On Mon, Jul 13, 2015 at 12:02 AM, Bjorn Helgaas wrote:
> Many architectures use a variant of "unexpected IRQ trap at vector %x" to
> log unexpected IRQs. This is confusing because (a) it prints the Linux IRQ
> number, but "vector" more often refers to a CPU vector number, and (b) it
> prints the
Many architectures use a variant of "unexpected IRQ trap at vector %x" to
log unexpected IRQs. This is confusing because (a) it prints the Linux IRQ
number, but "vector" more often refers to a CPU vector number, and (b) it
prints the IRQ number in hex with no base indication, while Linux IRQ
numbe
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