On Sat, 3 Feb 2001, Manfred Spraul wrote:
> I found another workaround:
> 8390.c currently calls
>
> outb_p(ENISR_ALL, e8390_base + EN0_IMR);
> enable_irq(dev->irq);
>
> and locks up after ~ 100 packets flood ping.
>
> If I reorder these calls to
>
> enable_irq(dev->irq);
> outb_p(ENISR_ALL, e8390_base + EN0_IMR);
> (and the correct spin_lock()'s)
>
> the lockup disappears.
Is it possible that asserting the IRQ when the mask is active makes it be
mishandled?
> Playing with the trigger mode is not 100% reliable - I assume it kicks
> the io apic only after several changes of the trigger mode bit. Maciej's
> patch switches that bit twice during every start_tx operation and thus
> doesn't lock up, my patch touches the redirection entry exactly once and
> reliably locks up - even if I change trigger mode, polarity, delivery
> mode and vector during enable_level_irq().
I believe I recover from the lockup -- it's the mask function that
recovers. But another one happens at the unmask time, I suppose.
> Any ideas?
I'll implement the IRQ unlocker I was thinking first. The idea is not to
try to prevent the lockup from happening as it might even be impossible
but to make the unlocker trigger after a lockup happens instead. I should
have an implementation ready soon.
-- + Maciej W. Rozycki, Technical University of Gdansk, Poland + +--------------------------------------------------------------+ + e-mail: macro@ds2.pg.gda.pl, PGP key available +- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Wed Feb 07 2001 - 21:00:21 EST