[PATCH v2 0/5] PCI: dwc: improve msi handling

Marc Zyngier maz at kernel.org
Tue Sep 29 14:12:57 EDT 2020


On 2020-09-29 19:02, Jon Hunter wrote:
> On 29/09/2020 18:25, Marc Zyngier wrote:
>> On 2020-09-29 14:22, Jon Hunter wrote:
>>> Hi Jisheng,
>>> 
>>> On 29/09/2020 11:48, Jisheng Zhang wrote:
>>>> Hi Jon,
>>>> 
>>>> On Fri, 25 Sep 2020 09:53:45 +0100 Jon Hunter wrote:
>>>> 
>>>>> 
>>>>> On 24/09/2020 12:05, Jisheng Zhang wrote:
>>>>>> Improve the msi code:
>>>>>> 1. Add proper error handling.
>>>>>> 2. Move dw_pcie_msi_init() from each users to designware host to 
>>>>>> solve
>>>>>> msi page leakage in resume path.
>>>>> 
>>>>> Apologies if this is slightly off topic, but I have been meaning to 
>>>>> ask
>>>>> about MSIs and PCI. On Tegra194 which uses the DWC PCI driver,
>>>>> whenever we
>>>>> hotplug CPUs we see the following warnings ...
>>>>> 
>>>>>  [      79.068351] WARNING KERN IRQ70: set affinity failed(-22).
>>>>>  [      79.068362] WARNING KERN IRQ71: set affinity failed(-22).
>>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> I tried to reproduce this issue on Synaptics SoC, but can't 
>>>> reproduce
>>>> it.
>>>> Per my understanding of the code in kernel/irq/cpuhotplug.c, this
>>>> warning
>>>> happened when we migrate irqs away from the offline cpu, this 
>>>> implicitly
>>>> implies that before this point the irq has bind to the offline cpu,
>>>> but how
>>>> could this happen given current dw_pci_msi_set_affinity() 
>>>> implementation
>>>> always return -EINVAL
>>> 
>>> By default the smp_affinity should be set so that all CPUs can be
>>> interrupted ...
>>> 
>>> $ cat /proc/irq/70/smp_affinity
>>> 0xff
>>> 
>>> In my case there are 8 CPUs and so 0xff implies that the interrupt 
>>> can
>>> be triggered on any of the 8 CPUs.
>>> 
>>> Do you see the set_affinity callback being called for the DWC irqchip 
>>> in
>>> migrate_one_irq()?
>> 
>> The problem is common to all MSI implementations that end up muxing
>> all the end-point MSIs into a single interrupt. With these systems,
>> you cannot set the affinity of individual MSIs (they don't target a
>> CPU, they target another interrupt... braindead). Only the mux
>> interrupt can have its affinity changed.
>> 
>> So returning -EINVAL is the right thing to do.
> 
> Right, so if that is the case, then surely there should be some way to
> avoid these warnings because they are not relevant?

I don't think there is a way to do this, because the core code
doesn't (and cannot) know the exact interrupt topology.

The only alternative would be to change the affinity of the mux
interrupt when a MSI affinity changes, but that tends to break
userspace (irqbalance, for example).

         M.
-- 
Jazz is not dead. It just smells funny...



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