Arnd Bergmann
2014-Aug-01 13:16 UTC
[RFC PATCH 00/11] Refactor MSI to support Non-PCI device
On Wednesday 30 July 2014, Yijing Wang wrote:> >>> > >>> The other part I'm not completely sure about is how you want to > >>> have MSIs map into normal IRQ descriptors. At the moment, all > >>> MSI users are based on IRQ numbers, but this has known scalability problems. > >> > >> Hmmm, I still use the IRQ number to map the MSIs to IRQ description. > >> I'm sorry, I don't understand you meaning. > >> What are the scalability problems you mentioned ? > > We have soft limitation of nr_irqs or hard limitation NR_IRQS, > > we couldn't allocate as much irq number as we need in some cases, > > such as to support MSI-x. > > Oh, yes, this is a potential issue. Gerry, thanks for you explanation. :)This should no longer be an issue, as arm64 uses CONFIG_SPARSE_IRQ and the number of interrupts is not limited in any form. My point was more that the device driver should not need to care about the interrupt number: it gets made up on the spot when the MSI is needed, and then it is only used to request the IRQ. This can be simplified into one interface at the device driver level, even though the internal still use numbers somewhere. If we ever remove IRQ numbers from the driver API, this part doesn't need to get touched again. Arnd
Yijing Wang
2014-Aug-04 03:32 UTC
[RFC PATCH 00/11] Refactor MSI to support Non-PCI device
On 2014/8/1 21:16, Arnd Bergmann wrote:> On Wednesday 30 July 2014, Yijing Wang wrote: >>>>> >>>>> The other part I'm not completely sure about is how you want to >>>>> have MSIs map into normal IRQ descriptors. At the moment, all >>>>> MSI users are based on IRQ numbers, but this has known scalability problems. >>>> >>>> Hmmm, I still use the IRQ number to map the MSIs to IRQ description. >>>> I'm sorry, I don't understand you meaning. >>>> What are the scalability problems you mentioned ? >>> We have soft limitation of nr_irqs or hard limitation NR_IRQS, >>> we couldn't allocate as much irq number as we need in some cases, >>> such as to support MSI-x. >> >> Oh, yes, this is a potential issue. Gerry, thanks for you explanation. :) > > This should no longer be an issue, as arm64 uses CONFIG_SPARSE_IRQ > and the number of interrupts is not limited in any form. > > My point was more that the device driver should not need to care about > the interrupt number: it gets made up on the spot when the MSI is > needed, and then it is only used to request the IRQ. This can be > simplified into one interface at the device driver level, even though > the internal still use numbers somewhere. If we ever remove IRQ numbers > from the driver API, this part doesn't need to get touched again. >Hi Arnd, I have another question is some drivers will request more than one MSI/MSI-X IRQ, and the driver will use them to process different things. Eg. network driver generally uses one of them to process trivial network thins, and others to transmit/receive data. So, in this case, it seems to driver need to touch the IRQ numbers. wr-linux:~ # cat /proc/interrupts CPU0 CPU1 CPU2 .... CPU17 CPU18 CPU19 CPU20 CPU21 CPU22 CPU23 ...... 100: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 IR-PCI-MSI-edge eth0 101: 2 0 0 0 0 0 302830488 0 0 0 IR-PCI-MSI-edge eth0-TxRx-0 102: 110 0 0 0 0 360675897 0 0 0 0 IR-PCI-MSI-edge eth0-TxRx-1 103: 109 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 IR-PCI-MSI-edge eth0-TxRx-2 104: 107 0 0 9678933 0 0 0 0 0 0 IR-PCI-MSI-edge eth0-TxRx-3 105: 107 0 0 0 357838258 0 0 0 0 0 IR-PCI-MSI-edge eth0-TxRx-4 106: 115 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 IR-PCI-MSI-edge eth0-TxRx-5 107: 114 0 0 0 0 0 0 337866096 0 0 IR-PCI-MSI-edge eth0-TxRx-6 108: 373801199 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 IR-PCI-MSI-edge eth0-TxRx-7 Thanks! Yijing.> > . >-- Thanks! Yijing
Arnd Bergmann
2014-Aug-04 14:45 UTC
[RFC PATCH 00/11] Refactor MSI to support Non-PCI device
On Monday 04 August 2014, Yijing Wang wrote:> I have another question is some drivers will request more than one > MSI/MSI-X IRQ, and the driver will use them to process different things. > Eg. network driver generally uses one of them to process trivial network thins, > and others to transmit/receive data. > > So, in this case, it seems to driver need to touch the IRQ numbers. > > wr-linux:~ # cat /proc/interrupts > CPU0 CPU1 CPU2 .... CPU17 CPU18 CPU19 CPU20 CPU21 CPU22 CPU23 > ...... > 100: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 IR-PCI-MSI-edge eth0 > 101: 2 0 0 0 0 0 302830488 0 0 0 IR-PCI-MSI-edge eth0-TxRx-0 > 102: 110 0 0 0 0 360675897 0 0 0 0 IR-PCI-MSI-edge eth0-TxRx-1 > 103: 109 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 IR-PCI-MSI-edge eth0-TxRx-2 > 104: 107 0 0 9678933 0 0 0 0 0 0 IR-PCI-MSI-edge eth0-TxRx-3 > 105: 107 0 0 0 357838258 0 0 0 0 0 IR-PCI-MSI-edge eth0-TxRx-4 > 106: 115 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 IR-PCI-MSI-edge eth0-TxRx-5 > 107: 114 0 0 0 0 0 0 337866096 0 0 IR-PCI-MSI-edge eth0-TxRx-6 > 108: 373801199 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 IR-PCI-MSI-edge eth0-TxRx-7 >I think in this example, you just need to request eight interrupts, and pass a different data pointer each time, pointing to the napi_struct of each of the NIC queues. The driver has no need to deal with the IRQ number at all, and I would be surprised if it cared today. Arnd
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