Hi, I see there is a bit of complaining on this original resend temporary patch. But, since it seems to do a good job for some people, here is my proposal to limit the 'range of fire' a little bit. Marcin and Jean-Baptiste: try to test this with 2.6.23-rc2, please. (Unless Ingo or Thomas have other plans with this problem?) Thanks, Jarek P. --------> Subject: [patch] genirq: temporary fix for level-triggered IRQ resend Marcin Slusarz reported a ne2k-pci "hung network interface" regression. delayed disable relies on the ability to re-trigger the interrupt in the case that a real interrupt happens after the software disable was set. In this case we actually disable the interrupt on the hardware level _after_ it occurred. On enable_irq, we need to re-trigger the interrupt. On i386 this relies on a hardware resend mechanism (send_IPI_self()). Actually we only need the resend for edge type interrupts. Level type interrupts come back once enable_irq() re-enables the interrupt line. Marcin found that when he disables the irq line on the hardware level (removing the delayed disable) the card is kept alive. Thomas Gleixner prepared a testing patch which proved to fix hung ups after limiting irqs resending to edge type only. Then Ingo Molnar's version of this patch was applied to 2.6.23-rc2 kernel as a temporary solution. Since, the problem is still diagnosed, but seems to affect mainly X86_64 arch, here is a modified, but still temporary, version of this solution, which should limit the range of warnings and changes in interrupt handling to minimum. Signed-off-by: Jarek Poplawski <jarkao2@xxxxx> Cc: Marcin Slusarz <marcin.slusarz@xxxxxxxxx> Cc: Jean-Baptiste Vignaud <vignaud@xxxxxxxxxxx> Cc: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@xxxxxxx> --- diff -Nurp 2.6.23-rc2-/kernel/irq/resend.c 2.6.23-rc2/kernel/irq/resend.c --- 2.6.23-rc2-/kernel/irq/resend.c 2007-08-08 11:48:15.000000000 +0200 +++ 2.6.23-rc2/kernel/irq/resend.c 2007-08-08 11:58:42.000000000 +0200 @@ -62,18 +62,19 @@ void check_irq_resend(struct irq_desc *d */ desc->chip->enable(irq); + if ((status & (IRQ_PENDING | IRQ_REPLAY)) == IRQ_PENDING) { + desc->status = (status & ~IRQ_PENDING) | IRQ_REPLAY; + +#ifdef CONFIG_X86_64 /* * Temporary hack to figure out more about the problem, which * is causing the ancient network cards to die. */ - if (desc->handle_irq != handle_edge_irq) { - WARN_ON_ONCE(1); - return; - } - - if ((status & (IRQ_PENDING | IRQ_REPLAY)) == IRQ_PENDING) { - desc->status = (status & ~IRQ_PENDING) | IRQ_REPLAY; - + if (desc->handle_irq == handle_fasteoi_irq) { + WARN_ON_ONCE(1); + return; + } +#endif if (!desc->chip || !desc->chip->retrigger || !desc->chip->retrigger(irq)) { #ifdef CONFIG_HARDIRQS_SW_RESEND - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-net" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html