On Tue, Mar 8, 2016 at 8:04 PM, Sinan Kaya <okaya@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >>>>> I think there are two issues here that should be teased apart a bit >>>>> more: >>>>> >>>>> 1) Trigger settings: If the IRQ is configured as anything other than >>>>> level-triggered, active-low, we can't use it at all for a PCI >>>>> interrupt, and we should return an "infinite" penalty. We currently >>>>> increase the penalty for the SCI IRQ if it's not level/low, but >>>>> doesn't it apply to *all* IRQs, not just the SCI IRQ? >>>> >>>> It makes sense for SCI as it is Intel specific. >>>> >>>> Unfortunately, this cannot be done in an arch independent way. Of course, >>>> ARM had to implement its own thing. While level-triggered, active-low is >>>> good for intel world, it is not for the ARM world. ARM uses active-high >>>> level triggered. >>> >>> I'm confused. I don't think SCI is Intel-specific. Per PCI Spec >>> r3.0, sec 2.2.6, PCI interrupts are level-sensitive, asserted low. >>> Per ACPI Spec v3.0, sec 2.1, the SCI is an "active, low, shareable, >>> level interrupt". That's correct. The SCI isn't Intel-specific or even x86-specific for that matter. However, it is not available on hardware-reduced ACPI platforms which are all ARM using ACPI. >>> Are you saying SCI is active-high on ARM? If so, I don't think that's >>> necessarily a huge problem, although we'd have to audit the ACPI code >>> to make sure we handle it correctly. > > We don't have an SCI interrupt on ARM. That's why, I assumed it is an Intel specific > interrupt. However, all legacy interrupts are active-high level sensitive. This is a > limitation of the ARM GIC Interrupt Controller. > > Here is what a PCI Link object looks like. > > Device(LN0D){ > Name(_HID, EISAID("PNP0C0F")) // PCI interrupt link > Name(_UID, 4) > Name(_PRS, ResourceTemplate(){ > Interrupt(ResourceProducer, Level, ActiveHigh, Exclusive, , ,) {123} > }) > Method(_DIS) {} > Method(_CRS) { Return (_PRS) } > Method(_SRS, 1) {} > } > >>> >>> The point here is that a PCI Interrupt Link can only use an IRQ that >>> is level-triggered, active low. If an IRQ is already set to any other >>> state, whether for an ISA device or for an active-high SCI, we can't >>> use it for a PCI Interrupt Link. > > Unfortunately, this still doesn't hold. I think that the original active-low requirement is related to the fact that those IRQ can be shared. If they aren't shared, I guess the point is slightly moot. Thanks, Rafael -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-pci" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html