[alsa-devel] [PATCH 01/10] irqchip: irq-mips-gic: export gic_send_ipi

Qais Yousef qais.yousef at imgtec.com
Wed Aug 26 17:41:48 CEST 2015


On 08/26/2015 04:08 PM, Thomas Gleixner wrote:
> On Wed, 26 Aug 2015, Qais Yousef wrote:
>> On 08/26/2015 02:19 PM, Thomas Gleixner wrote:
>>> Wrong. You cannot move an IPI around with set_affinity. It's possible
>>> to send an IPI to more than one target CPU, but that has nothing to do
>>> with affinities.
>>>
>>> Are you talking about IPIs or about general interrupts which have an
>>> affinity setting?
>> Maybe my view of the world is limited. I wrote this because the mechanism to
>> route an IPI and set affinities is the same.
> That might be the case on your particular platform, but that's not
> generally true.
>
>> So specifying which core or hardware thread should Linux CPU route this IPI to
>> is the same as setting the affinity, no? Linux will not move the IPI that is
>> routed to the coprocessor core. Just the IPI it will receive.
>>
>> Also the way I see it is that this is an external interrupt whether it was
>> asserted by real signal or through IPI mechanism and it should be treated as
>> such in terms of moving inside Linux SMP, no? Again maybe my view of the world
>> is limited but I can't see why migrating the interrupt would affect
>> correctness unless there's a hardware limitation like only core 0 can read
>> info from AXD (which is where my suggestion to using affinity hint above to
>> accommodate such limitations).
>>
>> When you say 'It is possible to send an IPI to more than one target CPU', is
>> it a case we need to cater for? The way I was seeing this problem is
>> communication between single Linux SMP and a single coprocessor unit. I didn't
>> think of it as single to many. Even if the coprocessor is a cluster I'd expect
>> it to act as a single unit like Linux SMP. And if it wanted to send 2
>> different interrupts it will need to use 2 different IPIs.
> You are confusing the terms.
>
> IPI = Inter Processor Interrupt
>
> As the name says that's an interrupt which goes from one cpu to
> another. So an IPI has a very clear target.

OK understood. My interpretation of the processor here was the 
difference. I was viewing the whole linux cpus as one unit with regard 
to its coprocessors.

>
> Whether the platform implements IPIs via general interrupts which are
> made affine to a particular cpu or some other specialized mechanism is
> completely irrelevant. An IPI is not subject to affinity settings,
> period.
>
> So if you want to use an IPI then you need a target cpu for that IPI.
>
> If you want something which can be affined to any cpu, then you need a
> general interrupt and not an IPI.

We are using IPIs to exchange interrupts. Affinity is not important to me.

Thanks,
Qais

>
> That's what I asked before and you still did not answer that question.
>
>>> Are you talking about IPIs or about general interrupts which have an
>>> affinity setting?
> Thanks,
>
> 	tglx



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