Hello, I am writing code for my platform's PCI Express controller. I am stuck at the legacy PCI interrupt handling. Interrupt requests are routed like this: Cortex A9 MP <-- GIC(v1?) <-- system_intc <-- PCIe_root_complex The PCIe root complex drives two interrupt signals to the system_intc 1) system_intc 54 = non-MSI interrupts 2) system_intc 55 = MSI interrupts I think the MSI handling mostly works (although it's 340 lines long, which seems excessive for such a common task; maybe the maintainers will spot lots of redundant code when I submit). As for non-MSI interrupts, there are 8 possible sources: system_error dma_read_ready dma_write_ready unsupported completion request configuration request retry status completer abort event completion timeout event legacy interrupt asserted (any of the 4 legacy interrupts) Basically, I need to deal with the first 7 interrupts "internally" in my PCIe root complex driver. But the last interrupt, I need to "forward" it to the proper ISR (e.g. XHCI ISR). For the "internal" handling, I think I need to register my own ISR with the IRQF_SHARED flag. Then other drivers will be able to register their ISR on the same interrupt line. But how do I tell the PCI core that it's supposed to use interrupt 54 for legacy interrupts? Here is my current DT: msi0: msi@2e080 { compatible = "sigma,msi"; reg = <0x2e04c 0x40>; interrupt-parent = <&irq0>; interrupts = <55 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>; msi-controller; num-vectors = <32>; }; pcie@30000000 { compatible = "sigma,smp8759-pcie"; reg = <0x30000000 SZ_4M>, <0x2e02c 4>; device_type = "pci"; bus-range = <0 3>; #size-cells = <2>; #address-cells = <3>; #interrupt-cells = <1>; ranges = <0x02000000 0x0 0x00400000 0x30400000 0x0 SZ_60M>; msi-parent = <&msi0>; interrupt-parent = <&irq0>; interrupts = <54 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>; }; I traced the action into pdev_fixup_irq() which calls of_irq_parse_and_map_pci() How do I tell Linux that - All the legacy PCI interrupts are muxed to a single line - And this line is routed to system interrupt 54 Ooooooh... Wait... Is this what interrupt-map is used for? http://elinux.org/Device_Tree_Usage#Advanced_Interrupt_Mapping Regards.