On Wed, 13 Feb 2019, Keith Busch wrote: > On Wed, Feb 13, 2019 at 09:56:36PM +0100, Thomas Gleixner wrote: > > On Wed, 13 Feb 2019, Bjorn Helgaas wrote: > > > On Wed, Feb 13, 2019 at 06:50:37PM +0800, Ming Lei wrote: > > > > We have to ask driver to re-caculate set vectors after the whole IRQ > > > > vectors are allocated later, and the result needs to be stored in 'affd'. > > > > Also both the two interfaces are core APIs, which should be trusted. > > > > > > s/re-caculate/recalculate/ > > > s/stored in 'affd'/stored in '*affd'/ > > > s/both the two/both/ > > > > > > This is a little confusing because you're talking about both "IRQ > > > vectors" and these other "set vectors", which I think are different > > > things. I assume the "set vectors" are cpumasks showing the affinity > > > of the IRQ vectors with some CPUs? > > > > I think we should drop the whole vector wording completely. > > > > The driver does not care about vectors, it only cares about a block of > > interrupt numbers. These numbers are kernel managed and the interrupts just > > happen to have a CPU vector assigned at some point. Depending on the CPU > > architecture the underlying mechanism might not even be named vector. > > Perhaps longer term we could move affinity mask creation from the irq > subsystem into a more generic library. Interrupts aren't the only > resource that want to spread across CPUs. For example, blk-mq has it's > own implementation to for polled queues, so I think a non-irq specific > implementation would be a nice addition to the kernel lib. Agreed. There is nothing interrupt specific in that code aside of some name choices. Btw, while I have your attention. There popped up an issue recently related to that affinity logic. The current implementation fails when: /* * If there aren't any vectors left after applying the pre/post * vectors don't bother with assigning affinity. */ if (nvecs == affd->pre_vectors + affd->post_vectors) return NULL; Now the discussion arised, that in that case the affinity sets are not allocated and filled in for the pre/post vectors, but somehow the underlying device still works and later on triggers the warning in the blk-mq code because the MSI entries do not have affinity information attached. Sure, we could make that work, but there are several issues: 1) irq_create_affinity_masks() has another reason to return NULL: memory allocation fails. 2) Does it make sense at all. Right now the PCI allocator ignores the NULL return and proceeds without setting any affinities. As a consequence nothing is managed and everything happens to work. But that happens to work is more by chance than by design and the warning is bogus if this is an expected mode of operation. We should address these points in some way. Thanks, tglx