Hi, > >Pawel Laszczak <pawell@xxxxxxxxxxx> writes: >>>> I have such situation in which one interrupt line is shared with ehci and cdns3 driver. >>>> In such case this function returns error code. >>> >>>which function returns error code? >> >> devm_request_threaded_irq, of course if I set IRQF_SHARED | IRQF_ONESHOT. >> As I remember it was EBUSY error. > >oh, right. That's probably because the handlers must agree on IRQ flags. > >>>> So probably I will need to mask only the reported interrupts. >>> >>>you should mask all interrupts from your device, otherwise you top-halt >>>may still end up reentrant. >>> >>>> I can't mask all interrupt using controller register because I can miss some of them. >>> >>>why would you miss them? They would be left in the register until you >>>unmask them and the line is raised again. >> >> I consult this with author of controller. >> We have: >> USB_IEN and USB_ISTS for generic interrupts >> EP_IEN and EP_ISTS for endpoint interrupts >> >> Both these group works different. >> For endpoint I can disable all interrupt and I don't miss any of them. >> So it's normal behavior. >> >> But USB_ISTS work little different. If we mask all interrupt in USB_IEN >> then when new event occurs the EP_ISTS will not be updated. > >wait a minute. When you mask USB_ISTS, then EP_ISTS isn't updated? Is >this a quirk on the controller or a design choice? > >> It's not standard and not expected behavior but it works in this way. > >Yeah, sounds rather odd. > Oh no. My mistake. Of course I mean USB_ISTS. If we mask all interrupt in USB_IEN then when new event occurs the USB_ISTS will not be updated. >>>>>>>> + /* check USB device interrupt */ >>>>>>>> + reg = readl(&priv_dev->regs->usb_ists); >>>>>>>> + >>>>>>>> + if (reg) { >>>>>>>> + writel(reg, &priv_dev->regs->usb_ists); >>>>>>>> + cdns3_check_usb_interrupt_proceed(priv_dev, reg); >>>>>>>> + ret = IRQ_HANDLED; >>>>>>> >>>>>>>now, because you _don't_ mask this interrupt, you're gonna have >>>>>>>issues. Say we actually get both device and endpoint interrupts while >>>>>>>the thread is already running with previous endpoint interrupts. Now >>>>>>>we're gonna reenter the top half, because device interrupts are *not* >>>>>>>masked, which will read usb_ists and handle it here. >>>>>> >>>>>> Endpoint interrupts are masked in cdns3_device_irq_handler and stay masked >>>>>> until they are not handled in threaded handler. >>>>> >>>>>Quick question, then: these ISTS registers, are they masked interrupt >>>>>status or raw interrupt status? >>>> >>>> Yes it's masked, but after masking them the new interrupts will not be reported >>>> In ISTS registers. Form this reason I can mask only reported interrupt. >>> >>>and what happens when you unmask the registers? Do they get reported? >> >> No they are not reported in case of USB_ISTS register. >> They should be reported in case EP_ISTS, but I need to test it. > >okay, please _do_ test and verify the behavior. The description above >sounds really surprising to me. Does it really mean that if you mask all >USB_ISTS and then disconnect the cable while interrupt is masked, you >won't know cable was disconnected? Yes, exactly. Initially I've tested it and it's work correct. I can even simply write 0 to EP_IEN in hard irq and ~0 in thread handler. It's simplest and sufficient way. > >>>>>>>> + struct cdns3_aligned_buf *buf, *tmp; >>>>>>>> + >>>>>>>> + list_for_each_entry_safe(buf, tmp, &priv_dev->aligned_buf_list, >>>>>>>> + list) { >>>>>>>> + if (!buf->in_use) { >>>>>>>> + list_del(&buf->list); >>>>>>>> + >>>>>>>> + spin_unlock_irqrestore(&priv_dev->lock, flags); >>>>>>> >>>>>>>creates the possibility of a race condition >>>>>> Why? In this place the buf can't be used. >>>>> >>>>>but you're reenabling interrupts, right? >>>> >>>> Yes, driver frees not used buffers here. >>>> I think that it's the safest place for this purpose. >>> >>>I guess you missed the point a little. Since you reenable interrupts >>>just to free the buffer, you end up creating the possibility for a race >>>condition. Specially since you don't mask all interrupt events. The >>>moment you reenable interrupts, one of your not-unmasked interrupt >>>sources could trigger, then top-half gets scheduled which tries to wake >>>up the IRQ thread again and things go boom. >> >> Ok, I think I understand. So I have 3 options: >> 1. Mask the USB_IEN and EP_IEN interrupts, but then I can lost some USB_ISTS >> events. It's dangerous options. > >sure sounds dangerous, but also sounds quite "peculiar" :-) > >> 2. Remove implementation of handling unaligned buffers and assume that >> upper layer will worry about this. What with vendor specific drivers that >> can be used by companies and not upstreamed ? >> It could be good to have such safety mechanism even if it is not currently used. > >dunno. It may become dead code that's NEVER used :-) > >> 3. Delegate this part of code for instance to separate thread that will be called >> In free time. > >Yet another thread? Can't you just run this right before giving back the >USB request? So, don't do it from IRQ handler, but from giveback path? Do you mean in: if (request->complete) { spin_unlock(&priv_dev->lock); if (priv_dev->run_garbage_collector) { .... } usb_gadget_giveback_request(&priv_ep->endpoint, request); spin_lock(&priv_dev->lock); } ?? I ask because this is finally also called from IRQ handler: cdns3_device_thread_irq_handler -> cdns3_check_ep_interrupt_proceed -> cdns3_transfer_completed -> cdns3_gadget_giveback -> usb_gadget_giveback_request -- Pawell