* Steven Rostedt <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I'm dealing with a problem where I want to know from __do_IRQ in
> kernel/irq/handle.c if the interrupt occurred while the process was in
> user space or kernel space. But the trick here is that it must work
> on all architectures.
>
> Does anyone know of some way that that function can tell if it had
> interrupted the kernel or user space? I know of serveral
> arch-dependent ways, but that's not acceptable right now.
i dont think there's any. user_mode(regs) gets the closest - it might
make sense to generalize it over all arches.
update_process_times() gets an arch-independent 'was the tick user-space
or kernel-space' flag, so the best starting point would be to look at
the output of:
for N in `find . -name '*.c' | xargs grep update_process_times |
grep arch`; do echo $N; done | grep update_process_times |
sort | uniq -c
which gives:
2 update_process_times()
1 update_process_times(CHOOSE_MODE(user_context(UPT_SP(regs)),
6 update_process_times(user);
1 update_process_times(user_mode(fp));
33 update_process_times(user_mode(regs));
2 update_process_times(user_mode_vm(regs));
so ~33 calls use user_mode(regs), and the rest needs to be reviewed and
possibly changed. Looks doable.
Ingo
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