seq_puts(p, " Machine check polls\n");
#endif
#if IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_HYPERV) || defined(CONFIG_XEN)
- seq_printf(p, "%*s: ", prec, "HYP");
- for_each_online_cpu(j)
- seq_printf(p, "%10u ", irq_stats(j)->irq_hv_callback_count);
- seq_puts(p, " Hypervisor callback interrupts\n");
+ if (test_bit(HYPERVISOR_CALLBACK_VECTOR, used_vectors)) {
+ seq_printf(p, "%*s: ", prec, "HYP");
+ for_each_online_cpu(j)
+ seq_printf(p, "%10u ",
+ irq_stats(j)->irq_hv_callback_count);
+ seq_puts(p, " Hypervisor callback interrupts\n");
+ }
#endif
seq_printf(p, "%*s: %10u\n", prec, "ERR", atomic_read(&irq_err_count));
#if defined(CONFIG_X86_IO_APIC)
/* high bit used in ret_from_ code */
unsigned vector = ~regs->orig_ax;
+ /*
+ * NB: Unlike exception entries, IRQ entries do not reliably
+ * handle context tracking in the low-level entry code. This is
+ * because syscall entries execute briefly with IRQs on before
+ * updating context tracking state, so we can take an IRQ from
+ * kernel mode with CONTEXT_USER. The low-level entry code only
+ * updates the context if we came from user mode, so we won't
+ * switch to CONTEXT_KERNEL. We'll fix that once the syscall
+ * code is cleaned up enough that we can cleanly defer enabling
+ * IRQs.
+ */
+
entering_irq();
+ /* entering_irq() tells RCU that we're not quiescent. Check it. */
+ RCU_LOCKDEP_WARN(!rcu_is_watching(), "IRQ failed to wake up RCU");
+
desc = __this_cpu_read(vector_irq[vector]);
if (!handle_irq(desc, regs)) {