Re: Where is the interrupt going?

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Quite right. I read it too quickly and thought it had succeeded when it had failed. I will modify the module to do the shared IRQ and then try the noapic test again. Exactly why I reserved the right to do it again.

This is good because it means the hammer may work after all.

Thank you very much and I will post to let you know the outcome.

Quoting Marin Mitov <[email protected]>, on Thu 22 Nov 2007 07:18:01 PM PST:

Hi,

On Friday 23 November 2007 02:48:53 am you wrote:
I tried the hammer and the problem persists.
observer@bbb:~$ cat /proc/cmdline
root=UUID=8b3c3666-22c3-4c04-b399-ece266f2ef30 ro noapic quiet splash

However, I reserve the right to try the hammer again in the future.
When I look at /proc/interrupts without the APIC:
observer@bbb:~$ cat /proc/interrupts
            CPU0
   0:        144    XT-PIC-XT        timer
   1:         10    XT-PIC-XT        i8042
   2:          0    XT-PIC-XT        cascade
   5:     100000    XT-PIC-XT        ohci_hcd:usb5, mxser
   6:          5    XT-PIC-XT        floppy
   7:          1    XT-PIC-XT        parport0
   8:          3    XT-PIC-XT        rtc
   9:          1    XT-PIC-XT        acpi, uhci_hcd:usb2
  10:     100000    XT-PIC-XT        ohci_hcd:usb4, ehci_hcd:usb6,
r128@pci:0000:01:00.0
  11:       2231    XT-PIC-XT        uhci_hcd:usb1, ohci_hcd:usb3, eth0
  12:        130    XT-PIC-XT        i8042
  14:       4362    XT-PIC-XT        libata
  15:      15315    XT-PIC-XT        libata
NMI:          0
LOC:     130125
ERR:          0
MIS:          0

I do not even see the device that I registered unless it is that
r128... line. However the code printed out in /var/log/messages:

No, this is your radeon 128 board (on AGP I suppose). Could be integrated
on the mobo if it is a server mobo.

Nov 22 16:05:27 bbb kernel: [  104.712473] apc8620: VID = 0x10B5
Nov 22 16:05:27 bbb kernel: [  104.712486] apc8620: mapped addr = e0bd4000
Nov 22 16:05:27 bbb kernel: [  104.713022] apc8620: registered carrier 0
Nov 22 16:05:27 bbb kernel: [  104.713028] apc8620: interrupt data
(0xe1083e40) on irq (10) and status (0x10)

Here is the problem (I suppose):
if status (0x10 hex or 16 decimal) is the value returned by request_irq:
status = request_irq (apcsi[i].board_irq,
                                      apc8620_handler,
                                      IRQF_DISABLED,
                                      DEVICE_NAME,
                                      (void*)&apcsi[i]);
(from your first post), that means the irq is NOT registered, because
according to the LDD v.3 book:
<cite>
The value returned from request_irq to the requesting function is either 0
to indicate success or a negative error code, as usual. It’s not uncommon
for the function to return -EBUSY to signal that another driver is already
using the requested interrupt line.
</cite>
If you grep the kernels's include directory for EBUSY you will find:
#define        EBUSY           16      /* Device or resource busy */
in include/asm-generic/errno-base.h

So I think your mobo has shared (with other devices) irq line on the
PCI/PCIe slot you use for your hardware and these other devices have
already registered shered irq handlers for the same irq (10), so the
attempt to register nonshared irq fails.

Either try to register the irq as shared, or put the hardware on
another slot whose irq line is not shared with other devises
(if such one exists). This info should be available from the mobo
manual book.

which indicates it successfully registered without being shared.

No, as I already explained.
The only problem :-) in my explanation is:
request_irq returns EBUSY (not -EBUSY as should be)

Marin Mitov

When
I have more time, I will changed the code to be a shared IRQ and try
the noapic again.

However, without the noapic /proc/interrupts looks like:
observer@bbb:~$ cat /proc/interrupts
            CPU0
   0:        154   IO-APIC-edge      timer
   1:         10   IO-APIC-edge      i8042
   6:          5   IO-APIC-edge      floppy
   7:          0   IO-APIC-edge      parport0
   8:          3   IO-APIC-edge      rtc
   9:          1   IO-APIC-fasteoi   acpi
  10:          0   IO-APIC-edge      apc8620
  12:        130   IO-APIC-edge      i8042
  14:       2861   IO-APIC-edge      libata
  15:       1049   IO-APIC-edge      libata
  16:     100001   IO-APIC-fasteoi   ohci_hcd:usb5, mxser
  17:          0   IO-APIC-fasteoi   uhci_hcd:usb1, ohci_hcd:usb3
  18:          0   IO-APIC-fasteoi   uhci_hcd:usb2
  19:        187   IO-APIC-fasteoi   eth0
  20:          0   IO-APIC-fasteoi   ohci_hcd:usb4, r128@pci:0000:01:00.0
  21:          0   IO-APIC-fasteoi   ehci_hcd:usb6
NMI:          0
LOC:       8820
ERR:          0
MIS:          0


I have attached the kernel module. The apc8620 is an IndustryPack
carrier card. I can therefore open up N (in this specific case 5) sub
memory windows in the memory mapped PCI address. The kernel module
keeps track of the slot offsets from the memory mapped address so that
the user can simply use read and write instead of a zillion ugly ioctl
calls. Because the kernel module tracks the slot offsets, I place acp
state into the private data of the file pointer. There can also be
multiple carriers on the bus. So, the array in the kernel module keeps
track of the card specific details with the file pointer the slot
specific information. Both are the same structure (bad on my part I
know but I never intended to show my dirty underwear). To get data
from interrupts (asynchronous IO) I was using readv. Now I am using
aio_read and had to make some minor changes that you will see comments
about to accomidate the change.

Just noticed that r128 is not the carrier card...

Thanks for all of the help so far and I hope this information is helpful.

I almost forgot. I also attached the dmesg output and will try the
irqpoll as it suggests. It is just the IRQ 16 is not the one I am
looking for, but is probably related to my mxser problems that I will
get to later.

Quoting Kyle McMartin <[email protected]>, on Wed 21 Nov 2007 06:20:04 PM
PST:
> On Wed, Nov 21, 2007 at 05:08:30PM -0800, Al Niessner wrote:
>> On with the detailed technical information. I developed a kernel module
>> for an PCI card back in 2.4, moved it to 2.6.3, then 2.6.11 or so and
>> now I am trying to move it to 2.6.22. When I began the to move to
>> 2.6.22, I changed all of the deprecated calls for finding the card on
>> the PCI bus, modified the interrupt handler prototype, and changed my
>> readvv/writev to aio_read/aio_write following
>> http://lwn.net/Articles/202449/. So initialization looks like this:
>
> Hi Al,
>
> From the sounds of it, you might have an interrupt routing problem. Can
> you describe the machine you have this plugged into? Possibly attaching
> a copy of "dmesg" and "/proc/interrupts"?
>
> Feel free to attach the driver source to your email if the size is
> reasonable (which it sounds like it is.)
>
> As a "big hammer" in case it is an APIC problem, please try booting the
> kernel with the "noapic" parameter.
>
> cheers,
> 	Kyle





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