On Monday 02 March 2009, Peter Zijlstra wrote: > On Mon, 2009-03-02 at 14:10 -0800, David Brownell wrote: > > > What's unfortunate is that you prefer not to fix that > > IRQF_DISABLED bug in lockdep, which you co-"maintain". > > When running with lockdep, that bug (a) introduces bugs > > in some drivers and (b) hides bugs in others. You've > > rejected even a minimal warning fix, to help minimize > > the amount of time developers waste on (a) and (b). > > I've come to the conclusion that the only technically sound solution is > to do as I proposed today, utterly eliminate !IRQF_DISABLED handlers. As you announced today. If you truly believe that, then you should at least submit a warning patch for 2.6.29-rc ("driver X isn't setting IRQF_DISABLED, reimplement!") with a Documentation/feature-removal-schedule.txt plan for removing that mechanism. And maybe updating the handling of IRQF_SHARED at the same time... most shared IRQs don't want IRQF_DISABLED. And ... surely more, even just to start phasing out such a longstanding mechanism. (Or more likely, start a real LKML discussion on that specific topic. I suspect it won't complete in time to merge such a patch with any sort of consensus.) > Apparently you had enough time to come up with the creative genirq abuse > of twl4030, I think that with a similar effort you could have > implemented generic threaded irq stuff like proposed by Thomas. Actually, I made time to clean that code up a lot; I didn't come up with that original stuff at all. Why would you think otherwise, after reading the copyrights at the top of twl4030-irq.c ?? And when I was doing that cleanup, the Official Plan was that Thomas' code would be ready for merge into at least the -next tree soon. I don't know about you, but stepping all over his work didn't seem like it would be at all constructive. Having a significant driver be ready to try using it ... seemed like a more productive approach. > > Attacking folk for having to cope with such bugs escalates > > things beyond "unfortunate". If lockdep is "maintained", > > your response should be fixing that lockdep bug. Once > > that's done, all workarounds for that bug can be removed. > > I state there is no lockdep bug in this respect. The bug is trying to > enable interrupts from hardirq context and running code that assumes > hardirq context from task context. Well, I state that you're wrong about those points... Regardless of what either of us states, the truth of the matter is that there are drivers that don't work with CONFIG_LOCKDEP and the *only* reason is the code removed by the (untested) patchlet below: semantics of irqs change when lockdep is enabled. (That is, your characterization above is incorrect.) I call that a lockdep bug; you don't want to accept that label. Are those incorrect lockdep assumptions really so hard to fix? Where do they surface? I scanned lockdep.c briefly, and it talks about "hardirq" in several places. Is it conflating that with "irqs disabled"? The two concepts should be distinct. - Dave --- kernel/irq/manage.c | 6 ------ 1 file changed, 6 deletions(-) --- a/kernel/irq/manage.c +++ b/kernel/irq/manage.c @@ -816,12 +816,6 @@ int request_irq_quickcheck(unsigned int "guaranteed on shared IRQs\n", irq, devname); -#ifdef CONFIG_LOCKDEP - /* - * Lockdep wants atomic interrupt handlers: - */ - irqflags |= IRQF_DISABLED; -#endif /* * Sanity-check: shared interrupts must pass in a real dev-ID, * otherwise we'll have trouble later trying to figure out -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-input" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html