On Wednesday, December 13, 2017 7:19:17 PM CET Thomas Gleixner wrote: > On Wed, 13 Dec 2017, Linus Torvalds wrote: > > > On Wed, Dec 13, 2017 at 8:41 AM, Thomas Gleixner <t...@linutronix.de> wrote: > > > > > > Definitely. That was fragile forever but puzzles me is that I can't figure > > > out what now causes that spurious interrupt to surface out of the blue. > > > > Perhaps just timing? > > That's what I'm trying to figure out right now, because that is the only > sensible explanation left. The whole machinery of suspend is exactly the > same with and without the vector changes. I instrumented all functions > involved and the picture is the same. I even do not see any fundamental > timing differences where one would say: That's it. > > What puzzles me even more is that in the range of commits I'm fiddling with > there is no other change than the vector management stuff and the point > where it breaks makes no sense at all. The point Maarten bisected it to > works nicely here, so that might just point to a very subtle timing issue. > > > How hard would it be to change the ordering to just redirect irqs first? > > The whole interrupt redirection happens when the non boot CPUs are brought > down, which is the very last step before the actual suspend happens. > > We could probably do that earlier, but that's something Rafael needs to > answer ultimately.
Well, that's both flattering and concerning. ;-) Anyway, yes, we can do that earlier AFAICS. Action handlers are not going to run after we've called suspend_device_irqs() which happens before the final stage of PCI devices suspend (suspend_noirq) and it doesn't matter which CPU gets the interrupt from that point on (it is either wakeup or unwanted then). Thanks, Rafael