[RFC PATCH v2 1/3] PCI: rockchip: Add support for pcie wake irq

jeffy jeffy.chen at rock-chips.com
Fri Aug 18 10:47:03 PDT 2017


Hi Brian,

On 08/19/2017 01:01 AM, Brian Norris wrote:
> Did you test that this works out correctly as a level-triggered
> interrupt? IIUC, the dummy handler won't mask the interrupt, so it might
> keep firing. See:
>
> static irqreturn_t handle_threaded_wake_irq(int irq, void *_wirq)
> {
>          struct wake_irq *wirq = _wirq;
>          int res;
>
>          /* Maybe abort suspend? */
>          if (irqd_is_wakeup_set(irq_get_irq_data(irq))) {
>                  pm_wakeup_event(wirq->dev, 0);
>
>                  return IRQ_HANDLED; <--- We can return here, with the trigger still asserted
>          }
> ...
>
> This could cause some kind of an IRQ storm, including a lockup or
> significant slowdown, I think.

hmmm, right, but as i replied at cros partner issue, this irq handle 
might not be called actually...

in my test on cros 4.4 kernel, it would break by irq_may_run(returning 
false):
static bool irq_may_run(struct irq_desc *desc)
{
...
         /*
          * If the interrupt is an armed wakeup source, mark it pending
          * and suspended, disable it and notify the pm core about the
          * event.
          */
         if (irq_pm_check_wakeup(desc))
                 return false;


bool irq_pm_check_wakeup(struct irq_desc *desc)
{
         if (irqd_is_wakeup_armed(&desc->irq_data)) {
                 irqd_clear(&desc->irq_data, IRQD_WAKEUP_ARMED);
                 desc->istate |= IRQS_SUSPENDED | IRQS_PENDING;
                 desc->depth++;
                 irq_disable(desc); <--- disabled here
                 pm_system_irq_wakeup(irq_desc_get_irq(desc));
                 return true;



and for irqd_is_wakeup_armed:

static bool suspend_device_irq(struct irq_desc *desc)
{
...
         if (irqd_is_wakeup_set(&desc->irq_data)) {
                 irqd_set(&desc->irq_data, IRQD_WAKEUP_ARMED); <-- set 
irqd_is_wakeup_armed here


void dpm_noirq_begin(void)
{
         cpuidle_pause();
         device_wakeup_arm_wake_irqs();
         suspend_device_irqs();


so unless we get an irq between device_wakeup_arm_wake_irqs and 
suspend_device_irq, the irq_pm_check_wakeup would not let us get to 
handle_threaded_wake_irq...


>
> BTW, in another context, Tony suggested we might need to fix up the IRQ flags
> like this:
>
> int dev_pm_set_dedicated_wake_irq(struct device *dev, int irq)
> {
> ...
>          err = request_threaded_irq(irq, NULL, handle_threaded_wake_irq,
> -                                  IRQF_ONESHOT, dev_name(dev), wirq);
> +                                  IRQF_ONESHOT | irq_get_trigger_type(irq), dev_name(dev), wirq);
>
> But IIUC, that's not actually necessary, because __setup_irq()
> automatically configures the trigger type if the driver didn't request
> one explicitly.

actually this would not work...irq_get_trigger_type would return zero 
due to a bug which we have a patch for it already:

9908207 New          [tip:irq/urgent] genirq: Restore trigger settings 
in irq_modify_status()


BTW, using dev_name for the name of this wake irq seems not very 
convenient...maybe add a ":wake" suffix?
>
> Brian





More information about the linux-arm-kernel mailing list