From 02ab851324dc7e2fc75787f7fae71187092be7ed Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Benjamin Herrenschmidt Date: Sun, 10 Jan 2010 17:51:42 +0000 Subject: serial/pmac_zilog: Workaround problem due to interrupt on closed port It seems that in qemu, we can see an interrupt in R3 despite the fact that it's masked in W1. The chip doesn't actually issue an interrupt, but we can "see" it when taking an interrupt for the other channel. This may be a qemu bug ... or not, so let's be safe and avoid calling into the UART layer when that happens which woulc cause a crash. Signed-off-by: Benjamin Herrenschmidt Acked-by: Rob Landley --- drivers/serial/pmac_zilog.c | 11 +++++++++++ 1 file changed, 11 insertions(+) (limited to 'drivers/serial') diff --git a/drivers/serial/pmac_zilog.c b/drivers/serial/pmac_zilog.c index 0700cd10b97c..683e66f18e8c 100644 --- a/drivers/serial/pmac_zilog.c +++ b/drivers/serial/pmac_zilog.c @@ -411,6 +411,17 @@ static void pmz_transmit_chars(struct uart_pmac_port *uap) goto ack_tx_int; } + /* Under some circumstances, we see interrupts reported for + * a closed channel. The interrupt mask in R1 is clear, but + * R3 still signals the interrupts and we see them when taking + * an interrupt for the other channel (this could be a qemu + * bug but since the ESCC doc doesn't specify precsiely whether + * R3 interrup status bits are masked by R1 interrupt enable + * bits, better safe than sorry). --BenH. + */ + if (!ZS_IS_OPEN(uap)) + goto ack_tx_int; + if (uap->port.x_char) { uap->flags |= PMACZILOG_FLAG_TX_ACTIVE; write_zsdata(uap, uap->port.x_char); -- cgit v1.2.2