On 5/31/06, Kevin D. Kissell <KevinK@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
sigprocmask manages signals, which are user-mode abstractions of exceptions. It does not affect hardware interrupt behavior. If by "uninterruptable", ZhuZhenHua means that the decoder process will not get switched out in favor of another user-mode process, then getpriority()/setpriority() provide some control that may be sufficient. If what is desired is that hardware interrupts are actually masked during some critical sequence, the critical sequence must be executed with kenel privilege - you need to look at putting the critical sequence into a driver or other loadable kernel module that can be invoked by the application code. Regards, Kevin K. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Bin Chen" <binary.chen@xxxxxxxxx> To: "zhuzhenhua" <zzh.hust@xxxxxxxxx> Cc: "linux-mips" <linux-mips@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Wednesday, May 31, 2006 8:11 AM Subject: Re: how to disable interrupt in application? > man sigprocmask > > On 5/31/06, zhuzhenhua <zzh.hust@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > our project have a video decoder code run as application. there is > > some short code want to be run uninterruptable. is there anyway to do > > it? > > thanks for any hints > > Best Regards > > > > > > zhuzhenhua > > > > > >
actually i don't want the pipelining be interrupted while run our user define instructions.