Skip to Content
Linux Device Drivers Development
book

Linux Device Drivers Development

by John Madieu
October 2017
Intermediate to advanced
586 pages
14h 8m
English
Packt Publishing
Content preview from Linux Device Drivers Development

Advanced IRQ Management

On a Linux system, devices notify the kernel about particular events by means of IRQs. The CPU exposes shared or unshared IRQ lines that are used by connected devices, so that when a device needs the CPU, it sends a request to it. When the CPU gets this request, it stops its actual job and saves its context, in order to serve the request issued by the device. After serving the device, the CPU's state is restored back to exactly where it stopped when the interruption occurred. There are so many IRQ lines that another device is responsible for them to the CPU. That device is the interrupt controller, illustrated as follows:

Interrupt controller and IRQ lines

Not only devices can raise interrupts; some processor operations ...

Become an O’Reilly member and get unlimited access to this title plus top books and audiobooks from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers, thousands of courses curated by job role, 150+ live events each month,
and much more.
Start your free trial

You might also like

Linux Device Drivers, Second Edition

Linux Device Drivers, Second Edition

Jonathan Corbet, Alessandro Rubini
Linux Device Drivers, 3rd Edition

Linux Device Drivers, 3rd Edition

Jonathan Corbet, Alessandro Rubini, Greg Kroah-Hartman

Publisher Resources

ISBN: 9781785280009Supplemental Content