On 1/20/23 04:14, Charles Keepax wrote:
On Thu, Jan 19, 2023 at 11:27:14AM -0600, Pierre-Louis Bossart wrote:
On 1/19/23 10:51, Charles Keepax wrote:
Currently the SoundWire core will loop handling slave alerts but it will only handle those present when the alert was first raised. This causes some issues with the Cadence SoundWire IP, which only generates an IRQ when alert changes state. This means that if a new alert arrives whilst old alerts are being handled it will not be handled in the currently loop and then no further alerts will be processed since alert never changes state to trigger a new IRQ.
Correct this issue by allowing the core to handle all pending alerts in the IRQ handling loop. The code will still only loop up to SDW_READ_INTR_CLEAR_RETRY times, so it shouldn't be possible for it get completely stuck and if you are generating IRQs faster than you can handle them you likely have bigger problems anyway.
The change makes sense, but it's a bit odd to change the way the interrupts are handled because of a specific design. The bus should be able to deal with various designs, not force a one-size-fits-all policy that may not be quite right in all cases.
Could we have a new flag at the bus level that says that peripheral interrupts are not filtered, and set if for the Intel case?
We could similarly make the SDW_READ_INTR_CLEAR_RETRY constant bus/platform specific. The SoundWire spec mandates that we re-read the status after clearing the interrupt, but it doesn't say how to deal with recurring interrupts.
Perhaps I should have phrased the commit message differently here. To be honest I am not really convince the old code makes a huge amount of sense. So I would prefer not to add a flag enabling the weird behaviour.
I would be of the opinion that there are really two options for IRQ handling code like this that make sense:
- Loop until the IRQs are handled, ie. it is the soundwire
core's responsibility to make sure all the IRQs are handled before moving on.
- Just handle the IRQs available when the function is called,
ie. it is the drivers responsibility to keep calling the core until the IRQs are handled.
That way there is a clearly defined who that is responsible. The old code is a weird mix of the two where most of the time it is the soundwire core's responsibly to handle recurring IRQs unless a new one happens in which case it is the drivers responsibilty to recall the core.
Also the new code will still work for drivers that have level IRQs and recall the core, without any modification of those drivers. So I don't see what anyone would be gaining from the old system.
I think the intent of the 'old code' was the option 2), expect that it's broken on Intel platforms and not possible because of the hardware design.
I am good with your two suggested options.
Regarding making the clear retries platform specific that makes sense to me but is clearly a separate patch. I will add it onto my soundwire todo list.
yes, it's a separate patch indeed.