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#include <sys/types.h> #include <sys/conf.h> #include <sys/ddi.h> #include <sys/sunddi.h> int ddi_intr_add_handler(ddi_intr_handle_t *h, ddi_intr_handler_t inthandler, void *arg1, void *arg2);
int ddi_intr_remove_handler(ddi_intr_handle_t h);
Solaris DDI specific (Solaris DDI).
ddi_intr_add_handler()
h
Pointer to the DDI interrupt handle
inthandler
Pointer to interrupt handler
arg1
First argument for the interrupt handler
arg2
Second, optional, argument for the interrupt handler
ddi_intr_remove_handler()
h
DDI interrupt handle
The ddi_intr_add_handler() function adds an interrupt handler given by the inthandler argument to the system with the handler arguments arg1 and arg2 for the previously allocated interrupt handle specified by the h pointer. The arguments arg1 and arg2 are passed as the first and second arguments, respectively, to the interrupt handler inthandler. See <sys/ddi_intr.h> for the definition of the interrupt handler.
The routine inthandler with the arguments arg1 and arg2 is called upon receipt of the appropriate interrupt. The interrupt handler should return DDI_INTR_CLAIMED if the interrupt is claimed and DDI_INTR_UNCLAIMED otherwise.
The ddi_intr_add_handler() function must be called after ddi_intr_alloc(), but before ddi_intr_enable() is called. The interrupt must be enabled through ddi_intr_enable() or ddi_intr_block_enable() before it can be used.
The ddi_intr_remove_handler() function removes the handler association, added previously with ddi_intr_add_handler(), for the interrupt identified by the interrupt handle h argument. Unloadable drivers should call this routine during their detach(9E) routine to remove the interrupt handler from the system.
The ddi_intr_remove_handler() function is used to disassociate the handler after the interrupt is disabled to remove dup-ed interrupt handles. See ddi_intr_dup_handler(9F) for dup-ed interrupt handles. If a handler is duplicated with the ddi_intr_dup_handler() function, all added and duplicated instances of the handler must be removed with ddi_intr_remove_handler() in order for the handler to be completely removed.
The ddi_intr_add_handler() and ddi_intr_remove_handler() functions return:
DDI_SUCCESS
On success.
DDI_EINVAL
On encountering invalid input parameters.
DDI_FAILURE
On any implementation specific failure.
The ddi_intr_add_handler() and ddi_intr_remove_handler() functions can be called from kernel non-interrupt context.
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
Interface Stability | Committed |
attributes(5), attach(9E), detach(9E), ddi_intr_alloc(9F), ddi_intr_block_enable(9F), ddi_intr_disable(9F), ddi_intr_dup_handler(9F), ddi_intr_enable(9F), ddi_intr_free(9F), ddi_intr_get_supported_types(9F), mutex(9F), mutex_init(9F), rw_init(9F), rwlock(9F)
Writing Device Drivers
Consumers of these interfaces should verify that the return value is not equal to DDI_SUCCESS. Incomplete checking for failure codes could result in inconsistent behavior among platforms.
If a device driver that uses MSI and MSI-X interrupts resets the device, the device might reset its configuration space modifications. Such a reset could cause a device driver to lose any MSI and MSI-X interrupt usage settings that have been applied.
The second argument, arg2, is optional. Device drivers are free to use the two arguments however they see fit. There is no officially recommended model or restrictions. For example, an interrupt handler may wish to use the first argument as the pointer to its softstate and the second argument as the value of the MSI vector.