Felipe, On 10/05/16 13:12, Felipe Balbi wrote: > > Hi, > > Roger Quadros <rogerq@xxxxxx> writes: >>>> @@ -497,8 +503,8 @@ static int dwc3_omap_probe(struct platform_device *pdev) >>>> /* check the DMA Status */ >>>> reg = dwc3_omap_readl(omap->base, USBOTGSS_SYSCONFIG); >>>> >>>> - ret = devm_request_irq(dev, omap->irq, dwc3_omap_interrupt, 0, >>>> - "dwc3-omap", omap); >>>> + ret = devm_request_threaded_irq(dev, omap->irq, dwc3_omap_interrupt, >>>> + NULL, 0, "dwc3-omap", omap); >>> >>> if you're using threaded_irq, it's better to have a NULL top half and >>> valid bottom half. >> >> But in this case we don't need a bottom half as there is nothing to do :). >> >>> >>> In fact, since this will be shared, you could do a proper preparation >>> and on top half check if $this device generated the IRQ and >>> conditionally schedule the bottom half. Don't forget to mask device's >>> interrupts from top half so you can run without IRQF_ONESHOT. >>> >> >> Why do this at all if there is nothing to do in the bottom half? > > oh, but there is :-) > > The whole idea of threaded IRQs is that you spend as little time as > possible on top half and the (strong) recommendation is that you *only* > check if $this device generated the interrupt. Note that "checking if > $this device generated the interrupt" will be mandatory as soon as you > mark the IRQ line as shared ;-) > > So here's how this should look like: > > static irqreturn_t dwc3_omap_interrupt(int irq, void *_omap) > { > struct dwc3_omap *omap = _omap; > u32 reg; > > reg = readl(IRQSTATUS) > if (reg) { > mask_interrupts(omap); > return IRQ_WAKE_THREAD; > } > > return IRQ_HANDLED; This should be IRQ_NONE right? > } > > static irqreturn_t dwc3_omap_threaded_interrupt(int irq, void *_omap) > { > struct dwc3_omap *omap = _omap; > u32 reg; > > spin_lock(&omap->lock); Do we really need a spin_lock for the dwc3-omap driver? Currently we won't be doing anything other than just clearing the irqstatus and re-enabling the interrupts. > reg = readl(IRQSTATUS); > > if (reg & BIT0) > handle_bit_0(omap); > > if (reg & BIT1) > handle_bit_1(omap); > > unmask_interrupts(omap); > spin_unlock(&omap->lock); > > return IRQ_HANDLED; > } > > this will *always* behave well with RT and non-RT kernels. It also > allows for the user to change priorities on these interrupt handlers if > necessary. > -- cheers, -roger -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-usb" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html