DOKK / manpages / debian 10 / freebsd-manpages / bus_bind_intr.9freebsd.en
BUS_BIND_INTR(9) Kernel Developer's Manual BUS_BIND_INTR(9)

BUS_BIND_INTR, bus_bind_intrbind an interrupt resource to a specific CPU

#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/bus.h>

int
BUS_BIND_INTR(device_t dev, device_t child, struct resource *irq, int cpu);

int
bus_bind_intr(device_t dev, struct resource *irq, int cpu);

The () method allows an interrupt resource to be pinned to a specific CPU. The interrupt resource must have an interrupt handler attached via BUS_SETUP_INTR(9). The cpu parameter corresponds to the ID of a valid CPU in the system. Binding an interrupt restricts the cpuset(2) of any associated interrupt threads to only include the specified CPU. It may also direct the low-level interrupt handling of the interrupt to the specified CPU as well, but this behavior is platform-dependent. If the value NOCPU is used for cpu, then the interrupt will be “unbound” which restores any associated interrupt threads back to the default cpuset.

Non-sleepable locks such as mutexes should not be held across calls to these functions.

The () function is a simple wrapper around BUS_BIND_INTR().

Note that currently there is no attempt made to arbitrate between multiple bind requests for the same interrupt from either the same device or multiple devices. There is also no arbitration between interrupt binding requests submitted by userland via cpuset(2) and (). The most recent binding request is the one that will be in effect.

Zero is returned on success, otherwise an appropriate error is returned.

cpuset(2), BUS_SETUP_INTR(9), device(9)

The BUS_BIND_INTR() method and bus_bind_intr() functions first appeared in FreeBSD 7.2.

October 14, 2009 Debian