On Fri, Jul 22, 2022 at 06:06:07PM +0100, Marc Zyngier wrote: > On Fri, 22 Jul 2022 15:39:05 +0100, > Bjorn Helgaas <helgaas@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > [+cc Marc, can you clarify when we need irq_dispose_mapping()?] > > In general, interrupt controllers should not have to discard mappings > themselves, just like they rarely create mappings themselves. That's > usually a different layer that has created it (DT, for example). > > The problem is that these mappings persist even if the interrupt has > been released by the driver (it called free_irq()), and the IRQ number > can be further reused. The client driver could dispose of the mapping > after having released the IRQ, but nobody does that in practice. > > From the point of view of the controller, there is no simple way to > tell when an interrupt is "unused". And even if a driver was > overzealous and called irq_dispose_mapping() on all the possible > mappings (and made sure no mapping could be created in parallel), this > could result in a bunch of dangling pointers should a client driver > still have the interrupt requested. > > Fixing this is pretty hard, as IRQ descriptors are leaky (you can > either have a pointer to one, or just an IRQ number -- they are > strictly equivalent). So in general, being able to remove an interrupt > controller driver is at best fragile, and I'm trying not to get more > of this in the tree. Thank you! How do we identify an interrupt controller driver? Apparently some of these PCIe controller drivers also include an interrupt controller driver, but I don't know what to look for to find them. Bjorn