On Wed, Jun 03, 2020 at 08:46:55PM -0700, Florian Fainelli wrote: > The SPI controller found in the BCM2711 and BCM7211 SoCs is instantiated > 5 times, with all instances sharing the same interrupt line. We > specifically match the two compatible strings here to determine whether > it is necessary to request the interrupt with the IRQF_SHARED flag and > to use an appropriate interrupt handler capable of returning IRQ_NONE. > For the BCM2835 case which is deemed performance critical, there is no > overhead since a dedicated handler that does not assume sharing is used. This feels hacky - it's essentially using the compatible string to set a boolean flag which isn't really about the IP but rather the platform integration. It might cause problems if we do end up having to quirk this version of the IP for some other reason. I'm also looking at the code and wondering if the overhead of checking to see if the interrupt is flagged is really that severe, it's just a check to see if a bit is set in a register which we already read so should be a couple of instructions (which disassembly seems to confirm). It *is* overhead so there's some value in it, I'm just surprised that it's such a hot path especially with a reasonably deep FIFO like this device has. I guess ideally genirq would provide a way to figure out if an interrupt is actually shared in the present system, and better yet we'd have a way for drivers to say they aren't using the interrupt ATM, but that might be more effort than it's really worth. If this is needed and there's no better way of figuring out if the interrupt is really shared then I'd suggest a boolean flag rather than a compatible string, it's still a hack but it's less likely to store up trouble for the future.