On Wed, Jun 7, 2017 at 9:13 AM, Geert Uytterhoeven <ge...@linux-m68k.org> wrote: >> +struct plic_enable_context { >> + atomic_t mask[32]; // 32-bit * 32-entry >> +};
You use many '//' style comments in this file, please change them all to '/* */' for consistency with kernel coding style. >> + >> +struct plic_priority { >> + u32 prio[MAX_DEVICES]; >> +}; >> + >> +struct plic_data { >> + struct irq_chip chip; >> + struct irq_domain *domain; >> + u32 ndev; >> + void __iomem *reg; >> + int handlers; >> + struct plic_handler *handler; >> + char name[30]; >> +}; >> + >> +struct plic_handler { >> + struct plic_hart_context *context; >> + struct plic_data *data; >> +}; >> + >> +static inline >> +struct plic_hart_context *plic_hart_context(struct plic_data *data, size_t >> i) >> +{ >> + return (struct plic_hart_context *)((char *)data->reg + HART_BASE + >> HART_SIZE*i); >> +} 'data->reg' is an __iomem pointer, so when you build-test this with 'make C=1', you should get a valid warning from sparse about an address space mismatch. Please address all the warning from sparse. >> +static void plic_disable(struct plic_data *data, int i, int hwirq) >> +{ >> + struct plic_enable_context *enable = plic_enable_context(data, i); >> + >> + atomic_and(~(1 << (hwirq % 32)), &enable->mask[hwirq / 32]); >> +} In particular, you must not do atomic operations on MMIO pointers. On most architectures these are explicitly disallowed and trap for a good reason, as the hardware implementation behind atomics tend to rely on the cache controller, while mmio registers are required to be uncached. >> + iowrite32(1, &priority->prio[d->hwirq]); I would normally use 'readl' instead of 'iowrite32'. They may be the same on riscv, but they have slightly different meaning in portable drivers. Arnd