[PATCH v2 1/6] idle: move the cpuidle entry point to the generic idle loop
Daniel Lezcano
daniel.lezcano at linaro.org
Thu Jan 30 08:44:00 EST 2014
On 01/30/2014 06:28 AM, Nicolas Pitre wrote:
> On Thu, 30 Jan 2014, Preeti U Murthy wrote:
>
>> Hi Nicolas,
>>
>> On 01/30/2014 02:01 AM, Nicolas Pitre wrote:
>>> On Wed, 29 Jan 2014, Nicolas Pitre wrote:
>>>
>>>> In order to integrate cpuidle with the scheduler, we must have a better
>>>> proximity in the core code with what cpuidle is doing and not delegate
>>>> such interaction to arch code.
>>>>
>>>> Architectures implementing arch_cpu_idle() should simply enter
>>>> a cheap idle mode in the absence of a proper cpuidle driver.
>>>>
>>>> Signed-off-by: Nicolas Pitre <nico at linaro.org>
>>>> Acked-by: Daniel Lezcano <daniel.lezcano at linaro.org>
>>>
>>> As mentioned in my reply to Olof's comment on patch #5/6, here's a new
>>> version of this patch adding the safety local_irq_enable() to the core
>>> code.
>>>
>>> ----- >8
>>>
>>> From: Nicolas Pitre <nicolas.pitre at linaro.org>
>>> Subject: idle: move the cpuidle entry point to the generic idle loop
>>>
>>> In order to integrate cpuidle with the scheduler, we must have a better
>>> proximity in the core code with what cpuidle is doing and not delegate
>>> such interaction to arch code.
>>>
>>> Architectures implementing arch_cpu_idle() should simply enter
>>> a cheap idle mode in the absence of a proper cpuidle driver.
>>>
>>> In both cases i.e. whether it is a cpuidle driver or the default
>>> arch_cpu_idle(), the calling convention expects IRQs to be disabled
>>> on entry and enabled on exit. There is a warning in place already but
>>> let's add a forced IRQ enable here as well. This will allow for
>>> removing the forced IRQ enable some implementations do locally and
>>
>> Why would this patch allow for removing the forced IRQ enable that are
>> being done on some archs in arch_cpu_idle()? Isn't this patch expecting
>> the default arch_cpu_idle() to have re-enabled the interrupts after
>> exiting from the default idle state? Its supposed to only catch faulty
>> cpuidle drivers that haven't enabled IRQs on exit from idle state but
>> are expected to have done so, isn't it?
>
> Exact. However x86 currently does this:
>
> if (cpuidle_idle_call())
> x86_idle();
> else
> local_irq_enable();
>
> So whenever cpuidle_idle_call() is successful then IRQs are
> unconditionally enabled whether or not the underlying cpuidle driver has
> properly done it or not. And the reason is that some of the x86 cpuidle
> do fail to enable IRQs before returning.
>
> So the idea is to get rid of this unconditional IRQ enabling and let the
> core issue a warning instead (as well as enabling IRQs to allow the
> system to run).
But what I don't get with your comment is the local_irq_enable is done
from the cpuidle common framework in 'cpuidle_enter_state' it is not
done from the arch specific backend cpuidle driver.
So the code above could be:
if (cpuidle_idle_call())
x86_idle();
without the else section, this local_irq_enable is pointless. Or may be
I missed something ?
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