On Sun, Jun 06, 2010 at 07:39:49AM +0000, Blue Swirl wrote: > On Sun, Jun 6, 2010 at 7:15 AM, Gleb Natapov <g...@redhat.com> wrote: > > On Sat, Jun 05, 2010 at 02:04:01AM +0200, Jan Kiszka wrote: > >> > I'd like to also support EOI handling. When the guest clears the > >> > interrupt condtion, the EOI callback would be called. This could occur > >> > much later than the IRQ delivery time. I'm not sure if we need the > >> > result code in that case. > >> > > >> > If any intermediate device (IOAPIC?) needs to be informed about either > >> > delivery or EOI also, it could create a proxy message with its > >> > callbacks in place. But we need then a separate opaque field (in > >> > addition to payload) to store the original message. > >> > > >> > struct IRQMsg { > >> > DeviceState *src; > >> > void (*delivery_cb)(IRQMsg *msg, int result); > >> > void (*eoi_cb)(IRQMsg *msg, int result); > >> > void *src_opaque; > >> > void *payload; > >> > }; > >> > >> Extending the lifetime of IRQMsg objects beyond the delivery call stack > >> means qemu_malloc/free for every delivery. I think it takes a _very_ > >> appealing reason to justify this. But so far I do not see any use case > >> for eio_cb at all. > >> > > I dislike use of eoi for reinfecting missing interrupts since > > it eliminates use of internal PIC/APIC queue of not yet delivered > > interrupts. PIC and APIC has internal queue that can handle two elements: > > one is delivered, but not yet acked interrupt in isr and another is > > pending interrupt in irr. Using eoi callback (or ack notifier as it's > > called inside kernel) interrupt will be considered coalesced even if irr > > is cleared, but no ack was received for previously delivered interrupt. > > But ack notifiers actually has another use: device assignment. There is > > a plan to move device assignment from kernel to userspace and for that > > ack notifiers will have to be extended to userspace too. If so we can > > use them to do irq decoalescing as well. I doubt they should be part > > of IRQMsg though. Why not do what kernel does: have globally registered > > notifier based on irqchip/pin. > > Because translation at IOAPIC may be lossy, IRQs from many devices > pointing to the same vector? With IRQMsg you know where a specific > message came from. The situation is different inside the kernel: it > manages both translation and registration, whereas in QEMU we could > only control registration. Configuring IOAPIC like that is against x86 architecture. OS will not be able to map from interrupt vector back to device.
-- Gleb.