[PATCH v4 04/11] mips: use fallback for random_get_entropy() instead of zero
Maciej W. Rozycki
macro at orcam.me.uk
Sat Apr 23 16:33:44 PDT 2022
On Mon, 18 Apr 2022, Thomas Bogendoerfer wrote:
> > Also the systems I have in mind and that lack a counter in the chipset
> > actually can make use of the buggy CP0 timer, because it's only when CP0
> > timer interrupts are used that the erratum matters, but they use a DS1287
> > RTC interrupt instead unconditionally as the clock event (see the comment
> > at the bottom of arch/mips/dec/time.c). But this has not been factored in
> > with `can_use_mips_counter' (should it just check for `mips_hpt_frequency'
> > being zero perhaps, meaning the timer interrupt not being used?).
> >
> > Thomas, do you happen to know if any of the SGI systems that we support
> > had buggy early R4k chips?
>
> IP22 has probably seen all buggy MIPS chips produced, so yes I even own
> Indy/Indigo2 CPU boards with early R4k chips.
Do they actually use the CP0 timer as a clock event device? Do they have
an alternative high-precision timer available?
In the course of verifying this change I have noticed my DECstation
5000/260, which has a high-precision timer in the chipset available as a
clock source device, does register the CP0 timer as a clock source device
regardless. Upon a closer inspection I have noticed that the CP0 timer
interrupt is non-functional in this machine, which I have then confirmed
as a valid CPU hardware configuration via the TimIntDis/TimerIntDis (the
R4k CPU manual is inconsistent in naming here) boot-mode bit. It allows
IP7 to be used as an external interrupt source instead. I used not to be
aware of the presence of this boot-mode bit.
I find this arrangement odd, because IP7 used to be wired internally as
the FPU interrupt with the 5000/240's CPU module, so it's not usable as an
external interrupt anyway with this system's mainboard.
That means however that this machine (and possibly the 5000/150 as well,
but I'll have to verify that once I get at the KN04 CPU module I have in a
drawer at my other place) can use the CP0 timer as a clock source device
unconditionally. I think this discovery asks for code optimisation, which
I'll try to cook up sometime.
I don't expect the IP22 to have a similar arrangement with the CP0 timer
interrupt given that the CPU was an in-house design at SGI, but who knows?
Do you?
Maciej
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