Re: [PATCH 3/6] irqchip: RISC-V Local Interrupt Controller Driver

From: Anup Patel
Date: Wed Jul 25 2018 - 23:38:05 EST


On Wed, Jul 25, 2018 at 4:54 PM, Christoph Hellwig <hch@xxxxxx> wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 25, 2018 at 12:18:39PM +0100, Marc Zyngier wrote:
>> This feels odd. It means that you cannot have the following sequence:
>>
>> local_irq_disable();
>> enable_irq(x); // where x is owned by a remote hart
>>
>> as smp_call_function_single() requires interrupts to be enabled.
>>
>> More fundamentally, why are you trying to make these interrupts look
>> global while they aren't? arm/arm64 have similar restrictions with GICv2
>> and earlier, and treats these interrupts as per-cpu.
>>
>> Given that the drivers that deal with drivers connected to the per-hart
>> irqchip are themselves likely to be aware of the per-cpu aspect, it
>> would make sense to align things (we've been through that same
>> discussion about the clocksource driver a few weeks back).
>
> Right now the only direct consumers are said clocksource, the PLIC
> driver later in this series and the RISC-V arch IPI code. None of them
> is going to do a manual enable_irq, so I guess the remote case of the
> code is simply dead code. I'll take a look at converting them to
> per-cpu. I guess the GICv2 driver is the best template?

Actually, RISCV HLIC and PLIC are very similar to RPi2 and RPi3 SOCs.

On RPi2 and RPi3, we have per-CPU BCM2836 local intc and the global
interrupts are managed using BCM2835 intc. You should certainly have
a look a this drivers because these very simple compared to GICv2 and
GICv3 drivers.

Regards,
Anup