On Mon, 25 Nov 2019 10:55:01 +0000 Marc Zyngier <maz@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: Hi Marc, dug this out of my inbox, sorry for warming this up. > On 2019-11-22 18:51, Andre Przywara wrote: > > Hi Marc, > > > > this is still a bit rough, and only briefly tested, but I wanted to > > hear your opinion on the general approach (using a second list in > > addition to the ap_list). Some ugly bits come from the fact that the > > two lists are not that different, so we have to consider both of them > > at times. This is what I wanted to avoid with just one list that gets > > filtered on the fly. > > Or I am just stupid and don't see how it can be done properly ;-) > > I don't know about that, but I think there is a better way. > > You have essentially two sets of pending interrupts: > > 1) those that are enabled and group-enabled, that end up in the AP list > 2) those that are either disabled and/or group-disabled > > Today, (2) are not on any list. For a reason: because we don't really care about them. And so far they would only become interesting on an *individual* interrupt base, and our VGIC routines can deal very well with that. > What I'm suggesting is that we create > a list for these interrupts that cannot be forwarded. So the problem with that is that a list would need a list lock, and this is where things get hairy: - Either we introduce a separate disabled_list lock, adding to the nightmare of lock hierarchy we already have. I don't think that's really justifiable just because of group0 IRQs. - We piggy-back on an existing lock, like the ap_list_lock. The problem with that is that vgic_queue_irq_unlock takes and drops that lock, so we can't just iterate over this disabled list while holding that lock, and feed each IRQ to vgic_queue_irq_unlock() easily. One solution I was thinking about was something like: while (!list_empty(disabled_list)) { spin_lock(ap_list_lock); irq = remove_first_entry(disabled_list); spin_unlock(ap_list_lock); lock_irq(irq); /* re-check? */ vgic_queue_irq_unlock(irq); } Does that sound feasible? It's not really efficient nor nice, but I am not sure we care so much about this since we assume group enablement is rather rare. Cheers, Andre > Then enabling an interrupt or a group is a matter of moving pending > interrupts from one list to another. And I think most of the logic > can be hidden in vgic_queue_irq_unlock(). > > M.