Date: Mon, 30 Jan 2012 22:37:28 +0100 Message-ID: Subject: [PATCH] Unhandled IRQs on AMD E-450: temporarily switch to low-performance polling IRQ mode From: Jeroen Van den Keybus To: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org Cc: Clemens Ladisch , "Huang, Shane" , Borislav Petkov , "Nguyen, Dong" , jesse.brandeburg@gmail.com Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 Sender: linux-kernel-owner@vger.kernel.org Precedence: bulk List-ID: X-Mailing-List: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org X-RedHat-Spam-Score: -4.898 (DKIM_ADSP_CUSTOM_MED,DKIM_SIGNED,FREEMAIL_FROM,RCVD_IN_DNSWL_HI,T_DKIM_INVALID,T_RP_MATCHES_RCVD) X-Scanned-By: MIMEDefang 2.67 on 10.5.11.12 X-Scanned-By: MIMEDefang 2.68 on 10.5.110.19 Status: RO Content-Length: 7029 Lines: 189 It seems that some motherboard designs using the ASM1083 PCI/PCIe bridge (PCI device ID 1b21:1080, Rev. 01) suffer from stuck IRQ lines on the PCI bus (causing the kernel to emit 'IRQxx: nobody cared' and disable the IRQ). The following patch is an attempt to mitigate the serious impact of permanently disabling an IRQ in that case and actually make PCI devices better usable on this platform. It seems that the bridge fails to issue a IRQ deassertion message on the PCIe bus, when the relevant driver causes the interrupting PCI device to deassert its IRQ line. To solve this issue, it was tried to re-issue an IRQ on a PCI device being able to do so (e1000 in this case), but we suspect that the attempt to re-assert/deassert may have occurred too soon after the initial IRQ for the ASM1083. Anyway, it didn't work but if, after some delay, a new IRQ occurred, the related IRQ deassertion message eventually did clear the IOAPIC IRQ. It would be useful to re-enable the IRQ here. Therefore the patch below to poll_spurious_irqs() in spurious.c is proposed, It does the following: 1. lets the kernel decide that an IRQ is unhandled after only 10 positives (instead of 100,000); 2. briefly (a few seconds or so, currently 1 s) switches to polling IRQ at a higher rate than usual (100..1,000Hz instead of 10Hz, currently 100Hz), but not too high to avoid excessive CPU load. Any device drivers 'see' their interrupts handled with a higher latency than usual, but they will still operate properly; 3. afterwards, simply reenable the IRQ. If proper operation of the PCIe legacy IRQ line emulation is restored after 3, the system operates again at normal performance. If the IRQ is still stuck after this procedure, the sequence repeats. If a genuinely stuck IRQ is used with this solution, the system would simply sustain short bursts of 10 unhandled IRQs per second, and use polling mode indefinitely at a moderate 100Hz rate. It seemed a good alternative to the default irqpoll behaviour to me, which is why I left it in poll_spurious_irqs() (instead of creating a new kernel option). Additionally, if any device happens to share an IRQ with a faulty one, that device is no longer banned forever. Debugging output is still present and may be removed. Bad IRQ reporting is also commented out now. I have now tried it for about 2 months and I can conclude the following: 1. The patch works and, judging from my Firewire card interrupt on IRQ16, which repeats every 64 secs, I can confirm that the IRQ usually gets reset when a new IRQ arrives (polling mode runs for 64 seconds every time). 2. When testing a SiL-3114 SATA PCI card behind the ASM1083, I could keep this running at fairly high speeds (50..70MB/s) for an hour or so, but eventually the SiL driver crashed. In such conditions the PCI system had to deal with a few hundred IRQs per second / polling mode kicking in every 5..10 seconds). I would like to thank Clemens Ladisch for his invaluable help in finding a solution (and providing a patch to avoid my SATA going down every time during debugging). Signed-off-by: Jeroen Van den Keybus Make it less chatty. Only kick it in if we detect an ASM1083 PCI bridge. Josh Boyer ====== --- linux-2.6.orig/kernel/irq/spurious.c +++ linux-2.6/kernel/irq/spurious.c @@ -18,6 +18,8 @@ static int irqfixup __read_mostly; +int irq_poll_and_retry = 0; + #define POLL_SPURIOUS_IRQ_INTERVAL (HZ/10) static void poll_spurious_irqs(unsigned long dummy); static DEFINE_TIMER(poll_spurious_irq_timer, poll_spurious_irqs, 0, 0); @@ -141,12 +143,13 @@ out: static void poll_spurious_irqs(unsigned long dummy) { struct irq_desc *desc; - int i; + int i, poll_again; if (atomic_inc_return(&irq_poll_active) != 1) goto out; irq_poll_cpu = smp_processor_id(); + poll_again = 0; /* Will stay false as long as no polling candidate is found */ for_each_irq_desc(i, desc) { unsigned int state; @@ -159,14 +162,33 @@ static void poll_spurious_irqs(unsigned if (!