[PATCH 2/6] brcmfmac: Handling the interrupt in ISR directly for non-OOB
Franky Lin
frankyl at broadcom.com
Tue Aug 28 12:45:39 EDT 2012
On 08/28/2012 04:13 AM, Wei Ni wrote:
> On Tue, 2012-08-28 at 04:06 +0800, Stephen Warren wrote:
>> On 08/27/2012 09:24 AM, Arend van Spriel wrote:
>>> On 08/27/2012 12:25 PM, Wei Ni wrote:
>>>> In case of inband interrupts, if we handle the interrupt in dpc thread,
>>>> two level of thread switching takes place to process wifi interrupts.
>>>> One in SDHCI driver and the other in Wifi driver. This may cause the
>>>> system
>>>> instability.
>>>
>>> Looking into the sdhci/mmc code indeed shows that the brcmfmac irq
>>> handler is not called in true IRQ context. So the dpc thread may add
>>> unnecessary complexity, but to me there is not indication that there is
>>> a stability issue.
>
> The brcmfmac irq handler is called in the thread sdio_irq_thread(), this
> thread indeed is driven by the sdhci irq, although it's not the true IRQ
> context. If the brcmfmac doesn't clear the IRQ condition ASAP, the
> sdio_irq_thread will be triggered again and again, and in this condition
> it's too difficult to run the brcmfmac dpc thread, more and more
> interrupt can't be handled.
>
>>>
>>>> Because the SDHCI calls sdio_irq_thread() to handle the irq, this
>>>> thread locks
>>>> mmc host and calls wifi handler. It expects WiFi handler to be quick and
>>>> enables sdio interrupt from card at end. If wifi handler defers this
>>>> work for
>>>> a different thread, sdio_irq_thread() will be stuck on next wifi
>>>> interrupt
>>>> since mmc lock is not freed.
>>>
>>> Not sure if I can follow this explanation. The isr is called with host
>>> claimed (by sdio_irq_thread) and all it does is at a linked list member
>>> and signal the dpc thread. After doing this the host is released.
>>
>> Is the issue something like the ISR handler or first level of threading
>> does:
>>
>> * Trigger DPC
>> * Re-enable interrupt
>>
>> So that the interrupt then fires again before the triggered DPC can run
>> to handle/clear it, thus causing an interrupt storm?
>>
>> Whereas handling the interrupt directly prevents this race condition?
>
> Above is my understanding.
>
Hi Wei,
I understand the issue here and totally agree that we should treat
in-band and out-band interrupts differently. But my concern is that the
behavior of releasing the host before calling brcmf_sdbrcm_isr and grab
it after is likely error prone. Also we are restructuring the dpc
routine internally and it's almost done. I will find a better solution
for in-band interrupt and get it the queue as well. So I suggest
dropping this patch.
Thanks,
Franky
More information about the linux-arm-kernel
mailing list