On Thu, Aug 18, 2022 at 10:07:37PM +0200, Pali Rohár wrote: > On Thursday 18 August 2022 21:51:21 Andrew Lunn wrote: > > > -static irqreturn_t mvebu_pcie_irq_handler(int irq, void *arg) > > > +static irqreturn_t mvebu_pcie_error_irq_handler(int irq, void *arg) > > > +{ > > > + struct mvebu_pcie_port *port = arg; > > > + struct device *dev = &port->pcie->pdev->dev; > > > + u32 cause, unmask, status; > > > + > > > + cause = mvebu_readl(port, PCIE_INT_CAUSE_OFF); > > > + unmask = mvebu_readl(port, PCIE_INT_UNMASK_OFF); > > > + status = cause & unmask; > > > + > > > + /* "error" interrupt handler does not process INTX interrupts */ > > > + status &= ~(PCIE_INT_INTX(0) | PCIE_INT_INTX(1) | > > > + PCIE_INT_INTX(2) | PCIE_INT_INTX(3)); > > > > Just for my understanding... > > > > There are two interrupts > > yes > > > but the status information what those > > interrupts actually mean are all packed into one register? > > yes > > for masking individual interrupt events there is just one shared > register for both "intx" and "error" interrupt source. > > and also there is also just one shared "cause" register which says which > individual interrupt events happened. > > > I assume reading the clause register does not clear set bits? > > yes, reading does not clear any interrupt event. > > > Otherwise there > > would be a race condition. > > > Are these actually level interrupts > > yes > > > and in order to clear them you need to poke some other register? > > to clear individual interrupt event you have to write corresponding 1b > bit into that cause register. > > so if interrupts events BIT(24), BIT(16) and BIT(17) happened and > BIT(24), BIT(25), BIT(26), BIT(27) and BIT(16) are unmasked then CPU > receives two interrupts (one for intx:24-27 and one for err:16). kernel > will call interrupt handlers for both intx and err (possible also in > parallel if it unmasked on different CPUs) and each handler just clears > events which process. So writing BIT(16) into cause register clears only > event 16 and all other (24-27, 17) are still active. And level interrupt > (the correct one intx or err) is then triggered again. Thanks for the explanation. I don't know enough about PCI to be able to give a meaningful Reviewed-by, so i will leave that to the PCI maintainer. But the DT bits look good to me. Andrew