(state & IRQS_SPURIOUS_DISABLED)) continue; - local_irq_disable(); - try_one_irq(i, desc, true); - local_irq_enable(); + /* We end up here with a disabled spurious interrupt. + desc->irqs_unhandled now tracks the number of times + the interrupt has been polled */ + if (irq_poll_and_retry) { + if (desc->irqs_unhandled < 100) { /* 1 second delay with poll frequency 100 Hz */ + local_irq_disable(); + try_one_irq(i, desc, true); + local_irq_enable(); + desc->irqs_unhandled++; + poll_again = 1; + } else { + irq_enable(desc); /* Reenable the interrupt line */ + desc->depth--; + desc->istate &= (~IRQS_SPURIOUS_DISABLED); + desc->irqs_unhandled = 0; + } + } else { + local_irq_disable(); + try_one_irq(i, desc, true); + local_irq_enable(); + } } + if (poll_again) + mod_timer(&poll_spurious_irq_timer, + jiffies + POLL_SPURIOUS_IRQ_INTERVAL); out: atomic_dec(&irq_poll_active); - mod_timer(&poll_spurious_irq_timer, - jiffies + POLL_SPURIOUS_IRQ_INTERVAL); } static inline int bad_action_ret(irqreturn_t action_ret) @@ -177,11 +199,19 @@ static inline int bad_action_ret(irqretu } /* - * If 99,900 of the previous 100,000 interrupts have not been handled + * If 9 of the previous 10 interrupts have not been handled * then assume that the IRQ is stuck in some manner. Drop a diagnostic * and try to turn the IRQ off. * - * (The other 100-of-100,000 interrupts may have been a correctly + * Although this may cause early deactivation of a sporadically + * malfunctioning IRQ line, the poll system will: + * a) Poll it for 100 cycles at a 100 Hz rate + * b) Reenable it afterwards + * + * In worst case, with current settings, this will cause short bursts + * of 10 interrupts every second. + * + * (The other single interrupt may have been a correctly * functioning device sharing an IRQ with the failing one) */ static void @@ -302,19 +332,24 @@ void note_interrupt(unsigned int irq, st } desc->irq_count++; - if (likely(desc->irq_count < 100000)) + if (likely(desc->irq_count < 10)) return; desc->irq_count = 0; - if (unlikely(desc->irqs_unhandled > 99900)) { + if (unlikely(desc->irqs_unhandled >= 9)) { /* - * The interrupt is stuck + * The interrupt might be stuck */ - __report_bad_irq(irq, desc, action_ret); + if (!irq_poll_and_retry) { + __report_bad_irq(irq, desc, action_ret); + printk(KERN_EMERG "Disabling IRQ %d\n", irq); + } else { + printk(KERN_INFO "IRQ %d might be stuck. Polling\n", + irq); + } /* * Now kill the IRQ */ - printk(KERN_EMERG "Disabling IRQ #%d\n", irq); desc->istate |= IRQS_SPURIOUS_DISABLED; desc->depth++; irq_disable(desc); --- linux-2.6.orig/drivers/pci/quirks.c +++ linux-2.6/drivers/pci/quirks.c @@ -1677,6 +1677,22 @@ DECLARE_PCI_FIXUP_FINAL(PCI_VENDOR_ID_IN DECLARE_PCI_FIXUP_FINAL(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, 0x260a, quirk_intel_pcie_pm); DECLARE_PCI_FIXUP_FINAL(PCI_VENDOR_ID_INTEL, 0x260b, quirk_intel_pcie_pm); +/* ASM108x transparent PCI bridges apparently have broken IRQ deassert + * handling. This causes interrupts to get "stuck" and eventually disabled. + * However, the interrupts are often shared and disabling them is fairly bad. + * It's been somewhat successful to switch to polling mode and retry after + * a bit, so let's do that. + */ +extern int irq_poll_and_retry; +static void quirk_asm108x_poll_interrupts(struct pci_dev *dev) +{ + dev_info(&dev->dev, "Buggy bridge found [%04x:%04x]\n", + dev->vendor, dev->device); + dev_info(&dev->dev, "Stuck interrupts will be polled and retried\n"); + irq_poll_and_retry = 1; +} +DECLARE_PCI_FIXUP_EARLY(PCI_VENDOR_ID_ASMEDIA, 0x1080, quirk_asm108x_poll_interrupts); + #ifdef CONFIG_X86_IO_APIC /* * Boot interrupts on some chipsets cannot be turned off. For these chipsets,