Daniel,
I've been a bit swamped this cycle and haven't kept as close an eye on this as I should have. :( fwiw, it's looking really good. I have one question below:
On Wed, Nov 26, 2014 at 04:23:28PM +0000, Daniel Thompson wrote:
Currently it is not possible to exploit FIQ for systems with a GIC, even if the systems are otherwise capable of it. This patch makes it possible for IPIs to be delivered using FIQ.
To do so it modifies the register state so that normal interrupts are placed in group 1 and specific IPIs are placed into group 0. It also configures the controller to raise group 0 interrupts using the FIQ signal. It provides a means for architecture code to define which IPIs shall use FIQ and to acknowledge any IPIs that are raised.
All GIC hardware except GICv1-without-TrustZone support provides a means to group exceptions into group 0 and group 1 but the hardware functionality is unavailable to the kernel when a secure monitor is present because access to the grouping registers are prohibited outside "secure world". However when grouping is not available (or in the case of early GICv1 implementations is very hard to configure) the code to change groups does not deploy and all IPIs will be raised via IRQ.
It has been tested and shown working on two systems capable of supporting grouping (Freescale i.MX6 and STiH416). It has also been tested for boot regressions on two systems that do not support grouping (vexpress-a9 and Qualcomm Snapdragon 600).
Signed-off-by: Daniel Thompson daniel.thompson@linaro.org Cc: Thomas Gleixner tglx@linutronix.de Cc: Jason Cooper jason@lakedaemon.net Cc: Russell King linux@arm.linux.org.uk Cc: Marc Zyngier marc.zyngier@arm.com Tested-by: Jon Medhurst tixy@linaro.org
arch/arm/kernel/traps.c | 5 +- drivers/irqchip/irq-gic.c | 155 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--- include/linux/irqchip/arm-gic.h | 8 +++ 3 files changed, 158 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-)
...
diff --git a/drivers/irqchip/irq-gic.c b/drivers/irqchip/irq-gic.c index 5d72823bc5e9..978e5e48d5c1 100644 --- a/drivers/irqchip/irq-gic.c +++ b/drivers/irqchip/irq-gic.c
...
+/*
- Test which group an interrupt belongs to.
- Returns 0 if the controller does not support grouping.
- */
+static int gic_get_group_irq(void __iomem *base, unsigned int hwirq) +{
- unsigned int grp_reg = hwirq / 32 * 4;
- u32 grp_val;
- grp_val = readl_relaxed(base + GIC_DIST_IGROUP + grp_reg);
- return (grp_val >> (hwirq % 32)) & 1;
+}
...
@@ -669,7 +802,11 @@ static void gic_raise_softirq(const struct cpumask *mask, unsigned int irq) dmb(ishst); /* this always happens on GIC0 */
- writel_relaxed(map << 16 | irq, gic_data_dist_base(&gic_data[0]) + GIC_DIST_SOFTINT);
- softint = map << 16 | irq;
- if (gic_get_group_irq(gic_data_dist_base(&gic_data[0]), irq))
softint |= 0x8000;
- writel_relaxed(softint,
gic_data_dist_base(&gic_data[0]) + GIC_DIST_SOFTINT);
bl_migration_unlock(); }
Is it worth the code complication to optimize this if the controller doesn't support grouping? Maybe set group_enabled at init so the above would become:
softint = map << 16 | irq; if (group_enabled && gic_get_group_irq(gic_data_dist_base(&gic_data[0]), irq)) softint |= 0x8000; writel_relaxed(...);
thx,
Jason.