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authorPaolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>2014-11-11 13:14:18 +0100
committerPaolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>2014-11-24 14:37:45 +0100
commit5224c88dd3f771702d450780a25f155e0fc8bb2b (patch)
tree1b0c5806fb6599f184a861598ed057481ee1300f /.gitmodules
parent8092cb71322ca488deeb7c750ff8022ffcc2f9a6 (diff)
downloadqemu-5224c88dd3f771702d450780a25f155e0fc8bb2b.tar.gz
apic: fix incorrect handling of ExtINT interrupts wrt processor priority
This fixes another failure with ExtINT, demonstrated by QNX. The failure mode is as follows: - IPI sent to cpu 0 (bit set in APIC irr) - IPI accepted by cpu 0 (bit cleared in irr, set in isr) - IPI sent to cpu 0 (bit set in both irr and isr) - PIC interrupt sent to cpu 0 The PIC interrupt causes CPU_INTERRUPT_HARD to be set, but apic_irq_pending observes that the highest pending APIC interrupt priority (the IPI) is the same as the processor priority (since the IPI is still being handled), so apic_get_interrupt returns a spurious interrupt rather than the pending PIC interrupt. The result is an endless sequence of spurious interrupts, since nothing will clear CPU_INTERRUPT_HARD. Instead, ExtINT interrupts should have ignored the processor priority. Calling apic_check_pic early in apic_get_interrupt ensures that apic_deliver_pic_intr is called instead of delivering the spurious interrupt. apic_deliver_pic_intr then clears CPU_INTERRUPT_HARD if needed. Reported-by: Richard Bilson <rbilson@qnx.com> Tested-by: Richard Bilson <rbilson@qnx.com> Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
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