Really challenging...I'll see what I can do...

On Wed, Aug 11, 2010 at 03:29, Parmenides <mobile.parmeni...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
>   There are some problems puzzled me concerning interrupts.
....
> 1. The following excerpt code is from function mask_and_ack_8259a:
> The operations are seemingly all dedicated to change the status of
> 8259A chip, including masking the corresponding interrupt line
> specific to irq, while none to affect the kernel data structure.
> Therefore, I wonder what's role of the flag of  IRQ_DISABLED.

I am sloppy when dealing with interrupt handling, but here's how I
think:  if you don't disable it during acknowledgment, then how do you
prevent the following queued interrupts from screwing?

> 2. When processing an IRQ, is there any chance to lost the same IRQ
> comes next? Take keyboard, if I keep a key pressing down for a while,
> the keyboard will raise the same IRQ continually. The first occurence
> lead the CPU to jump to a corresponding ISR, and before the ISR
> finishing the 8259A can not accept the same IRQ, and the next
> occurence of the same IRQ come form the keyboard.  Will the second
> occurence lost?

AFAIK nope, it's disabled (errr wait, or masked?)... meaning something
like "I won't respond for now, so please sit down and wait until we
call you"



--
regards,

Mulyadi Santosa
Freelance Linux trainer and consultant

blog: the-hydra.blogspot.com
training: mulyaditraining.blogspot.com

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