> >Hi, > >Pawel Laszczak <pawell@xxxxxxxxxxx> writes: >>>>>>>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. > >okay. Just to be sure I understand correctly. If you mask USB_IEN, then >we would miss a cable disconnect event. Right? > >>>>>>>>>> + 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); >> } >> ?? > >right, you can do it right before giving back the request. Or right >after. > >> 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 > >Did you notice that it doesn't reenable interrupts, though? I noticed that there is a lack of reenabling interrupts :) The problem is that If I have disabled interrupt the kernel complains for using dma_free_coherent function in such place. Here you have a fragment of complaints: [ 7420.502863] WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 10260 at kernel/dma/mapping.c:281 dma_free_attrs+0xa0/0xd0 [ 7420.502866] Modules linked in: usb_f_mass_storage cdns3(OE) cdns3_pci_wrap(OE) libcomposite ... [ 7420.502965] cdns3_gadget_giveback+0x159/0x2a0 [cdns3] [ 7420.502975] cdns3_transfer_completed+0xc5/0x3c0 [cdns3] [ 7420.502986] cdns3_device_thread_irq_handler+0x1b1/0xab0 [cdns3] [ 7420.502991] ? __schedule+0x333/0x7e0 [ 7420.503001] irq_thread_fn+0x26/0x60 [ 7420.503006] ? irq_thread+0xa8/0x1b0 [ 7420.503011] irq_thread+0x10e/0x1b0 [ 7420.503015] ? irq_forced_thread_fn+0x80/0x80 [ 7420.503021] ? wake_threads_waitq+0x30/0x30 [ 7420.503029] kthread+0x12c/0x150 [ 7420.503034] ? irq_thread_check_affinity+0xe0/0xe0 [ 7420.503038] ? kthread_park+0x90/0x90 [ 7420.503045] ret_from_fork+0x3a/0x50 [ 7420.503061] irq event stamp: 2962 [ 7420.503065] hardirqs last enabled at (2961): [<ffffffffb252672c>] _raw_spin_unlock_irq+0x2c/0x40 [ 7420.503070] hardirqs last disabled at (2962): [<ffffffffb25268f5>] _raw_spin_lock_irqsave+0x25/0x60 [ 7420.503074] softirqs last enabled at (2918): [<ffffffffb2800340>] __do_softirq+0x340/0x451 [ 7420.503079] softirqs last disabled at (2657): [<ffffffffb1aa02b6>] irq_exit+0xc6/0xd0 [ 7420.503082] ---[ end trace d02652af11011c3b ]--- Maybe it's a bug in implementation of this function. I allocate memory with flag GFP_ATOMIC with disabled interrupt, but I can't free such memory. -- pawell