On Sun, 18 Oct 2020 10:20:41 +0200 Heiner Kallweit wrote: > >> Otherwise a non-solution could be to make IRQ_FORCED_THREADING > >> configurable. > > > > I have to say I do not understand why we want to defer to a thread the > > hard IRQ that we use in NAPI model. > > > Seems like the current forced threading comes with the big hammer and > thread-ifies all hard irq's. To avoid this all NAPI network drivers > would have to request the interrupt with IRQF_NO_THREAD.
Right, it'd work for some drivers. Other drivers try to take spin locks in their IRQ handlers. What gave me a pause was that we have a busy loop in napi_schedule_prep: bool napi_schedule_prep(struct napi_struct *n) { unsigned long val, new; do { val = READ_ONCE(n->state); if (unlikely(val & NAPIF_STATE_DISABLE)) return false; new = val | NAPIF_STATE_SCHED; /* Sets STATE_MISSED bit if STATE_SCHED was already set * This was suggested by Alexander Duyck, as compiler * emits better code than : * if (val & NAPIF_STATE_SCHED) * new |= NAPIF_STATE_MISSED; */ new |= (val & NAPIF_STATE_SCHED) / NAPIF_STATE_SCHED * NAPIF_STATE_MISSED; } while (cmpxchg(&n->state, val, new) != val); return !(val & NAPIF_STATE_SCHED); } Dunno how acceptable this is to run in an IRQ handler on RT..