Re: [v9,5/7] PCI: mediatek-gen3: Add MSI support
From: Marc Zyngier <maz@kernel.org>
Date: 2021-03-27 19:45:31
Also in:
linux-arm-kernel, linux-mediatek, linux-pci, lkml
On Sat, 27 Mar 2021 19:28:37 +0000, Pali Rohár [off-list ref] wrote:
On Wednesday 24 March 2021 11:05:08 Jianjun Wang wrote:quoted
+static void mtk_pcie_msi_handler(struct mtk_pcie_port *port, int set_idx) +{ + struct mtk_msi_set *msi_set = &port->msi_sets[set_idx]; + unsigned long msi_enable, msi_status; + unsigned int virq; + irq_hw_number_t bit, hwirq; + + msi_enable = readl_relaxed(msi_set->base + PCIE_MSI_SET_ENABLE_OFFSET); + + do { + msi_status = readl_relaxed(msi_set->base + + PCIE_MSI_SET_STATUS_OFFSET); + msi_status &= msi_enable; + if (!msi_status) + break; + + for_each_set_bit(bit, &msi_status, PCIE_MSI_IRQS_PER_SET) { + hwirq = bit + set_idx * PCIE_MSI_IRQS_PER_SET; + virq = irq_find_mapping(port->msi_bottom_domain, hwirq); + generic_handle_irq(virq); + } + } while (true);Hello! Just a question, cannot this while-loop cause block of processing other interrupts?
This is a level interrupt. You don't have much choice but to handle it immediately, although an alternative would be to mask it and deal with it in a thread. And since Linux doesn't deal with interrupt priority, a screaming interrupt is never a good thing.
I have done tests with different HW (aardvark) but with same while(true) loop logic. One XHCI PCIe controller was sending MSI interrupts too fast and interrupt handler with this while(true) logic was in infinite loop. During one IRQ it was calling infinite many times generic_handle_irq() as HW was feeding new and new MSI hwirq into status register.
Define "too fast". If something in the system is able to program the XHCI device in such a way that it causes a screaming interrupt, that's the place to look for problems, and probably not in the interrupt handling itself, which does what it is supposed to do.
But this is different HW, so it can have different behavior and does not have to cause above issue. I have just spotted same code pattern for processing MSI interrupts...
This is a common pattern that you will find in pretty much any interrupt handling/demuxing, and is done this way when the cost of taking the exception is high compared to that of handling it. Which is pretty much any of the badly designed, level-driving, DW-inspired, sorry excuse for MSI implementations that are popular on low-end ARM SoCs. Thanks, M. -- Without deviation from the norm, progress is not possible.