Otherwise, if we lost the race, the pipestat bit would be set without being
reflected in IIR, and we would never clear the pipestat bit so the pipe
event would never be generated again, and all vblank waits would time out.
Signed-off-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Acked-by: Keith Packard <keithp@keithp.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
}
spin_lock_irqsave(&dev_priv->user_irq_lock, irqflags);
}
spin_lock_irqsave(&dev_priv->user_irq_lock, irqflags);
+ /* Enabling vblank events in IMR comes before PIPESTAT write, or
+ * there's a race where the PIPESTAT vblank bit gets set to 1, so
+ * the OR of enabled PIPESTAT bits goes to 1, so the PIPExEVENT in
+ * ISR flashes to 1, but the IIR bit doesn't get set to 1 because
+ * IMR masks it. It doesn't ever get set after we clear the masking
+ * in IMR because the ISR bit is edge, not level-triggered, on the
+ * OR of PIPESTAT bits.
+ */
+ i915_enable_irq(dev_priv, interrupt);
pipestat = I915_READ(pipestat_reg);
if (IS_I965G(dev))
pipestat |= PIPE_START_VBLANK_INTERRUPT_ENABLE;
pipestat = I915_READ(pipestat_reg);
if (IS_I965G(dev))
pipestat |= PIPE_START_VBLANK_INTERRUPT_ENABLE;
PIPE_VBLANK_INTERRUPT_STATUS);
I915_WRITE(pipestat_reg, pipestat);
(void) I915_READ(pipestat_reg); /* Posting read */
PIPE_VBLANK_INTERRUPT_STATUS);
I915_WRITE(pipestat_reg, pipestat);
(void) I915_READ(pipestat_reg); /* Posting read */
- i915_enable_irq(dev_priv, interrupt);
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&dev_priv->user_irq_lock, irqflags);
return 0;
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&dev_priv->user_irq_lock, irqflags);
return 0;