Xenomai API
2.5.6.1
|
Files | |
file | intr.c |
Interrupt management. | |
Functions | |
int | xnintr_init (xnintr_t *intr, const char *name, unsigned irq, xnisr_t isr, xniack_t iack, xnflags_t flags) |
Initialize an interrupt object. | |
int | xnintr_destroy (xnintr_t *intr) |
Destroy an interrupt object. | |
int | xnintr_attach (xnintr_t *intr, void *cookie) |
Attach an interrupt object. | |
int | xnintr_detach (xnintr_t *intr) |
Detach an interrupt object. | |
int | xnintr_enable (xnintr_t *intr) |
Enable an interrupt object. | |
int | xnintr_disable (xnintr_t *intr) |
Disable an interrupt object. | |
xnarch_cpumask_t | xnintr_affinity (xnintr_t *intr, xnarch_cpumask_t cpumask) |
Set interrupt's processor affinity. |
Interrupt management.
xnarch_cpumask_t xnintr_affinity | ( | xnintr_t * | intr, |
xnarch_cpumask_t | cpumask | ||
) |
Set interrupt's processor affinity.
Causes the IRQ associated with the interrupt object intr to be received only on processors which bits are set in cpumask.
intr | The descriptor address of the interrupt object which affinity is to be changed. |
cpumask | The new processor affinity of the interrupt object. |
int xnintr_attach | ( | xnintr_t * | intr, |
void * | cookie | ||
) |
Attach an interrupt object.
Attach an interrupt object previously initialized by xnintr_init(). After this operation is completed, all IRQs received from the corresponding interrupt channel are directed to the object's ISR.
intr | The descriptor address of the interrupt object to attach. |
cookie | A user-defined opaque value which is stored into the interrupt object descriptor for further retrieval by the ISR/ISR handlers. |
Environments:
This service can be called from:
Rescheduling: never.
Referenced by pthread_intr_attach_np(), rt_intr_create(), and rtdm_irq_request().
int xnintr_destroy | ( | xnintr_t * | intr | ) |
Destroy an interrupt object.
Destroys an interrupt object previously initialized by xnintr_init(). The interrupt object is automatically detached by a call to xnintr_detach(). No more IRQs will be dispatched by this object after this service has returned.
intr | The descriptor address of the interrupt object to destroy. |
Environments:
This service can be called from:
Rescheduling: never.
References xnintr_detach().
Referenced by rt_intr_delete().
int xnintr_detach | ( | xnintr_t * | intr | ) |
Detach an interrupt object.
Detach an interrupt object previously attached by xnintr_attach(). After this operation is completed, no more IRQs are directed to the object's ISR, but the interrupt object itself remains valid. A detached interrupt object can be attached again by a subsequent call to xnintr_attach().
intr | The descriptor address of the interrupt object to detach. |
Environments:
This service can be called from:
Rescheduling: never.
Referenced by rtdm_irq_request(), and xnintr_destroy().
int xnintr_disable | ( | xnintr_t * | intr | ) |
Disable an interrupt object.
Disables the hardware interrupt line associated with an interrupt object. This operation invalidates further interrupt requests from the given source until the IRQ line is re-enabled anew.
intr | The descriptor address of the interrupt object to disable. |
Environments:
This service can be called from:
Rescheduling: never.
Referenced by pthread_intr_control_np(), and rt_intr_disable().
int xnintr_enable | ( | xnintr_t * | intr | ) |
Enable an interrupt object.
Enables the hardware interrupt line associated with an interrupt object. Over real-time control layers which mask and acknowledge IRQs, this operation is necessary to revalidate the interrupt channel so that more interrupts can be notified.
intr | The descriptor address of the interrupt object to enable. |
Environments:
This service can be called from:
Rescheduling: never.
Referenced by pthread_intr_control_np(), rt_intr_enable(), and rtdm_irq_request().
int xnintr_init | ( | xnintr_t * | intr, |
const char * | name, | ||
unsigned | irq, | ||
xnisr_t | isr, | ||
xniack_t | iack, | ||
xnflags_t | flags | ||
) |
Initialize an interrupt object.
Associates an interrupt object with an IRQ line.
When an interrupt occurs on the given irq line, the ISR is fired in order to deal with the hardware event. The interrupt service code may call any non-suspensive service from the nucleus.
Upon receipt of an IRQ, the ISR is immediately called on behalf of the interrupted stack context, the rescheduling procedure is locked, and the interrupt source is masked at hardware level. The status value returned by the ISR is then checked for the following values:
In addition, one of the following bits may be set by the ISR :
NOTE: use these bits with care and only when you do understand their effect on the system. The ISR is not encouraged to use these bits in case it shares the IRQ line with other ISRs in the real-time domain.
The nucleus re-enables the IRQ line by default. Over some real-time control layers which mask and acknowledge IRQs, this operation is necessary to revalidate the interrupt channel so that more interrupts can be notified.
A count of interrupt receipts is tracked into the interrupt descriptor, and reset to zero each time the interrupt object is attached. Since this count could wrap around, it should be used as an indication of interrupt activity only.
intr | The address of a interrupt object descriptor the nucleus will use to store the object-specific data. This descriptor must always be valid while the object is active therefore it must be allocated in permanent memory. |
name | An ASCII string standing for the symbolic name of the interrupt object or NULL ("<unknown>" will be applied then). |
irq | The hardware interrupt channel associated with the interrupt object. This value is architecture-dependent. An interrupt object must then be attached to the hardware interrupt vector using the xnintr_attach() service for the associated IRQs to be directed to this object. |
isr | The address of a valid low-level interrupt service routine if this parameter is non-zero. This handler will be called each time the corresponding IRQ is delivered on behalf of an interrupt context. When called, the ISR is passed the descriptor address of the interrupt object. |
iack | The address of an optional interrupt acknowledge routine, aimed at replacing the default one. Only very specific situations actually require to override the default setting for this parameter, like having to acknowledge non-standard PIC hardware. iack should return a non-zero value to indicate that the interrupt has been properly acknowledged. If iack is NULL, the default routine will be used instead. |
flags | A set of creation flags affecting the operation. The valid flags are: |
Environments:
This service can be called from:
Rescheduling: never.
Referenced by pthread_intr_attach_np(), rt_intr_create(), rtdm_irq_request(), and xnpod_enable_timesource().