[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] RE: [Xen-devel] [PATCH] Re-enable MSI support
[Kevin Tian] >> From: Espen Skoglund >> Sent: Wednesday, December 10, 2008 7:34 PM >> >> [Yunhong Jiang] >>> This patch try to do some cleanup for these issues. >>> 1) The basic idea is to remove the pci_dev's lock, instead, we try >>> to use the big pcidevs_lock to protect the whole pci_dev >>> stuff. It including both pci_dev adding/removing, and also the >>> assignment of the devices. We checked the code and seems there is >>> no critical code path for this. We try to use fine-grained lock >>> and seems the code will be very tricky. >>> 2) Split the pci_enable_msi into two step, firstly it will just >>> construct the msi_desc through pci_enable_msi without holding the >>> irq_desc lock, and then it will setup msi through setup_msi_irq >>> with irq_desc holded. >>> 3) Change the iommu->lock and hd->mapping_lock to be irq_save. >>> 4) Fix to some minor issues. >> >>> Now the lock sequence is: pcidevs_lock -> domai's event_lock -> >>> iommu's lock -> hvm_iommu's mapping_lock. The irq_desc's lock will >>> always be the last lock be hold for peformance consideration. >> >> So what exactly is it that pcidevs_lock is supposed to "protect" now? >> Does it indicate that someone is holding a reference to a pci_dev? >> Does it indicate that someone will modify some pci_dev? Does it >> indicate that someone is messing around with interrupts or MSI >> descriptors? > I think it protects all above. As those operations are all rare, such a > big lock can avoid complex lock/unlock sequence regarding to different > paths to different resource of an assigned device. Except, since it is used as a read_lock most of the time it does not actually protect things in the way a spinlock would do. eSk _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-devel
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