swi_add
, swi_remove
,
swi_sched
—
register and schedule software interrupt handlers
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/bus.h>
#include <sys/interrupt.h>
extern struct intr_event *tty_intr_event;
extern struct intr_event *clk_intr_event;
extern void *vm_ih;
int
swi_add
(struct intr_event
**eventp, const char *name,
driver_intr_t handler, void
*arg, int pri, enum intr_type
flags, void **cookiep);
int
swi_remove
(void
*cookie);
void
swi_sched
(void
*cookie, int
flags);
These functions are used to register and schedule software interrupt handlers.
Software interrupt handlers are attached to a software interrupt thread, just
as hardware interrupt handlers are attached to a hardware interrupt thread.
Multiple handlers can be attached to the same thread. Software interrupt
handlers can be used to queue up less critical processing inside of hardware
interrupt handlers so that the work can be done at a later time. Software
interrupt threads are different from other kernel threads in that they are
treated as an interrupt thread. This means that time spent executing these
threads is counted as interrupt time, and that they can be run via a
lightweight context switch.
The swi_add
() function is used to add a
new software interrupt handler to a specified interrupt event. The
eventp argument is an optional pointer to a
struct intr_event pointer. If this argument points to
an existing event that holds a list of interrupt handlers, then this handler
will be attached to that event. Otherwise a new event will be created, and
if eventp is not NULL
, then
the pointer at that address to will be modified to point to the newly
created event. The name argument is used to associate
a name with a specific handler. This name is appended to the name of the
software interrupt thread that this handler is attached to. The
handler argument is the function that will be executed
when the handler is scheduled to run. The arg
parameter will be passed in as the only parameter to
handler when the function is executed. The
pri value specifies the priority of this interrupt
handler relative to other software interrupt handlers. If an interrupt event
is created, then this value is used as the vector, and the
flags argument is used to specify the attributes of a
handler such as INTR_MPSAFE
. The
cookiep argument points to a void
* cookie. This cookie will be set to a value that uniquely identifies
this handler, and is used to schedule the handler for execution later
on.
The swi_remove
() function is used to
teardown an interrupt handler pointed to by the cookie
argument. It detaches the interrupt handler from the associated interrupt
event and frees its memory.
The swi_sched
() function is used to
schedule an interrupt handler and its associated thread to run. The
cookie argument specifies which software interrupt
handler should be scheduled to run. The flags argument
specifies how and when the handler should be run and is a mask of one or
more of the following flags:
SWI_DELAY
- Specifies that the kernel should mark the specified handler as needing to
run, but the kernel should not schedule the software interrupt thread to
run. Instead, handler will be executed the next time
that the software interrupt thread runs after being scheduled by another
event. Attaching a handler to the clock software interrupt thread and
using this flag when scheduling a software interrupt handler can be used
to implement the functionality performed by
setdelayed
() in earlier versions of
FreeBSD.
SWI_FROMNMI
- Specifies that
swi_sched
() is called from NMI
context and should be careful about used KPIs. On platforms allowing IPI
sending from NMI context it immediately wakes
clk_intr_event via the IPI, otherwise it works just
like SWI_DELAY.
The tty_intr_event and
clk_intr_event variables contain pointers to the
software interrupt handlers for the tty and clock software interrupts,
respectively. tty_intr_event is used to hang tty
software interrupt handlers off of the same thread.
clk_intr_event is used to hang delayed handlers off of
the clock software interrupt thread so that the functionality of
setdelayed
() can be obtained in conjunction with
SWI_DELAY
. The vm_ih handler
cookie is used to schedule software interrupt threads to run for the VM
subsystem.
The swi_add
() and swi_remove
()
functions return zero on success and non-zero on failure.
The swi_add
() function will fail if:
- [
EAGAIN
]
- The system-imposed limit on the total number of processes under execution
would be exceeded. The limit is given by the
sysctl(3)
MIB variable
KERN_MAXPROC
.
- [
EINVAL
]
- The flags argument specifies
INTR_ENTROPY
.
- [
EINVAL
]
- The eventp argument points to a hardware interrupt
thread.
- [
EINVAL
]
- Either of the name or handler
arguments are
NULL
.
- [
EINVAL
]
- The
INTR_EXCL
flag is specified and the interrupt
event pointed to by eventp already has at least one
handler, or the interrupt event already has an exclusive handler.
The swi_remove
() function will fail
if:
- [
EINVAL
]
- A software interrupt handler pointed to by cookie is
NULL
.
The swi_add
() and swi_sched
()
functions first appeared in FreeBSD 5.0. They replaced
the register_swi
() function which appeared in
FreeBSD 3.0 and the
setsoft*
(), and schedsoft*
()
functions which date back to at least 4.4BSD. The
swi_remove
() function first appeared in
FreeBSD 6.1.
Most of the global variables described in this manual page should not be global,
or at the very least should not be declared in
<sys/interrupt.h>
.