Commits
Jon Hunter committed b62b2cf5759
irqdomain: Fix handling of type settings for existing mappings When mapping an IRQ, it is possible that a mapping for the IRQ already exists. If mapping does exist then there are the following issues with regard to the handling of the IRQ type settings ... 1. If the domain is part of a hierarchy, then: a. We do not check that the type settings for the existing mapping match those of the new mapping. b. We do not check to see if the type settings have been programmed yet (and they might not have been) and so we may never set the type. 2. If the domain is NOT part of a hierarchy, we will overwrite the current type settings programmed if they are different from the previous mapping. Please note that irq_create_mapping() calls irq_find_mapping() to check if a mapping already exists. Although, it may be unlikely that the type settings for a shared interrupt would not match, nonetheless we should check for this. Therefore, to fix this check if a mapping exists (regardless of whether the domain is part of a hierarchy or not) and if it does then: 1. Return the IRQ number if the type settings match or are not specified. 2. Program the type settings and return the IRQ number if the type settings have not been programmed yet. 3. Otherwise if the type setting do not match, then print a warning and don't return the IRQ number. Furthermore, add a warning if the type return by irq_domain_translate() has bits outside the sense mask set and then clear these bits. If these bits are not cleared then this will cause the comparision of the type settings for an existing mapping to fail with that of the new mapping even if the sense bit themselves match. The reason being is that the existing type settings are read by calling irq_get_trigger_type() which will clear any bits outside the sense mask. This will allow us to detect irqchips that are not correctly clearing these bits and fix them. Signed-off-by: Jon Hunter <jonathanh@nvidia.com> Reviewed-by: Marc Zyngier <marc.zyngier@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Marc Zyngier <marc.zyngier@arm.com>