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authorJohannes Berg <johannes.berg@intel.com>2022-05-06 16:46:12 +0300
committerRichard Weinberger <richard@nod.at>2022-05-27 10:03:41 +0300
commitd5a9597d6916a76663085db984cb8fe97f0a5c56 (patch)
treeb06153c49cceff45e0cf636496f6bcd44163258d /arch/arm/mach-ux500
parent2419ac3272669240e70c967bacaa49be943b6344 (diff)
downloadlinux-d5a9597d6916a76663085db984cb8fe97f0a5c56.tar.xz
um: line: Use separate IRQs per line
Today, all possible serial lines (ssl*=) as well as all possible consoles (con*=) each share a single interrupt (with a fixed number) with others of the same type. Now, if you have two lines, say ssl0 and ssl1, and one of them is connected to an fd you cannot read (e.g. a file), but the other gets a read interrupt, then both of them get the interrupt since it's shared. Then, the read() call will return EOF, since it's a file being written and there's nothing to read (at least not at the current offset, at the end). Unfortunately, this is treated as a read error, and we close this line, losing all the possible output. It might be possible to work around this and make the IRQ sharing work, however, now that we have dynamically allocated IRQs that are easy to use, simply use that to achieve separating between the events; then there's no interrupt for that line and we never attempt the read in the first place, thus not closing the line. This manifested itself in the wifi hostap/hwsim tests where the parallel script communicates via one serial console and the kernel messages go to another (a file) and sending data on the communication console caused the kernel messages to stop flowing into the file. Reported-by: Jouni Malinen <j@w1.fi> Signed-off-by: Johannes Berg <johannes.berg@intel.com> Acked-By: anton ivanov <anton.ivanov@cambridgegreys.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Weinberger <richard@nod.at>
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