On Fri, Oct 09, 2020 at 01:17:38AM +0200, Thomas Gleixner wrote: > Dave, > > On Thu, Oct 08 2020 at 09:51, Dave Jiang wrote: > > On 10/8/2020 12:39 AM, Thomas Gleixner wrote: > >> On Wed, Oct 07 2020 at 14:54, Dave Jiang wrote: > >>> On 9/30/2020 12:57 PM, Thomas Gleixner wrote: > >>>> Aside of that this is fiddling in the IMS storage array behind the irq > >>>> chips back without any comment here and a big fat comment about the > >>>> shared usage of ims_slot::ctrl in the irq chip driver. > >>>> > >>> This is to program the pasid fields in the IMS table entry. Was > >>> thinking the pasid fields may be considered device specific so didn't > >>> attempt to add the support to the core code. > >> > >> Well, the problem is that this is not really irq chip functionality. > >> > >> But the PASID programming needs to touch the IMS storage which is also > >> touched by the irq chip. > >> > >> This might be correct as is, but without a big fat comment explaining > >> WHY it is safe to do so without any form of serialization this is just > >> voodoo and unreviewable. > >> > >> Can you please explain when the PASID is programmed and what the state > >> of the interrupt is at that point? Is this a one off setup operation or > >> does this happen dynamically at random points during runtime? > > > > I will put in comments for the function to explain why and when we modify > > the > > pasid field for the IMS entry. Programming of the pasid is done right > > before we > > request irq. And the clearing is done after we free the irq. We will not be > > touching the IMS field at runtime. So the touching of the entry should be > > safe. > > Thanks for clarifying that. > > Thinking more about it, that very same thing will be needed for any > other IMS device and of course this is not going to end well because > some driver will fiddle with the PASID at the wrong time.
Why? This looks like some quirk of the IDXD HW where it just randomly put PASID along with the IRQ mask register. Probably because PASID is not the full 32 bits. AFAIK the PASID is not tagged on the MemWr TLP triggering the interrupt, so it really is unrelated to the irq. I think the ioread to get the PASID is rather ugly, it should pluck the PASID out of some driver specific data structure with proper locking, and thus use the sleepable version of the irqchip? This is really not that different from what I was describing for queue contexts - the queue context needs to be assigned to the irq # before it can be used in the irq chip other wise there is no idea where to write the msg to. Just like pasid here. Jason