[RFC PATCH] genirq: Change the non-balanced irq to balance irq when the cpu of the irq bounded off line
Marc Zyngier
marc.zyngier at arm.com
Fri Apr 1 01:30:32 PDT 2016
Hi Ma Jun,
On 01/04/16 04:28, MaJun wrote:
> From: Ma Jun <majun258 at huawei.com>
>
> When the CPU of a non-balanced irq bounded is off line, the irq will be migrated to other CPUs,
> usually the first cpu on-line.
>
> We can suppose the situation if a system has more than one non-balanced irq.
> At extreme case, these irqs will be migrated to the same CPU and will cause the
> CPU run with high irq pressure, even make the system die.
It would take a hell of lot of interrupts (and a very badly designed
system) for that system to collapse under the interrupt load. Whatever
people tend to think, interrupts are a very rare event.
Any moderately ancient CPU can take several hundred of thousand
interrupts per second, and you still barely notice it (try any embedded
platform with a bunch of MMC controllers...).
Now, let's get to the actual question:
> So, I think maybe we need to change the non-balanced irq to a irq can be
> balanced to avoid the problem descried above.
But what makes you think that you can safely clear that flag? If it has
been excluding from balancing, that's surely for a good reason, and the
device driver that requested this probably doesn't expect the interrupt
affinity to change, other than by the effect of CPU hotplug itself.
So if you're seeing a problem with an interrupt not being balanced,
please first investigate *why* the driver asked for it the first place.
But to the best of my understanding, this patch doesn't solve anything.
Thanks,
N,
--
Jazz is not dead. It just smells funny...
More information about the linux-arm-kernel
mailing list