Get rid of IRQF_DISABLED - (was [PATCH] genirq: warn about IRQF_SHARED|IRQF_DISABLED)
David Brownell
david-b at pacbell.net
Mon Nov 30 15:53:28 EST 2009
On Monday 30 November 2009, Russell King - ARM Linux wrote:
> On Mon, Nov 30, 2009 at 02:47:02PM +0000, Alan Cox wrote:
> > SHARED|DISABLED ought to WARN_ON() and if that doesn't motivate people
> > then return -EINVAL.
>
> That is an impossibility. There is hardware out there (AT91) where
> the timer interrupt is shared with other peripherals, and you end
> up with a mixture of irqs-disabled and irqs-enabled handlers sharing
> the same interrupt.
For the record: AT91 isn't restricted to the system timers hooked
up on irq 0 ... there's also drivers/clocksource/tcb_clksrc.c (not
at the same hardware priority).
But to concur, this is indeed messy. Both the system timer and
the serial console generally share the same IRQ; both are very
timing-sensitive. I've seen console character dropouts after
tweaking timer IRQ handling. And I've never convinced myself
that Linux handles the hardware IRQ priority on those chips as
well as it could.
> My point is that if we outlaw irqs-disabled shared interrupts, it puts
> Atmel AT91 support into immediate difficulties.
ISTR that those TCB modules don't share IRQs with other peripherals.
Also, that Linux doesn't use them for much else. I've yet to see a
three-phase motor driver using the TCB's PWM capabilities, for example.
- Dave
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