Am Freitag, 21. Juli 2017, 17:09:11 CEST schrieb Arnd Bergmann:

Hi Arnd,

> On Fri, Jul 21, 2017 at 10:57 AM, Stephan Müller <smuel...@chronox.de> 
wrote:
> > Am Freitag, 21. Juli 2017, 05:08:47 CEST schrieb Theodore Ts'o:
> >> Um, the timer is the largest number of interrupts on my system.  Compare:
> >>             CPU0       CPU1       CPU2       CPU3
> >>  
> >>  LOC:    6396552    6038865    6558646    6057102   Local timer
> >>  interrupts
> >> 
> >> with the number of disk related interrupts:
> >>  120:      21492     139284      40513    1705886   PCI-MSI 376832-edge
> >> 
> >> ahci[0000:00:17.0]
> > 
> > They seem to be not picked up with the add_interrupt_randomness function.
> 
> On x86, the local APIC timer has some special handling in
> arch/x86/entry/entry_64.S that does not go through handle_irq_event().
> 
> I would assume that this is different when you boot with the "noapictimer"
> option and use the hpet clockevent instead.
> 
> On other architectures, the timer interrupt is often handled as a regular
> IRQ as well.

Thank you for the hint.

Yet, I would think that timer interrupts can be identified by 
add_interrupt_randomness, either by the IRQ or the stuck test that was is 
suggested with the LRNG patch set.

Ciao
Stephan

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