On Fri, Oct 16, 2020 at 04:41:50PM +0200, Heiner Kallweit wrote: > On 16.10.2020 16:26, Vladimir Oltean wrote: > > On Fri, Oct 16, 2020 at 01:34:55PM +0200, Heiner Kallweit wrote: > >> I'm aware of the topic, but missing the benefits of the irqoff version > >> unconditionally doesn't seem to be the best option. > > > > What are the benefits of the irqoff version? As far as I see it, the > > only use case for that function is when the caller has _explicitly_ > > disabled interrupts. > > > If the irqoff version wouldn't have a benefit, then I think we wouldn't > have it .. > > > The plain napi_schedule call will check if irqs are disabled. If they > > are, it won't do anything further in that area. There is no performance > > impact except for a check. > > > There is no such check, and in general currently attempts are made to > remove usage of e.g. in_interrupt(). napi_schedule() has additional calls > to local_irq_save() and local_irq_restore().
This has nothing to do with in_interrupt(). Now, to explain where my confusion came from. arm64 has this: static inline unsigned long arch_local_irq_save(void) { unsigned long flags; flags = arch_local_save_flags(); /* * There are too many states with IRQs disabled, just keep the current * state if interrupts are already disabled/masked. */ if (!arch_irqs_disabled_flags(flags)) arch_local_irq_disable(); return flags; } I just thought that the generic implementation had the "if" too.