IIO irq allocation fails on AT91SAM9G45

Maxime Ripard maxime.ripard at free-electrons.com
Fri Mar 2 04:03:12 EST 2012


Le 29/02/2012 21:48, Russell King - ARM Linux a écrit :
> On Wed, Feb 29, 2012 at 08:35:27PM +0000, Jonathan Cameron wrote:
>> On 02/29/2012 02:32 PM, Maxime Ripard wrote:
>>> Hi everyone,
>>>
>>> I'm working on adding the support for the AT91SAM9M10G45-EK board from
>>> Atmel for the at91_adc driver I previously posted, and I encounter some
>>> weird issue here.
>>>
>>> When calling the iio_allocate_trigger
>>> (http://lxr.free-electrons.com/source/drivers/staging/iio/industrialio-trigger.c?a=arm#L421)
>>> from my driver on the G45, it returns ENOMEM, while on the
>>> AT91SAM9G20-EK board, it works perfectly.
>>>
>>> Digging a bit into it, it seems that the call to irq_alloc_descs is
>>> returning the error (the value of CONFIG_IIO_CONSUMERS_PER_TRIGGER is 2
>>> in my configuration, which seems pretty reasonable and is the default
>>> value anyway), which is itself getting that return value from
>>> irq_expand_nr_irqs.
>>>
>>> Here, I'm left confused, I don't know this part of the kernel anymore,
>>> and most importantly, it seems to be pretty-much arch-independant, while
>>> the nature of my issue seems really platform-dependant.
>>>
>>> Do you have any clue of what's going on here ?
>> We ran into this originally on the pxa as well.   My guess is that
>> nr_irqs is not set high enough for that particular board.
>>
>> Looking back I can find some mention of a nasty bit of code that
>> just adds a bit of padding but I can't find it now.
>>
>> Anyhow, you probably have a line somewhere in the kernel log
>> saying something like:
>>
>> [    0.000000] NR_IRQS:288 nr_irqs:296 296
>>
>> NR_IRQS is typically the number of the SoC
>> nr_irqs should be large enough to accomodate those provided by
>> other peripherals.
>>
>> I also have a vague recollection that the problem goes away entirely
>> with sparse irqs?
> 
> Yes, because IRQs will be allocated above the last figure on that
> line, up to IRQ_BITMAP_BITS which happens to be 8192 above NR_IRQS.
> 
> There's an issue though: if your on-SoC IRQ controller is already
> using irq_alloc_descs(), it will fail if you want it to grab IRQs
> below the last figure on that line, because those will have already
> been allocated for you.

Ok, so using either the sparse irqs or changing the definition of
NR_IRQS from 192 to 224 makes the problem go away.

I guess the reason because I was not seeing this issue with the G20 is
because it has less interrupt sources.

Anyway, I'm not sure about the augmenting the NR_IRQS fix. It seems to
work pretty well, but might it have some weird side-effects ?

Should I send a patch for it, or should I find another way to fix this ?

-- 
Maxime Ripard, Free Electrons
Kernel, drivers, real-time and embedded Linux
development, consulting, training and support.
http://free-electrons.com



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