[RFC PATCH 1/4] DRIVERS: IRQCHIP: Add crossbar irqchip driver
Santosh Shilimkar
santosh.shilimkar at ti.com
Thu Sep 12 18:51:38 EDT 2013
On Thursday 12 September 2013 06:22 PM, Thomas Gleixner wrote:
> On Thu, 12 Sep 2013, Santosh Shilimkar wrote:
>> Specifically for the IRQ case addressed here, the cross-bar IP
>> sits between the interrupt controller and peripheral interrupts.
>>
>> CPU <-- GIC <----- CROSSBAR <----- PERIPHERAL IRQs
>>
>> Just to expand it better, cross-bar input IRQ lines are more than
>> what a GIC IRQ controller can support.
>> e.q Total 250 peripheral IRQ lines out of which GIC support
>> only 160 IRQ lines.
>>
>> So the idea here is to dynamically map the IRQ lines at
>> cross-bar level to pick based on request_irq() so that one
>> can optimize the use of limited IRQ lines at the GIC level.
>> Strictly speaking the need is just establish the IRQ
>> connection from peripheral to GIC and thats achieved
>> at the request_irq() level.
>>
>> Earlier approach was to statically build this connections
>> using the DT information in a separate driver probe but
>> it had limitations of fixing the IRQ map and taking away
>> flexibility what this IP provide.
>>
>> Hope this gives better picture to you behind the patch
>> series.
>
> Yes. I halfways understand what you are trying to achieve.
>
> So CROSSBAR is a routing block between the peripheral and the GIC in
> order to expand the number of possible interrupts.
>
> Now the real question is, how that expansion mechanism is supposed to
> work. There are two possible scenarios:
>
> 1) Expand the number of handled interrupts beyond the GIC capacity:
>
> That requires a mechanism in CROSSBAR to map several CROSSBAR
> interrupts to a particular GIC interrupt and provide a demux
> mechanism to invoke the shared handlers.
>
This is not possible in hardware and not supported. Hardware has
no notion of muxing multiple IRQ's to generate 1 IRQ or ack etc
functionality. Its a simple MUX to tie knots between input and output
wires.
> 2) Provide a mapping mechanism between possibly 250 interrupt numbers
> and a limitation of a total 160 active interrupts by the underlying
> GIC.
>
This is the need and problem we are trying to solve.
Regards,
Santosh
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