Date: Fri, 21 Apr 2017 09:21:23 +0000 From: Tom Vijlbrief <tvijlbrief@gmail.com> To: Mark Millard <markmi@dsl-only.net> Cc: freebsd-arm <freebsd-arm@freebsd.org> Subject: Re: Pine64 spurious interrupts Message-ID: <CAOQrpVd%2BroHjoxhy6rqxy-OmQwcXm91=F=BLb6Gi1itMZ9Pfzw@mail.gmail.com> In-Reply-To: <28157698-A5E9-4194-9B5D-77D7B487ADFB@dsl-only.net> References: <CAOQrpVexBMEaMfRw%2BA0Km35dgYW7QcybRrKnkjOZmbrvX593=Q@mail.gmail.com> <28157698-A5E9-4194-9B5D-77D7B487ADFB@dsl-only.net>
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Hi Mark, Thanks for your feedback! On boot I often find a single spurious interrupt 92 generated on my 1GB Pine64+: root@pine64:~ # dmesg | grep pur gic0: Spurious interrupt detected: last irq: 92 on CPU0 I used to get a lot of 1023's but the current kernel gives me: ic0: Spurious interrupt detected: last irq: 92 on CPU0 root@pine64:~ # gic0: Spurious interrupt detected: last irq: 106 on CPU3 gic0: Spurious interrupt detected: last irq: 27 on CPU0 gic0: Spurious interrupt detected: last irq: 27 on CPU3 gic0: Spurious interrupt detected: last irq: 27 on CPU2 gic0: Spurious interrupt detected: last irq: 27 on CPU2 gic0: Spurious interrupt detected: last irq: 27 on CPU3 gic0: gic0: Spurious interrupt detected: last irq: 27 on CPU2 Spurious interrupt detected: last irq: 27 on CPU1 gic0: Spurious interrupt detected: last irq: 106 on CPU3 gic0: Spurious interrupt detected: last irq: 27 on CPU2 gic0: Spurious interrupt detected: last irq: 27 on CPU1 I want to upgrade my RPI first model (256Mb :-) which is my low power server to this Pine64 board, but this spurious interrupt issue holds me back. Op vr 21 apr. 2017 om 10:57 schreef Mark Millard <markmi@dsl-only.net>: > [I had done the spurious-interrupt code change long enough ago > that having not had any notices of non-1023 for the current > irq that I'd forgotten which board I'd had the problem > with. It was the Pine64+ 2GB. So correcting my earlier > notes. . .] > > On 2017-Apr-21, at 1:07 AM, Tom Vijlbrief <tvijlbrief@gmail.com> wrote: > > > I have a lot of spurious interrupts on my Pine64. > > I've seen this as well. I sent out notes on the > lists back on 2016-Nov-07 and 2017-Jan-28/31. It > is a Pine64+ 2GB. I later got access to a rpi3 > as well but I run the same world and kernel build > on it and so do not know if it would generate the > messages. I'll have to try that at some point. > > I'd seen a couple of the notices on armv7 (a bpim3) > before I'd made any changes to what I build. But > very rare. (I'd swapped the status in my head when > I wrote before.) > > > Even in idle single user mode: > > > > # pstree > > -+= 00001 root /sbin/init -- > > \-+= 01783 root -sh (sh) > > \-+= 01804 root pstree > > \--- 01805 root ps -axwwo user,pid,ppid,pgid,command > > # > > > > gic0: Spurious interrupt detected: last irq: 27 on CPU3 > > gic0: Spurious interrupt detected: last irq: 27 on CPU0 > > gic0: Spurious interrupt detected: last irq: 27 on CPU2 > > gic0: Spurious interrupt detected: last irq: 114 on CPU1 > > gic0: Spurious interrupt detected: last irq: 27 on CPU3 > > gic0: Spurious interrupt detected: last irq: 27 on CPU3 > > gic0: Spurious interrupt detected: last irq: 114 on CPU1 > > gic0: Spurious interrupt detected: last irq: 27 on CPU2 > > gic0: Spurious interrupt detected: last irq: 27 on CPU2 > > gic0: Spurious interrupt detected: last irq: 27 on CPU2 > > gic0: gic0: Spurious interrupt detected: last irq: 27 on CPU3 > > Spurious interrupt detected: last irq: 27 on CPU0 > > gic0: Spurious interrupt detected: last irq: 27 on CPU0 > > gic0: Spurious interrupt detected: last irq: 27 on CPU0 > > gic0: Spurious interrupt detected: last irq: 27 on CPU0 > > gic0: Spurious interrupt detected: last irq: 114 on CPU1 > > gic0: Spurious interrupt detected: last irq: 27 on CPU0 > > gic0: Spurious interrupt detected: last irq: 27 on CPU0 > > > > When building world (3 threads) the frequency is about a few each > second, idle perhaps a few each hour. > > I got thousands in sort order during buildworld buildkernel > (-j4). Idle was normally rare for one to be generated but > it did happen on occasion. > > If I re-enable the notices I should try -j3 vs. -j4 > and see how much of a difference it makes. > > The 1023 IRQ can be delivered because another core > has handled the original IRQ as I remember what I > quoted in the prior message. So keeping all cores > busy might generate more of these notices. > > > I have ethernet connected and a small USB hard disk with it's own power > supply, which hosts /usr/{src,obj,ports}. > > Similarly here (but an SSD on a powered hub), with the > whole root file system on the SSD. Only booting through > the kernel stage comes from /dev/mmcsd0 . > > > In addition I noticed an ethernet lock up from time to time. Executing > "dmesg" in a ssh session is often sufficient to trigger it. > > I used to get this but I've not seen it since the > recent fixes to fork behavior. May be it would happen > again if I re-enabled the gic0 messages for current > irq 1023, another potential experiment. > > One of the fixes to fork was avoiding interrupts > corrupting a special register. > > > The weird thing is that after some boots (perhaps 1 out of 10) the > spurious interrupts do not happen! I have not been able to detect a pattern > here. > > I also had occasions when it would not happen after booting, > or at least for a significant time after booting, even if > I did a buildworld buildkernel. I did have examples where > it eventually started getting the messages again. > > > Can others reproduce these findings? > > I have in the past but I currently have things set up > to generate messages only when the current irq is not > 1023 --which generates no such messages to speak of. > > > Thanks in advance for any hints. > > I only got as far as learning that the current IRQ > was (nearly?) always 1023. I really did not learn > any more. (I went after investigating fork issues > once I could use the console reasonably.) > > I've not figured out how to get any more useful > information so far. > > But the code change that I sent should get rid of the > notices. That in turn makes the console far more useful. > Other than that it just masks the problem, whatever the > problem is. > > === > Mark Millard > markmi at dsl-only.net > > > >
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