Marcel Moolenaar
eead2d551c
Protect against broken hardware. In this particular case, protect against
H/W not de-asserting the interrupt at all. On x86, and because of the following conditions, this results in a hard hang with interrupts disabled: 1. The uart(4) driver uses a spin lock to protect against concurrent access to the H/W. Spin locks disable and restore interrupts. 2. Restoring the interrupt on x86 always writes the flags register. Even if we're restoring the interrupt from disabled to disabled. 3. The x86 CPU has a short window in which interrupts are enabled when the flags register is written. 4. The uart(4) driver registers a fast interrupt by default. To catch this case, we first try to clear any pending H/W interrupts and in particular, before setting up the interrupt. This makes sure the interrupt is masked on the PIC. The interrupt handler now has a limit set on the number of iterations it'll go through to clear interrupt conditions. If the limit is hit, the handler will return FILTER_SCHEDULE_THREAD. The attach function will check for this return code and avoid setting up the interrupt and foce polling in that case. Obtained from: Juniper Networks, Inc.
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