[PATCH v3 02/13] genirq: Define ack_irq() and eoi_irq() helpers

Valentin Schneider valentin.schneider at arm.com
Thu Aug 12 06:36:11 PDT 2021


On 12/08/21 08:49, Marc Zyngier wrote:
> On Tue, 29 Jun 2021 13:49:59 +0100,
> Valentin Schneider <valentin.schneider at arm.com> wrote:
>> +void eoi_irq(struct irq_desc *desc)
>> +{
>> +	desc->irq_data.chip->irq_eoi(&desc->irq_data);
>> +
>> +	if (desc->irq_data.chip->flags & IRQCHIP_AUTOMASKS_FLOW)
>> +		irq_state_clr_flow_masked(desc);
>
> I just realised that this has a good chance to result in a mess with
> KVM, and specially the way we let the vGIC deactivate an interrupt
> directly from the guest, without any SW intervention (the magic HW bit
> in the LRs).
>

I didn't think to consider those. It can't ever be simple, can it...

> With this, interrupts routed to a guest (such as the timers) will
> always have the IRQD_IRQ_FLOW_MASKED flag set, which will never be
> cleared.
>
> I wonder whether this have a chance to interact badly with
> mask/unmask, or with the rest of the flow...
>

Isn't it the other way around? That is, eoi_irq() will clear
IRQD_IRQ_FLOW_MASKED regardless of what happens within chip->irq_eoi(),
so we would end up with !IRQD_IRQ_FLOW_MASKED even if the (physical) IRQ
remains Active (irqd_is_forwarded_to_vcpu() case).

This does not entirely match reality (if the IRQ is still Active then it is
still "flow-masked"), but AFAICT this doesn't impact our handling of
forwarded IRQs: IRQD_IRQ_FLOW_MASKED is only really relevant from ack_irq()
to eoi_irq(), and deactivation-from-the-guest (propagated via LR.HW=1)
happens after that.



More information about the linux-arm-kernel mailing list