On 08/29/2014 03:14 PM, Andrew Bresticker wrote:
The Global Interrupt Controller (GIC) present on certain MIPS systems
can be used to route external interrupts to individual VPEs and CPU
interrupt vectors. It also supports a timer and software-generated
interrupts.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Bresticker <abres...@chromium.org>
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+MIPS Global Interrupt Controller (GIC)
+
+The MIPS GIC routes external interrupts to individual VPEs and IRQ pins.
+It also supports a timer and software-generated interrupts which can be
+used as IPIs.
+
+Required properties:
+- compatible : Should be "mti,global-interrupt-controller"
+- reg : Base address and length of the GIC registers.
+- interrupts : Core interrupts to which the GIC may route external interrupts.
This doesn't make sense to me. The GIC can, and does, route interrupts
to all CPU cores in a SMP system. How can there be a concept of only
associating it with several interrupt lines on a single CPU in the
system? That is not what the GIC does, is it? It is a Global
interrupts controller, not local. So specifying device tree bindings
that don't show its Global nature seems wrong.
+- interrupt-controller : Identifies the node as an interrupt controller
+- #interrupt-cells : Specifies the number of cells needed to encode an
+ interrupt specifier. Should be 3.
+ - The first cell is the GIC interrupt number.
+ - The second cell encodes the interrupt flags.
+ See <include/dt-bindings/interrupt-controller/irq.h> for a list of valid
+ flags.
+ - The optional third cell indicates which CPU interrupt vector the GIC
+ interrupt should be routed to. It is a 0-based index into the list of
+ GIC-to-CPU interrupts specified in the "interrupts" property described
+ above. For example, a '2' in this cell will route the interrupt to the
+ 3rd core interrupt listed in 'interrupts'. If omitted, the interrupt will
+ be routed to the 1st core interrupt.
+
This seems like a really convoluted way of doing things that really goes
against the device tree model.
The routing of interrupts through the GIC to a core interrupt is
controlled entirely within the GIC hardware and therefore should be a
property of the GIC itself, not all the random devices connected
upstream to the GIC.
It also places policy about the priority of the various interrupts into
the device tree. Typically the device tree would contain only
information about the topology of the hardware blocks, not arbitrary
policy decisions that software could change and still have a perfectly
functional system.
Therefore I would recommend removing the third cell from the interrupt
specifier.
+Example:
+
+ cpu_intc: interrupt-controller@0 {
+ compatible = "mti,cpu-interrupt-controller";
+
+ interrupt-controller;
+ #interrupt-cells = <1>;
+ };
+
+ gic: interrupt-controller@1bdc0000 {
+ compatible = "mti,global-interrupt-controller";
+ reg = <0x1bdc0000 0x20000>;
+
+ interrupt-controller;
+ #interrupt-cells = <3>;
+
+ interrupt-parent = <&cpu_intc>;
+ interrupts = <3>, <4>;
+ };
+
+ uart@18101400 {
+ ...
+ interrupt-parent = <&gic>;
+ interrupts = <24 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH 0>;
+ ...
+ };
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