[PATCH v24 09/11] acpi/arm64: Add memory-mapped timer support in GTDT driver

Mark Rutland mark.rutland at arm.com
Wed Apr 19 11:45:54 EDT 2017


On Wed, Apr 19, 2017 at 04:07:25PM +0100, Mark Rutland wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 18, 2017 at 06:21:07PM +0100, Lorenzo Pieralisi wrote:
> > On Sat, Apr 15, 2017 at 02:40:12AM +0800, fu.wei at linaro.org wrote:
 
> > If yes, why can't it simply be written like this ?
> > 
> > for (; i >= 0; i--, gtdt_frame--) {
> > 	frame = &timer_mem->frame[gtdt_frame->frame_number];
> > 
> > 	/* not sure this check is actually needed */
> > 	if (gtdt_frame->common_flags & ACPI_GTDT_GT_IS_SECURE_TIMER)
> > 		continue;
> > 
> > 	if (frame->phys_irq > 0)
> > 		acpi_unregister_gsi(gtdt_frame->timer_interrupt);
> > 	if (frame->virt_irq > 0)
> > 		acpi_unregister_gsi(gtdt_frame->virtual_timer_interrupt);
> > }
> 
> A reverse loop of this form will work.
> 
> That requires some restructuring, and care to avoid going out of bounds
> instantaneously with the gtdt_frame--, so as to not invoke nasal demons.
> 
> I've attacked this locally, and will send this out after testing. I'll
> drop the new ACPI API patch.

FWIW, I've set this up so the cleanup path is:

do {
        if (gtdt_frame->common_flags & ACPI_GTDT_GT_IS_SECURE_TIMER ||
            gtdt_frame->frame_number >= ARCH_TIMER_MEM_MAX_FRAMES)
                continue;

        frame = &timer_mem->frame[gtdt_frame->frame_number];

        if (frame->phys_irq > 0)
                acpi_unregister_gsi(gtdt_frame->timer_interrupt);
        frame->phys_irq = 0;

        if (frame->virt_irq > 0)
                acpi_unregister_gsi(gtdt_frame->virtual_timer_interrupt);
        frame->virt_irq = 0;
} while (i-- >= 0 && gtdt_frame--);

... the zeroing is to account for duplicate frames, which I now check for in
the probe path (as we do for DT).

Can I take it per your comment on the prior version that with this change I can
take your ack?

I also assume that you're happy for all of the drivers/acpi/arm64/ patches in the
series to go via the clocksource tree?

Thanks,
Mark.



More information about the linux-arm-kernel mailing list