On Thursday 27 April 2006 21:10, Protasevich, Natalie wrote:
> >
> > >There are probably better ways to control 224 possible IRQs by their
> > >total number instead of their range, and per-cpu IDTs are the better
> > >answer to the IRQ shortage altogether. But just going back
> > to the way
> > >it was wouldn't be right I think.
> > >We were able to run 2 generations of
> > >systems only because we had this compression, other big systems
> > >benefited from it as well.
> >
> > I don't propose reverting the IRQ re-name patch and breaking
> > the big iron without replacing it with something else that works.
>
> Len, maybe it sounds dramatic and/or extreme, but how about getting rid
> of IRQs and just having GSI-vector pair.
> I intuitively think that would be possible (not that I have all the
> details lined up :)
> And this would probably take away confusing IRQ abstraction out once and
> for all? I think something like that is done in ia64.
x86 users are attached to their interrupt numbers I think back from the bad old
days with only 16 interrupts and interrupt sharing didn't work. We might have a revolt
in the user base if /proc/interrupts didn't display them anymore @)
But I guess using GSI/vector internally only would be fine.
-Andi
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