[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] [Xen-devel] RE: [PATCH v2 2/2] x86: don't unmask disabled irqs when migrating them
> From: Thomas Gleixner > Sent: Friday, May 06, 2011 6:00 PM > > On Fri, 6 May 2011, Tian, Kevin wrote: > > x86: don't unmask disabled irqs when migrating them > > > > it doesn't make sense to mask/unmask a disabled irq when migrating it > > from offlined cpu to another, because it's not expected to handle any > > instance of it. Current mask/set_affinity/unmask steps may trigger > > unexpected instance on disabled irq which then simply bug on when > > there is no handler for it. One failing example is observed in Xen. > > Xen pvops > > So there is no handler, why the heck is there an irq action? > > if (!irq_has_action(irq) .... > continue; > > Should have caught an uninitialized interrupt. If Xen abuses interrupts that > way, > then it rightfully explodes. And we do not fix it by magic somewhere else. sorry that my bad description here. there does be a dummy handler registered on such irqs which simply throws out a BUG_ON when hit. I should just say such injection is not expected instead of no handler. :-) > > > guest marks a special type of irqs as disabled, which are simply used > > As I explained before several times, IRQF_DISABLED has absolutely nothing to > do with it and pvops _CANNOT_ mark an interrupt disabled. I have to admit that I need more study about whole interrupt sub-system, to better understand your explanation here. Also here again my description is not accurate enough. I meant that Xen pvops request the special irq with below flags: IRQF_DISABLED|IRQF_PERCPU|IRQF_NOBALANCING and then later explicitly disable it with disable_irq(). As you said that IRQF_DISABLED itself has nothing to do with it, and it's the later disable_irq() which takes real effect because Xen event chip hooks this callback to mask the irq from the chip level. > > > > > chip = irq_data_get_irq_chip(data); > > - if (!irqd_can_move_in_process_context(data) && chip->irq_mask) > > + do_mask = !irqd_irq_disabled(data) && > > + !irqd_can_move_in_process_context(data) && > > chip->irq_mask; > > + if (do_mask) > > chip->irq_mask(data); > > This is completely wrong. irqd_irq_disabled() is a status information which > does > not tell you whether the interrupt is actually masked at the hardware level > because we do lazy interrupt hardware masking. So your change would keep > the line unmasked at the hardware level for all interrupts which are in the > lazy > disabled state. Got it. > > The only conditional which is interesting is the unmask path and that's a > simple > optimization and not a correctness problem. > So what's your suggestion based on my updated information? Is there any interface I may take to differentiate above exception with normal case? Basically in Xen usage we want such irqs permanently disabled at the chip level. Or could we only do mask/unmask for irqs which are unmasked atm if as you said it's just an optimization step? :-) Thanks Kevin _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-devel
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