS + 8196)
#else
# define IRQ_BITMAP_BITS NR_IRQS
#endif

The thing I'm troubled about is that BITS_TO_LONGS divides
IRQ_BITMAP_BITS by sizeof(long) * 8, which makes it possible for the
size of allocated_irqs to be smaller than NR_IRQS.

For instance, if !CONFIG_SPARSE_IRQ, sizeof(long) == 8, and NR_IRQS is
defined as 16, then IRQ_BITMAP_BITS would be equal to
(16 + 64 - 1)/64 = 1. Even if CONFIG_SPARSE_IRQ is defined, a device
with a large number of IRQ lines would end up with a small bitmap for
allocated_irqs.

I thought NR_IRQS would be multiplied by the number of bits it uses.
Something like:

#ifdef CONFIG_SPARSE_IRQ
# define IRQ_BITMAP_BITS (NR_IRQS * BITS_PER_TYPE(long) + 8196)
#else
# define IRQ_BITMAP_BITS (NR_IRQS * BITS_PER_TYPE(long))
#endif

Anyhow, IRQ_BITMAP_BITS is also used to limit the maximum number of IRQs
at irqdesc.c. If my understanding of nr_irqs is correct, it would make
sense to change some sanity checks at early_irq_init() too.

Does anyone mind giving me some advice on how allocated_irqs is
initialized with a suitable size to support the number of interrupt
lines a board may have?

Maybe I'm missing something, but allocated_irqs is a bitmap. This means each bit corresponds to one IRQ. if sizeof(long) is 8 and allocated_irqs is sized to be one long that means it is large enough for 64 IRQs.

- Lars