[WARNING: A/V UNSCANNABLE][Merge tag 'media/v4.11-1' of git] ff58d005cd: BUG: unable to handle kernel NULL pointer dereference at 0000039c
Thomas Gleixner
tglx at linutronix.de
Mon Feb 27 02:09:41 PST 2017
On Sat, 25 Feb 2017, Linus Torvalds wrote:
> On Sat, Feb 25, 2017 at 1:07 AM, Ingo Molnar <mingo at kernel.org> wrote:
> >
> > So, should we revert the hw-retrigger change:
> >
> > a9b4f08770b4 x86/ioapic: Restore IO-APIC irq_chip retrigger callback
> >
> > ... until we managed to fix CONFIG_DEBUG_SHIRQ=y? If you'd like to revert it
> > upstream straight away:
> >
> > Acked-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo at kernel.org>
>
> So I'm in no huge hurry to revert that commit as long as we're still
> in the merge window or early -rc's.
>
> From a debug standpoint, the spurious early interrupts are fine, and
> hopefully will help us find more broken drivers.
>
> It's just that I'd like to revert it before the actual 4.11 release,
> unless we can find a better solution.
>
> Because it really seems like the interrupt re-trigger is entirely
> bogus. It's not an _actual_ "re-trigger the interrupt that may have
> gotten lost", it's some code that ends up triggering it for no good
> reason.
>
> So I'd actually hope that we could figure out why IRQS_PENDING got
> set, and perhaps fix the underlying cause?
>
> There are several things that set IRQS_PENDING, ranging from "try to
> test mis-routed interrupts while irqd was working", to "prepare for
> suspend losing the irq for us", to "irq auto-probing uses it on
> unassigned probable irqs".
>
> The *actual* reason to re-send, namely getting a nested irq that we
> had to drop because we got a second one while still handling the first
> (or because it was disabled), is just one case.
>
> Personally, I'd suspect some left-over state from auto-probing earlier
> in the boot, but I don't know. Could we fix that underlying issue?
I'm on it.
Thanks,
tglx
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