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GIC: Dont disable INT in ack callback

Masking in the ack callback fails to work with handle_percpu_irq and handle_edge_irq.
The interrupt stays disabled after the first invocation since percpu and edge irq do
not unmask an interrupt after handling it. For handle_level_irq masking in the ack
is redundant because ack is always called after mask in the mask_ack function.

Masking in the ack function is required only when __do_IRQ was used instead of flow
handlers, but using __do_IRQ has been deprecated.

Remove the masking of interrupt from the ack callback.

Signed-off-by: Abhijeet Dharmapurikar <adharmap@codeaurora.org>
Signed-off-by: Jeff Ohlstein <johlstei@codeaurora.org>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Walker <dwalker@codeaurora.org>
Abhijeet Dharmapurikar 14 жил өмнө
parent
commit
846afbd1fe
1 өөрчлөгдсөн 0 нэмэгдсэн , 14 устгасан
  1. 0 14
      arch/arm/common/gic.c

+ 0 - 14
arch/arm/common/gic.c

@@ -67,25 +67,11 @@ static inline unsigned int gic_irq(unsigned int irq)
 
 /*
  * Routines to acknowledge, disable and enable interrupts
- *
- * Linux assumes that when we're done with an interrupt we need to
- * unmask it, in the same way we need to unmask an interrupt when
- * we first enable it.
- *
- * The GIC has a separate notion of "end of interrupt" to re-enable
- * an interrupt after handling, in order to support hardware
- * prioritisation.
- *
- * We can make the GIC behave in the way that Linux expects by making
- * our "acknowledge" routine disable the interrupt, then mark it as
- * complete.
  */
 static void gic_ack_irq(unsigned int irq)
 {
-	u32 mask = 1 << (irq % 32);
 
 	spin_lock(&irq_controller_lock);
-	writel(mask, gic_dist_base(irq) + GIC_DIST_ENABLE_CLEAR + (gic_irq(irq) / 32) * 4);
 	writel(gic_irq(irq), gic_cpu_base(irq) + GIC_CPU_EOI);
 	spin_unlock(&irq_controller_lock);
 }