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Mathis MARION authored
This patch follows a change to how IRQ are handled by HTVIC. Here is a copy of the commit message for the corresponding HTVIC patch: When creating an IRQ domain, the code used to store a device struct pointer in the `of_node` field of the irq_domain struct returned by `irq_domain_add_linear`. This was done by casting to a void pointer and passing as the first argument of the function. In the SPEC repository (and supposedly other depending repositories), we would then get back the irq_domain struct by calling `irq_find_host` with again a device struct pointer casted to a void pointer as the argument. The function would compare the addresses of the 2 device structs and return the right irq_domain. This trick was most likely due to the fact that the IRQ domain API was conceived around OpenFirmware before version 4.4, and that the project should work for ACPI. A workaround for kernel 4.7 was written, which involved using a `select` function, and passing the address of the device struct as a parameter. It was particularly ugly as it would require getting around the `irq_find_host` to call immediately `irq_find_matching_fwspec` and pass in the address of the wanted device struct as a parameter in a hacky way to fit it inside two 32 bit integers. Kernel version 4.4 introduced fwnodes, which would make easier working with ACPI. Instead of repeating the hacky workaround (which would result in a kernel error on later kernels when calling irq_domain_add_linear), I allocated a fwnode_handle struct before creating a new IRQ domain. Then I used the new irq_domain_create_* API to get an irq_domain using this fwnode. I also took care of disallocating the fwnode_handle. On the other end, we can just call `irq_find_matching_fwnode` and pass dev.fwnode as a parameter. Signed-off-by: Gwenhael GOAVEC <gwenhael.goavec@femto-st.fr> Signed-off-by: Mathis MARION <mathis.marion@grenoble-inp.org>
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