From: Alexandru Elisei <alexandru.elisei@xxxxxxx> Writing to the EOIR register before masking the HW mapped timer interrupt can cause taking another timer interrupt immediately after exception return. This doesn't happen all the time, because KVM reevaluates the state of pending HW mapped level sensitive interrupts on each guest exit. If the second interrupt is pending and a guest exit occurs after masking the timer interrupt and before the ERET (which restores PSTATE.I), then KVM removes it. Move the write after the IMASK bit has been set to prevent this from happening. Signed-off-by: Alexandru Elisei <alexandru.elisei@xxxxxxx> Signed-off-by: Andrew Jones <drjones@xxxxxxxxxx> --- arm/timer.c | 7 ++++--- 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) diff --git a/arm/timer.c b/arm/timer.c index 82f891147b35..b6f9dd10162d 100644 --- a/arm/timer.c +++ b/arm/timer.c @@ -157,19 +157,20 @@ static void irq_handler(struct pt_regs *regs) u32 irqstat = gic_read_iar(); u32 irqnr = gic_iar_irqnr(irqstat); - if (irqnr != GICC_INT_SPURIOUS) - gic_write_eoir(irqstat); - if (irqnr == PPI(vtimer_info.irq)) { info = &vtimer_info; } else if (irqnr == PPI(ptimer_info.irq)) { info = &ptimer_info; } else { + if (irqnr != GICC_INT_SPURIOUS) + gic_write_eoir(irqstat); report_info("Unexpected interrupt: %d\n", irqnr); return; } info->write_ctl(ARCH_TIMER_CTL_IMASK | ARCH_TIMER_CTL_ENABLE); + gic_write_eoir(irqstat); + info->irq_received = true; } -- 2.25.1