1 /* interrupt.h */ 2 #ifndef _LINUX_INTERRUPT_H 3 #define _LINUX_INTERRUPT_H 4 5 #include <linux/kernel.h> 6 #include <linux/linkage.h> 7 #include <linux/bitops.h> 8 #include <linux/preempt.h> 9 #include <linux/cpumask.h> 10 #include <linux/irqreturn.h> 11 #include <linux/irqnr.h> 12 #include <linux/hardirq.h> 13 #include <linux/sched.h> 14 #include <linux/irqflags.h> 15 #include <linux/smp.h> 16 #include <linux/percpu.h> 17 18 #include <asm/atomic.h> 19 #include <asm/ptrace.h> 20 #include <asm/system.h> 21 22 /* 23 * These correspond to the IORESOURCE_IRQ_* defines in 24 * linux/ioport.h to select the interrupt line behaviour. When 25 * requesting an interrupt without specifying a IRQF_TRIGGER, the 26 * setting should be assumed to be "as already configured", which 27 * may be as per machine or firmware initialisation. 28 */ 29 #define IRQF_TRIGGER_NONE 0x00000000 30 #define IRQF_TRIGGER_RISING 0x00000001 31 #define IRQF_TRIGGER_FALLING 0x00000002 32 #define IRQF_TRIGGER_HIGH 0x00000004 33 #define IRQF_TRIGGER_LOW 0x00000008 34 #define IRQF_TRIGGER_MASK (IRQF_TRIGGER_HIGH | IRQF_TRIGGER_LOW | \ 35 IRQF_TRIGGER_RISING | IRQF_TRIGGER_FALLING) 36 #define IRQF_TRIGGER_PROBE 0x00000010 37 38 /* 39 * These flags used only by the kernel as part of the 40 * irq handling routines. 41 * 42 * IRQF_DISABLED - keep irqs disabled when calling the action handler 43 * IRQF_SAMPLE_RANDOM - irq is used to feed the random generator 44 * IRQF_SHARED - allow sharing the irq among several devices 45 * IRQF_PROBE_SHARED - set by callers when they expect sharing mismatches to occur 46 * IRQF_TIMER - Flag to mark this interrupt as timer interrupt 47 * IRQF_PERCPU - Interrupt is per cpu 48 * IRQF_NOBALANCING - Flag to exclude this interrupt from irq balancing 49 * IRQF_IRQPOLL - Interrupt is used for polling (only the interrupt that is 50 * registered first in an shared interrupt is considered for 51 * performance reasons) 52 */ 53 #define IRQF_DISABLED 0x00000020 54 #define IRQF_SAMPLE_RANDOM 0x00000040 55 #define IRQF_SHARED 0x00000080 56 #define IRQF_PROBE_SHARED 0x00000100 57 #define IRQF_TIMER 0x00000200 58 #define IRQF_PERCPU 0x00000400 59 #define IRQF_NOBALANCING 0x00000800 60 #define IRQF_IRQPOLL 0x00001000 61 62 typedef irqreturn_t (*irq_handler_t)(int, void *); 63 64 /** 65 * struct irqaction - per interrupt action descriptor 66 * @handler: interrupt handler function 67 * @flags: flags (see IRQF_* above) 68 * @mask: no comment as it is useless and about to be removed 69 * @name: name of the device 70 * @dev_id: cookie to identify the device 71 * @next: pointer to the next irqaction for shared interrupts 72 * @irq: interrupt number 73 * @dir: pointer to the proc/irq/NN/name entry 74 */ 75 struct irqaction { 76 irq_handler_t handler; 77 unsigned long flags; 78 cpumask_t mask; 79 const char *name; 80 void *dev_id; 81 struct irqaction *next; 82 int irq; 83 struct proc_dir_entry *dir; 84 }; 85 86 extern irqreturn_t no_action(int cpl, void *dev_id); 87 extern int __must_check request_irq(unsigned int, irq_handler_t handler, 88 unsigned long, const char *, void *); 89 extern void free_irq(unsigned int, void *); 90 91 struct device; 92 93 extern int __must_check devm_request_irq(struct device *dev, unsigned int irq, 94 irq_handler_t handler, unsigned long irqflags, 95 const char *devname, void *dev_id); 96 extern void devm_free_irq(struct device *dev, unsigned int irq, void *dev_id); 97 98 /* 99 * On lockdep we dont want to enable hardirqs in hardirq 100 * context. Use local_irq_enable_in_hardirq() to annotate 101 * kernel code that has to do this nevertheless (pretty much 102 * the only valid case is for old/broken hardware that is 103 * insanely slow). 