Author | Tokens | Token Proportion | Commits | Commit Proportion |
---|---|---|---|---|
Alex Williamson | 183 | 98.92% | 2 | 66.67% |
Thomas Gleixner | 2 | 1.08% | 1 | 33.33% |
Total | 185 | 3 |
/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only */ /* * IRQ offload/bypass manager * * Copyright (C) 2015 Red Hat, Inc. * Copyright (c) 2015 Linaro Ltd. */ #ifndef IRQBYPASS_H #define IRQBYPASS_H #include <linux/list.h> struct irq_bypass_consumer; /* * Theory of operation * * The IRQ bypass manager is a simple set of lists and callbacks that allows * IRQ producers (ex. physical interrupt sources) to be matched to IRQ * consumers (ex. virtualization hardware that allows IRQ bypass or offload) * via a shared token (ex. eventfd_ctx). Producers and consumers register * independently. When a token match is found, the optional @stop callback * will be called for each participant. The pair will then be connected via * the @add_* callbacks, and finally the optional @start callback will allow * any final coordination. When either participant is unregistered, the * process is repeated using the @del_* callbacks in place of the @add_* * callbacks. Match tokens must be unique per producer/consumer, 1:N pairings * are not supported. */ /** * struct irq_bypass_producer - IRQ bypass producer definition * @node: IRQ bypass manager private list management * @token: opaque token to match between producer and consumer (non-NULL) * @irq: Linux IRQ number for the producer device * @add_consumer: Connect the IRQ producer to an IRQ consumer (optional) * @del_consumer: Disconnect the IRQ producer from an IRQ consumer (optional) * @stop: Perform any quiesce operations necessary prior to add/del (optional) * @start: Perform any startup operations necessary after add/del (optional) * * The IRQ bypass producer structure represents an interrupt source for * participation in possible host bypass, for instance an interrupt vector * for a physical device assigned to a VM. */ struct irq_bypass_producer { struct list_head node; void *token; int irq; int (*add_consumer)(struct irq_bypass_producer *, struct irq_bypass_consumer *); void (*del_consumer)(struct irq_bypass_producer *, struct irq_bypass_consumer *); void (*stop)(struct irq_bypass_producer *); void (*start)(struct irq_bypass_producer *); }; /** * struct irq_bypass_consumer - IRQ bypass consumer definition * @node: IRQ bypass manager private list management * @token: opaque token to match between producer and consumer (non-NULL) * @add_producer: Connect the IRQ consumer to an IRQ producer * @del_producer: Disconnect the IRQ consumer from an IRQ producer * @stop: Perform any quiesce operations necessary prior to add/del (optional) * @start: Perform any startup operations necessary after add/del (optional) * * The IRQ bypass consumer structure represents an interrupt sink for * participation in possible host bypass, for instance a hypervisor may * support offloads to allow bypassing the host entirely or offload * portions of the interrupt handling to the VM. */ struct irq_bypass_consumer { struct list_head node; void *token; int (*add_producer)(struct irq_bypass_consumer *, struct irq_bypass_producer *); void (*del_producer)(struct irq_bypass_consumer *, struct irq_bypass_producer *); void (*stop)(struct irq_bypass_consumer *); void (*start)(struct irq_bypass_consumer *); }; int irq_bypass_register_producer(struct irq_bypass_producer *); void irq_bypass_unregister_producer(struct irq_bypass_producer *); int irq_bypass_register_consumer(struct irq_bypass_consumer *); void irq_bypass_unregister_consumer(struct irq_bypass_consumer *); #endif /* IRQBYPASS_H */
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