ARM Cortex-A7 support in Linux

Marc Zyngier marc.zyngier at arm.com
Fri May 17 07:42:11 EDT 2013


On 17/05/13 12:36, Will Deacon wrote:
> On Fri, May 17, 2013 at 11:55:00AM +0100, Russell King - ARM Linux wrote:
>> On Fri, May 17, 2013 at 12:47:45PM +0200, Marc Zyngier wrote:
>>> It depends which feature you're after. Linux supports the GIC
>>> virtualization extensions with KVM, for example. But we don't make any use
>>> of other things like priorities, split deactivation/priority drop...
>>
>> Not that we could make use of priorities anymore as all interrupt handlers
>> are now run with IRQs disabled; an IRQ handler can't be interrupted by a
>> higher priority IRQ coming in.
>>
>> Part of the solution to that is to go back to the original philosophy of
>> IRQ handling in Linux - do the least possible amount of work in the IRQ
>> and move the heavier stuff off into soft-IRQ context.  Unfortunately,
>> many drivers are no longer written like that, and just do a great amount
>> of time consuming work in their IRQ handler.
> 
> We could also consider using interrupt priorities to have a fake NMI (I
> think PPC does this for some cores), which is useful for profiling and
> watchdogs, especially now that FIQ is often stolen by the secure world.
> 
> I remember dismissing this in the past because I thought it would increase
> our GIC distributor accesses, but I don't remember why.

I think it would rather require to write to the interrupt priority mask
register (GIC_PMR) in the CPU interface. The cost is probably the same,
actually (probably quite high, given how often we enable/disable
interrupts).

	M.
-- 
Jazz is not dead. It just smells funny...




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