Losing interrupts?
pri=-10 Stuart Lynne
sl at van-bc.UUCP
Fri Oct 7 07:05:20 AEST 1988
In article <592 at cimcor.mn.org> mike at cimcor.mn.org (Michael Grenier) writes:
>From article <1905 at van-bc.UUCP>, by sl at van-bc.UUCP (pri=-10 Stuart Lynne):
>! For example one of the basic differences between SCO 386 and the SysV 386
>! products is the priority of the interrupts.
>! SCO SysV
>! SPL7 Serial SPL7 Clock
>! SPL6 Clock SPLTTY Serial
>! SysV allows the clock interrupt to take over the machine at a higher
>! priority level than (for example) the serial interrupts.
>I don't think so. Microport has the serial interrupts at SPL7 (the
>highest) and the clock at the lowest (which is probably why the
Can't speak to Microport 286, but I just spent an hour and a half pulling in
Microport's 386 atconf directories off tape and they match the standard
System V / 386 stuff pretty close.
The clock is at SPL7 and serial is at SPLTTY.
For inquiring minds, SPL6 < SPLTTY < SPL7. In other words SPL7 is actually
priority level 8!
In any event I'm not sure it will be possible to distribute a polling serial
driver which needs the clock to be a lower SPL level, the standard release
has a check for what SPL level it is running at and panics with a polite
message if not at SPL7.
--
Stuart.Lynne at wimsey.bc.ca {ubc-cs,uunet}!van-bc!sl Vancouver,BC,604-937-7532
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