104 * 105 * NOTE: in theory this might break fragile code that relies 106 * on hardirq delivery - in practice we dont seem to have such 107 * places left. So the only effect should be slightly increased 108 * irqs-off latencies. 109 */ 110 #ifdef CONFIG_LOCKDEP 111 # define local_irq_enable_in_hardirq() do { } while (0) 112 #else 113 # define local_irq_enable_in_hardirq() local_irq_enable() 114 #endif 115 116 extern void disable_irq_nosync(unsigned int irq); 117 extern void disable_irq(unsigned int irq); 118 extern void enable_irq(unsigned int irq); 119 120 /* The following three functions are for the core kernel use only. */ 121 extern void suspend_device_irqs(void); 122 extern void resume_device_irqs(void); 123 #ifdef CONFIG_PM_SLEEP 124 extern int check_wakeup_irqs(void); 125 #else 126 static inline int check_wakeup_irqs(void) { return 0; } 127 #endif 128 129 #if defined(CONFIG_SMP) && defined(CONFIG_GENERIC_HARDIRQS) 130 131 extern cpumask_var_t irq_default_affinity; 132 133 extern int irq_set_affinity(unsigned int irq, const struct cpumask *cpumask); 134 extern int irq_can_set_affinity(unsigned int irq); 135 extern int irq_select_affinity(unsigned int irq); 136 137 #else /* CONFIG_SMP */ 138 139 static inline int irq_set_affinity(unsigned int irq, const struct cpumask *m) 140 { 141 return -EINVAL; 142 } 143 144 static inline int irq_can_set_affinity(unsigned int irq) 145 { 146 return 0; 147 } 148 149 static inline int irq_select_affinity(unsigned int irq) { return 0; } 150 151 #endif /* CONFIG_SMP && CONFIG_GENERIC_HARDIRQS */ 152 153 #ifdef CONFIG_GENERIC_HARDIRQS 154 /* 155 * Special lockdep variants of irq disabling/enabling. 156 * These should be used for locking constructs that 157 * know that a particular irq context which is disabled, 158 * and which is the only irq-context user of a lock, 159 * that it's safe to take the lock in the irq-disabled 160 * section without disabling hardirqs. 161 * 162 * On !CONFIG_LOCKDEP they are equivalent to the normal 163 * irq disable/enable methods. 164 */ 165 static inline void disable_irq_nosync_lockdep(unsigned int irq) 166 { 167 disable_irq_nosync(irq); 168 #ifdef CONFIG_LOCKDEP 169 local_irq_disable(); 170 #endif 171 } 172 173 static inline void disable_irq_nosync_lockdep_irqsave(unsigned int irq, unsigned long *flags) 174 { 175 disable_irq_nosync(irq); 176 #ifdef CONFIG_LOCKDEP 177 local_irq_save(*flags); 178 #endif 179 } 180 181 static inline void disable_irq_lockdep(unsigned int irq) 182 { 183 disable_irq(irq); 184 #ifdef CONFIG_LOCKDEP 185 local_irq_disable(); 186 #endif 187 } 188 189 static inline void enable_irq_lockdep(unsigned int irq) 190 { 191 #ifdef CONFIG_LOCKDEP 192 local_irq_enable(); 193 #endif 194 enable_irq(irq); 195 } 196 197 static inline void enable_irq_lockdep_irqrestore(unsigned int irq, unsigned long *flags) 198 { 199 #ifdef CONFIG_LOCKDEP 200 local_irq_restore(*flags); 201 #endif 202 enable_irq(irq); 203 } 204 205 /* IRQ wakeup (PM) control: */ 206 extern int set_irq_wake(unsigned int irq, unsigned int on); 207 208 static inline int enable_irq_wake(unsigned int irq) 209 { 210 return set_irq_wake(irq, 1); 211 } 212 213 static inline int disable_irq_wake(unsigned int irq) 214 { 215 return set_irq_wake(irq, 0); 216 } 217 218 #else /* !CONFIG_GENERIC_HARDIRQS */ 219 /* 220 * NOTE: non-genirq architectures, if they want to support the lock 221 * validator need to define the methods below in their asm/irq.h 222 * files, under an #ifdef CONFIG_LOCKDEP section. 223 */ 224 #ifndef CONFIG_LOCKDEP 225 # define disable_irq_nosync_lockdep(irq) disable_irq_nosync(irq) 226 # define disable_irq_nosync_lockdep_irqsave(irq, flags) \ 227 disable_irq_nosync(irq) 228 # define disable_irq_lockdep(irq) disable_irq(irq) 229 # define enable_irq_lockdep(irq) enable_irq(irq) 230 # define enable_irq_lockdep_irqrestore(irq, flags) \ 231 enable_irq(irq) 232 # endif 233 234 static inline int enable_irq_wake(unsigned int irq) 235 { 236 return 0; 237 } 238 239 static inline int disable_irq_wake(unsigned int irq) 240 { 241 return 0; 242 } 243 #endif /* CONFIG_GENERIC_HARDIRQS */ 244 245 #ifndef __ARCH_SET_SOFTIRQ_PENDING 246 #define set_softirq_pending(x) (local_softirq_pending() = (x)) 247 #define or_softirq_pending(x) (local_softirq_pending() |= (x)) 248 #endif 249 250 /* Some architectures might implement lazy enabling/disabling of 251 * interrupts. In some cases, such as stop_machine, we might want 252 * to ensure that after a local_irq_disable(), interrupts have 253 * really been disabled in hardware. Such architectures need to 254 * implement the following hook. 255 */ 256 #ifndef hard_irq_disable 257 #define hard_irq_disable() do { } while(0) 258 #endif 259 260 /* PLEASE, avoid to allocate new softirqs, if you need not _really_ high 261 frequency threaded job scheduling. For almost all the purposes 262 tasklets are more than enough. F.e. all serial device BHs et 263 al. should be converted to tasklets, not to softirqs. 264 */ 265 266 enum 267 { 268 HI_SOFTIRQ=0, 269 TIMER_SOFTIRQ, 270 NET_TX_SOFTIRQ, 271 NET_RX_SOFTIRQ, 272 BLOCK_SOFTIRQ, 273 TASKLET_SOFTIRQ, 274 SCHED_SOFTIRQ, 275 HRTIMER_SOFTIRQ, 276 RCU_SOFTIRQ, /* Preferable RCU should always be the last softirq */ 277 278 NR_SOFTIRQS 279 }; 280 281 /* softirq mask and active fields moved to irq_cpustat_t in 282 * asm/hardirq.h to get better cache usage. KAO 283 */ 284 285 struct softirq_action 286 { 287 void (*action)(struct softirq_action *); 288 }; 289 290 asmlinkage void do_softirq(void); 291 asmlinkage void __do_softirq(void); 292 extern void open_softirq(int nr, void (*action)(struct softirq_action *)); 293 extern void softirq_init(void); 294 #define __raise_softirq_irqoff(nr) do { or_softirq_pending(1UL << (nr)); } while (0) 295 extern void raise_softirq_irqoff(unsigned int nr); 296 extern void raise_softirq(unsigned int nr); 297 298 /* This is the worklist that queues up per-cpu softirq work. 299 * 300 * send_remote_sendirq() adds work to these lists, and 301 * the softirq handler itself dequeues from them. The queues 302 * are protected by disabling local cpu