> > > In addition, how do you handle shared interrupts ?
> >
> > It is impossible, see my another message.
>
> Which IMHO makes the concept pretty much useless.
> Interrupt sharing is pretty much the norm today. And there is no evidence for
> this to change in the near future. Rather the opposite seems to happen in
> fact.
>
> Which devices were you thinking of, that need a hardware IRQ and no kernel
> driver ?
An ISA cards, mostly for data acquisition - edge triggered interrupts,
no ack required immediately from interrupt handler. Rest of hardware
handling can be deferred to user space.
IRQ sharing is possible there in spite of some hardware hacking.
Yes, it is very limited range of hardware today but it exists
and /dev/irq kernel module provide one of generic mechanisms for user
space driver implementation.
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