[v9,5/7] PCI: mediatek-gen3: Add MSI support

Marc Zyngier maz at kernel.org
Sat Mar 27 19:44:30 GMT 2021


On Sat, 27 Mar 2021 19:28:37 +0000,
Pali Rohár <pali at kernel.org> wrote:
> 
> On Wednesday 24 March 2021 11:05:08 Jianjun Wang wrote:
> > +static void mtk_pcie_msi_handler(struct mtk_pcie_port *port, int set_idx)
> > +{
> > +	struct mtk_msi_set *msi_set = &port->msi_sets[set_idx];
> > +	unsigned long msi_enable, msi_status;
> > +	unsigned int virq;
> > +	irq_hw_number_t bit, hwirq;
> > +
> > +	msi_enable = readl_relaxed(msi_set->base + PCIE_MSI_SET_ENABLE_OFFSET);
> > +
> > +	do {
> > +		msi_status = readl_relaxed(msi_set->base +
> > +					   PCIE_MSI_SET_STATUS_OFFSET);
> > +		msi_status &= msi_enable;
> > +		if (!msi_status)
> > +			break;
> > +
> > +		for_each_set_bit(bit, &msi_status, PCIE_MSI_IRQS_PER_SET) {
> > +			hwirq = bit + set_idx * PCIE_MSI_IRQS_PER_SET;
> > +			virq = irq_find_mapping(port->msi_bottom_domain, hwirq);
> > +			generic_handle_irq(virq);
> > +		}
> > +	} while (true);
> 
> Hello!
> 
> Just a question, cannot this while-loop cause block of processing other
> interrupts?

This is a level interrupt. You don't have much choice but to handle it
immediately, although an alternative would be to mask it and deal with
it in a thread. And since Linux doesn't deal with interrupt priority,
a screaming interrupt is never a good thing.

> I have done tests with different HW (aardvark) but with same while(true)
> loop logic. One XHCI PCIe controller was sending MSI interrupts too fast
> and interrupt handler with this while(true) logic was in infinite loop.
> During one IRQ it was calling infinite many times generic_handle_irq()
> as HW was feeding new and new MSI hwirq into status register.

Define "too fast". If something in the system is able to program the
XHCI device in such a way that it causes a screaming interrupt, that's
the place to look for problems, and probably not in the interrupt
handling itself, which does what it is supposed to do.

> But this is different HW, so it can have different behavior and does not
> have to cause above issue.
> 
> I have just spotted same code pattern for processing MSI interrupts...

This is a common pattern that you will find in pretty much any
interrupt handling/demuxing, and is done this way when the cost of
taking the exception is high compared to that of handling it.

Which is pretty much any of the badly designed, level-driving,
DW-inspired, sorry excuse for MSI implementations that are popular on
low-end ARM SoCs.

Thanks,

	M.

-- 
Without deviation from the norm, progress is not possible.



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