interrupts and they must 303 * only be accessed by the local cpu that they are for. 304 */ 305 DECLARE_PER_CPU(struct list_head [NR_SOFTIRQS], softirq_work_list); 306 307 /* Try to send a softirq to a remote cpu. If this cannot be done, the 308 * work will be queued to the local cpu. 309 */ 310 extern void send_remote_softirq(struct call_single_data *cp, int cpu, int softirq); 311 312 /* Like send_remote_softirq(), but the caller must disable local cpu interrupts 313 * and compute the current cpu, passed in as 'this_cpu'. 314 */ 315 extern void __send_remote_softirq(struct call_single_data *cp, int cpu, 316 int this_cpu, int softirq); 317 318 /* Tasklets --- multithreaded analogue of BHs. 319 320 Main feature differing them of generic softirqs: tasklet 321 is running only on one CPU simultaneously. 322 323 Main feature differing them of BHs: different tasklets 324 may be run simultaneously on different CPUs. 325 326 Properties: 327 * If tasklet_schedule() is called, then tasklet is guaranteed 328 to be executed on some cpu at least once after this. 329 * If the tasklet is already scheduled, but its excecution is still not 330 started, it will be executed only once. 331 * If this tasklet is already running on another CPU (or schedule is called 332 from tasklet itself), it is rescheduled for later. 333 * Tasklet is strictly serialized wrt itself, but not 334 wrt another tasklets. If client needs some intertask synchronization, 335 he makes it with spinlocks. 336 */ 337 338 struct tasklet_struct 339 { 340 struct tasklet_struct *next; 341 unsigned long state; 342 atomic_t count; 343 void (*func)(unsigned long); 344 unsigned long data; 345 }; 346 347 #define DECLARE_TASKLET(name, func, data) \ 348 struct tasklet_struct name = { NULL, 0, ATOMIC_INIT(0), func, data } 349 350 #define DECLARE_TASKLET_DISABLED(name, func, data) \ 351 struct tasklet_struct name = { NULL, 0, ATOMIC_INIT(1), func, data } 352 353 354 enum 355 { 356 TASKLET_STATE_SCHED, /* Tasklet is scheduled for execution */ 357 TASKLET_STATE_RUN /* Tasklet is running (SMP only) */ 358 }; 359 360 #ifdef CONFIG_SMP 361 static inline int tasklet_trylock(struct tasklet_struct *t) 362 { 363 return !test_and_set_bit(TASKLET_STATE_RUN, &(t)->state); 364 } 365 366 static inline void tasklet_unlock(struct tasklet_struct *t) 367 { 368 smp_mb__before_clear_bit(); 369 clear_bit(TASKLET_STATE_RUN, &(t)->state); 370 } 371 372 static inline void tasklet_unlock_wait(struct tasklet_struct *t) 373 { 374 while (test_bit(TASKLET_STATE_RUN, &(t)->state)) { barrier(); } 375 } 376 #else 377 #define tasklet_trylock(t) 1 378 #define tasklet_unlock_wait(t) do { } while (0) 379 #define tasklet_unlock(t) do { } while (0) 380 #endif 381 382 extern void __tasklet_schedule(struct tasklet_struct *t); 383 384 static inline void tasklet_schedule(struct tasklet_struct *t) 385 { 386 if (!test_and_set_bit(TASKLET_STATE_SCHED, &t->state)) 387 __tasklet_schedule(t); 388 } 389 390 extern void __tasklet_hi_schedule(struct tasklet_struct *t); 391 392 static inline void tasklet_hi_schedule(struct tasklet_struct *t) 393 { 394 if (!test_and_set_bit(TASKLET_STATE_SCHED, &t->state)) 395 __tasklet_hi_schedule(t); 396 } 397 398 399 static inline void tasklet_disable_nosync(struct tasklet_struct *t) 400 { 401 atomic_inc(&t->count); 402 smp_mb__after_atomic_inc(); 403 } 404 405 static inline void tasklet_disable(struct tasklet_struct *t) 406 { 407 tasklet_disable_nosync(t); 408 tasklet_unlock_wait(t); 409 smp_mb(); 410 } 411 412 static inline void tasklet_enable(struct tasklet_struct *t) 413 { 414 smp_mb__before_atomic_dec(); 415 atomic_dec(&t->count); 416 } 417 418 static inline void tasklet_hi_enable(struct tasklet_struct *t) 419 { 420 smp_mb__before_atomic_dec(); 421 atomic_dec(&t->count); 422 } 423 424 extern void tasklet_kill(struct tasklet_struct *t); 425 extern void tasklet_kill_immediate(struct tasklet_struct *t, unsigned int cpu); 426 extern void tasklet_init(struct tasklet_struct *t, 427 void (*func)(unsigned long), unsigned long data); 428 429 /* 430 * Autoprobing for irqs: 431 * 432 * probe_irq_on() and probe_irq_off() provide robust primitives 433 * for accurate IRQ probing during kernel initialization. They are 434 * reasonably simple to use, are not "fooled" by spurious interrupts, 435 * and, unlike other attempts at IRQ probing, they do not get hung on 436 * stuck interrupts (such as unused PS2 mouse interfaces on ASUS boards). 437 * 438 * For reasonably foolproof probing, use them as follows: 439 * 440 * 1. clear and/or mask the device's internal interrupt. 441 * 2. sti(); 442 * 3. irqs = probe_irq_on(); // "take over" all unassigned idle IRQs 443 * 4. enable the device and cause it to trigger an interrupt. 444 * 5. wait for the device to interrupt, using non-intrusive polling or a delay. 445 * 6. irq = probe_irq_off(irqs); // get IRQ number, 0=none, negative=multiple 446 * 7. service the device to clear its pending interrupt. 447 * 8. loop again if paranoia is required. 448 * 449 * probe_irq_on() returns a mask of allocated irq's. 450 * 451 * probe_irq_off() takes the mask as a parameter, 452 * and returns the irq number which occurred, 453 * or zero if none occurred, or a negative irq number 454 * if more than one irq occurred. 455 */ 456 457 #if defined(CONFIG_GENERIC_HARDIRQS) && !defined(CONFIG_GENERIC_IRQ_PROBE) 458 static inline unsigned long probe_irq_on(void) 459 { 460 return 0; 461 } 462 static inline int probe_irq_off(unsigned long val) 463 { 464 return 0; 465 } 466 static inline unsigned int probe_irq_mask(unsigned long val) 467 { 468 return 0; 469 } 470 #else 471 extern unsigned long probe_irq_on(void); /* returns 0 on failure */ 472 extern int probe_irq_off(unsigned long); /* returns 0 or negative on failure */ 473 extern unsigned int probe_irq_mask(unsigned long); /* returns mask of ISA interrupts */ 474 #endif 475 476 #ifdef CONFIG_PROC_FS 477 /* Initialize /proc/irq/ */ 478 extern void init_irq_proc(void); 479 #else 480 static inline void init_irq_proc(void) 481 { 482 } 483 #endif 484 485 #if defined(CONFIG_GENERIC_HARDIRQS) && defined(CONFIG_DEBUG_SHIRQ) 486 extern void debug_poll_all_shared_irqs(void); 487 #else 488 static inline void debug_poll_all_shared_irqs(void) { } 489 #endif 490 491 int show_interrupts(struct seq_file *p, void *v); 492 493 struct irq_desc; 494 495 extern int early_irq_init(void); 496 extern int arch_probe_nr_irqs(void); 497 extern int arch_early_irq_init(void); 498 extern int arch_init_chip_data(struct irq_desc *desc, int cpu); 499 500 #endif 501