On Wed, Aug 23, 2006 at 12:53:49PM -0700, David Christensen wrote: > This "lost interrupt" type of problem is addressed by the use of the > status_tag > field in the status block. (Listed as bge_rsvd0 in the bge_status_block > structure). > Everytime the status block is updated a new tag value is written to the > status block. > When the ISR starts the driver should record the status_tag value. At > the end > of the ISR, the driver should compare the current status_tag value is > the status > block with the value recorded on entry to the ISR. If the values are > the same > then no additional status block updates have occurred so there shouldn't > be > any packets hanging around. If the values are different then additional > packets > or completions are waiting around so the ISR should loop around again. > At the > end of the ISR the driver will write the status_tag value it last > handled to a > mailbox register, letting the hardware know the last status block update > handled. > If necessary the hardware will generate a new interrupt and start the > process over > again. > > This entire process should be included in the Linux driver, I don't see > it being > used in the bge driver (bge_intr()). >
Hi, I have a question too. How we know generated interrupt is ours? It seems that status block could be updated before/after generation of an interrupt. If the interrupt is shared with other devices what is correct way to know the origion of the interrupt? -- Regards, Pyun YongHyeon _______________________________________________ freebsd-net@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-net To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"