On 08/11/16 17:03, Peter Rosin wrote: > On 2016-11-08 16:59, Thomas Gleixner wrote: >> On Tue, 8 Nov 2016, Peter Rosin wrote: >>> +/* >>> + * The envelope_detector_comp_latch function works together with the compare >>> + * interrupt service routine below (envelope_detector_comp_isr) as a latch >>> + * (one-bit memory) for if the interrupt has triggered since last calling >>> + * this function. >>> + * The ..._comp_isr function disables the interrupt so that the cpu does not >>> + * need to service a possible interrupt flood from the comparator when no-one >>> + * cares anyway, and this ..._comp_latch function reenables them again if >>> + * needed. >>> + */ >>> +static int envelope_detector_comp_latch(struct envelope *env) >>> +{ >>> + int comp; >>> + >>> + spin_lock_irq(&env->comp_lock); >>> + comp = env->comp; >>> + env->comp = 0; >>> + spin_unlock_irq(&env->comp_lock); >>> + >>> + if (!comp) >>> + return 0; >>> + >>> + /* >>> + * The irq was disabled, and is reenabled just now. >>> + * But there might have been a pending irq that >>> + * happened while the irq was disabled that fires >>> + * just as the irq is reenabled. That is not what >>> + * is desired. >>> + */ >>> + enable_irq(env->comp_irq); >>> + >>> + /* So, synchronize this possibly pending irq... */ >>> + synchronize_irq(env->comp_irq); >>> + >>> + /* ...and redo the whole dance. */ >>> + spin_lock_irq(&env->comp_lock); >>> + comp = env->comp; >>> + env->comp = 0; >>> + spin_unlock_irq(&env->comp_lock); >>> + >>> + if (comp) >>> + enable_irq(env->comp_irq); >> >> So you need that whole dance including the delayed work because you cannot >> call iio_write_channel_raw() from hard interrupt context, right? > > It's not the "cannot call from hard irq context" that made me do that, it's... > >> So you might just register a threaded interrupt handler, which should make >> this whole thing way simpler. >> >> devm_request_threaded_irq(dev, irq, NULL, your_isr, IRQF_ONESHOT, ...); >> >> The core will mask the interrupt line until the threaded handler is >> finished. The threaded handler is invoked with preemption enabled, so you >> can sleep there as long as you want. So you can do everything in your >> handler and the above dance is just not required. > > ...that I couldn't work out how to reenable a oneshot irq once it had fired, > short of freeing the irq and requesting it again. That seemed entirely > bogus, the driver shouldn't risk losing a resource like that so I don't know > what I didn't see? Or maybe it was that I had a hard time resolving the race > between the irq and the timeout in a nice way. I honestly don't remember > why exactly I abandoned oneshot irqs, but this enable/sync/enable dance > was much nicer than what I came up with for the oneshot irq solution I > originally worked on. > > Or maybe I had problems with the possibly pending irq also when using a > oneshot irq, but didn't realize it? That was something I discovered quite > late in the process, some time after moving away from oneshot irqs. Are > pending irqs cleared when requesting (or reenabling, however that is done) > a oneshot irq? > > Anyway, I do not want the interrupt to be serviced when no one is interested, > since I'm afraid that nasty input might generate a flood of interrupts that > might disturb other things that the cpu is doing. Which means that I need > to enable/disable the interrupt as needed. > > However, what *I* thought Jonathan wanted input on was the part where the > interrupt edge/level is flipped when requesting "inverted" signals in > envelope_store_invert(). That could perhaps be seen as unorthodox and in > need of more eyes? Nope, as far as I can recall it was precisely this dance that was I wanted Thomas to comment on :) The inverted bit isn't as novel as this ;) Anyhow, thread ended up with a good conclusion so I'm happy. Jonathan > > Cheers, > Peter > -- > To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-iio" in > the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html > -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-iio" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html