/* MN10300 Watchdog timer * * Copyright (C) 2007 Red Hat, Inc. All Rights Reserved. * Written by David Howells (dhowells@redhat.com) * - Derived from arch/i386/kernel/nmi.c * * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or * modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public Licence * as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version * 2 of the Licence, or (at your option) any later version. */ #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include static DEFINE_SPINLOCK(watchdog_print_lock); static unsigned int watchdog; static unsigned int watchdog_hz = 1; unsigned int watchdog_alert_counter; EXPORT_SYMBOL(touch_nmi_watchdog); /* * the best way to detect whether a CPU has a 'hard lockup' problem * is to check its timer makes IRQ counts. If they are not * changing then that CPU has some problem. * * as these watchdog NMI IRQs are generated on every CPU, we only * have to check the current processor. * * since NMIs dont listen to _any_ locks, we have to be extremely * careful not to rely on unsafe variables. The printk might lock * up though, so we have to break up any console locks first ... * [when there will be more tty-related locks, break them up * here too!] */ static unsigned int last_irq_sums[NR_CPUS]; int __init check_watchdog(void) { irq_cpustat_t tmp[1]; printk(KERN_INFO "Testing Watchdog... "); memcpy(tmp, irq_stat, sizeof(tmp)); local_irq_enable(); mdelay((10 * 1000) / watchdog_hz); /* wait 10 ticks */ local_irq_disable(); if (nmi_count(0) - tmp[0].__nmi_count <= 5) { printk(KERN_WARNING "CPU#%d: Watchdog appears to be stuck!\n", 0); return -1; } printk(KERN_INFO "OK.\n"); /* now that we know it works we can reduce NMI frequency to * something more reasonable; makes a difference in some configs */ watchdog_hz = 1; return 0; } static int __init setup_watchdog(char *str) { unsigned tmp; int opt; u8 ctr; get_option(&str, &opt); if (opt != 1) return 0; watchdog = opt; if (watchdog) { set_intr_stub(EXCEP_WDT, watchdog_handler); ctr = WDCTR_WDCK_65536th; WDCTR = WDCTR_WDRST | ctr; WDCTR = ctr; tmp = WDCTR; tmp = __muldiv64u(1 << (16 + ctr * 2), 1000000, MN10300_WDCLK); tmp = 1000000000 / tmp; watchdog_hz = (tmp + 500) / 1000; } return 1; } __setup("watchdog=", setup_watchdog); void __init watchdog_go(void) { u8 wdt; if (watchdog) { printk(KERN_INFO "Watchdog: running at %uHz\n", watchdog_hz); wdt = WDCTR & ~WDCTR_WDCNE; WDCTR = wdt | WDCTR_WDRST; wdt = WDCTR; WDCTR = wdt | WDCTR_WDCNE; wdt = WDCTR; check_watchdog(); } } asmlinkage void watchdog_interrupt(struct pt_regs *regs, enum exception_code excep) { /* * Since current-> is always on the stack, and we always switch * the stack NMI-atomically, it's safe to use smp_processor_id(). */ int sum, cpu = smp_processor_id(); int irq = NMIIRQ; u8 wdt, tmp; wdt = WDCTR & ~WDCTR_WDCNE; WDCTR = wdt; tmp = WDCTR; NMICR = NMICR_WDIF; nmi_count(cpu)++; kstat_incr_irqs_this_cpu(irq, irq_to_desc(irq)); sum = irq_stat[cpu].__irq_count; if (last_irq_sums[cpu] == sum) { /* * Ayiee, looks like this CPU is stuck ... * wait a few IRQs (5 seconds) before doing the oops ... */ watchdog_alert_counter++; if (watchdog_alert_counter == 5 * watchdog_hz) { spin_lock(&watchdog_print_lock); /* * We are in trouble anyway, lets at least try * to get a message out. */ bust_spinlocks(1); printk(KERN_ERR "NMI Watchdog detected LOCKUP on CPU%d," " pc %08lx, registers:\n", cpu, regs->pc); show_registers(regs); printk("console shuts up ...\n"); console_silent(); spin_unlock(&watchdog_print_lock); bust_spinlocks(0); #ifdef CONFIG_GDBSTUB if (gdbstub_busy) gdbstub_exception(regs, excep); else gdbstub_intercept(regs, excep); #endif do_exit(SIGSEGV); } } else { last_irq_sums[cpu] = sum; watchdog_alert_counter = 0; } WDCTR = wdt | WDCTR_WDRST; tmp = WDCTR; WDCTR = wdt | WDCTR_WDCNE; tmp = WDCTR; }