Re: [PATCH] mmc: host: meson-gx-mmc: fix possible deadlock condition for preempt_rt
From: Sebastian Andrzej Siewior <bigeasy@linutronix.de>
Date: 2020-09-25 15:05:25
Also in:
linux-amlogic, linux-mmc, linux-rt-users, lkml
On 2020-09-25 16:14:09 [+0200], Jerome Brunet wrote:
Looks like we need to do manually what IRQF_ONESHOT was doing for us :(
IRQF_ONESHOT disables the IRQ at the irqchip level. You must ensure that the device keeps quite. Usually you mast the interrupt source at the device lee.
This brings a few questions: * The consideration you described is not mentioned near the description of IRQF_ONESHOT. Maybe it should so other drivers with same intent don't end up in the same pitfall ?
From request_threaded_irq() -> | * If you want to set up a threaded irq handler for your device | * then you need to supply @handler and @thread_fn. @handler is | * still called in hard interrupt context and has to check | * whether the interrupt originates from the device. If yes it | * needs to disable the interrupt on the device and return | * IRQ_WAKE_THREAD which will wake up the handler thread and run | * @thread_fn. This split handler design is necessary to support | * shared interrupts. Just the line that saying what needs to be done before returning IRQ_WAKE_THREAD.
* Why doesn't RT move the IRQ with this flag ? Seems completly unrelated to RT (maybe it is the same documentation problem)
It is unrelated to RT. Mostly. You end up with the same problem booting with `threadirqs'. RT has the additional restrictions that you may not acquire any sleeping locks in hardirq context. This you can see with addinional lockdep magic.
* Can't we have flag doing the irq disable in the same way while still allowing to RT to do its magic ? seems better than open coding it in the driver ?
Puh. That should be forwarded the IRQ department. So we have IRQF_NO_THREAD to avoid force threading. This is documented as such. Then we have IRQF_TIMER and IRQF_PERCPU which are also not force threaded and it is not documented as such. However it is used for the timer-IRQ, IPI, perf and such - things you obviously don't want to thread and need to run in hard-IRQ context. What you have ist a primary and secondary and IRQF_ONESHOT and don't want the primary handler to be force-threaded. I can't answer why we don't. However, drivers usually disable the source themself if they providing both handler. Sebastian _______________________________________________ linux-arm-kernel mailing list linux-arm-kernel@lists.infradead.org http://lists.infradead.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-arm-kernel