Date: Tue, 9 Sep 2008 00:08:05 +0100 From: Oliver Peter <lists@peter.de.com> To: John Baldwin <jhb@freebsd.org> Cc: freebsd-acpi@freebsd.org Subject: Re: kernel: interrupt storm detected on "irq22:"; throttling interrupt source [7.0-RELEASE] Message-ID: <20080909000805.5dc4407c@delorean.geonosis.homeunix.org> In-Reply-To: <200809081108.50135.jhb@freebsd.org> References: <20080901141216.72601dfb@dilbert.office.centralnic.com> <200809081108.50135.jhb@freebsd.org>
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Hi John, Thanks for your reply. On Mon, 8 Sep 2008 11:08:49 -0400 John Baldwin <jhb@freebsd.org> wrote: > On Monday 01 September 2008 09:12:16 am Oliver Peter wrote: > > Hi, > > > > For about 6 weeks I'm suffering an interrupt storm on my production > > machine which is running 7.0-RELEASE-p3/amd64. > > > > The kernel is flooding my syslog with the following messages[1]. > > A full dmesg can be found here[2]. > > > > As discribed in "Using and Debugging FreeBSD ACPI" I already tried > > to disable apic during boot time but that's a bad idea because it > > seems that the SATA2 onboard controller has to have apic loaded - > > please correct me if I'm wrong. > > > > /boot/loader.conf: > > hint.apic.0.disabled="1" > > > > Doesn't work for me. > > > > Btw. I think it's worth it to have a little note in that part of > > the documentation which says something about possible failures > > during the boot time. > > > > Thanks for any suggestions. > > There are two possible causes of an interrupt storm: 1) some device > is actually using IRQ 22 but FreeBSD thinks it is using something > else. This doesn't happen very often as it is generally a bug in the > BIOS and one of the tables it generates. This used to happen more > often in older versions of FreeBSD that had bugs or limitations in > the code that figured out which IRQ PCI devices used. How can I find out exactly which device is using IRQ 22? Maybe I can disable it - i.e. USB is not needed at all. > 2) There is a > bug in the driver for one of the devices on IRQ 22. In this case the > only device you have on IRQ is atapci0, so it may be a bug in the > ata(4) driver, possibly. You could check to see if the interrupt > handler for the Linux driver for your chipset has extra logic > (currently ata(4) doesn't have any chipset-specific logic for > interrupt handlers AFAIK). Also, you could try examining the > interrupt status register of your controller when you are getting > storms to see if there is a condition set that isn't being cleared by > ata's interrupt handler. ... of course I could do that - but could you please be so kind and explain how to do that? :-) Cheers, O. -- Oliver PETER, email: oliver@peter.de.com, ICQ# 113969174 "If it feels good, you're doing something wrong." -- Coach McTavish
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