* and irq serialization situations. This is somewhat complex because
* it handles static as well as dynamic (PCMCIA) IDE interfaces.
*
- * The SA_INTERRUPT in sa_flags means ide_intr() is always entered with
+ * The IRQF_DISABLED in sa_flags means ide_intr() is always entered with
* interrupts completely disabled. This can be bad for interrupt latency,
* but anything else has led to problems on some machines. We re-enable
* interrupts as much as we can safely do in most places.
* Allocate the irq, if not already obtained for another hwif
*/
if (!match || match->irq != hwif->irq) {
- int sa = SA_INTERRUPT;
+ int sa = IRQF_DISABLED;
#if defined(__mc68000__) || defined(CONFIG_APUS)
- sa = SA_SHIRQ;
+ sa = IRQF_SHARED;
#endif /* __mc68000__ || CONFIG_APUS */
if (IDE_CHIPSET_IS_PCI(hwif->chipset)) {
- sa = SA_SHIRQ;
+ sa = IRQF_SHARED;
#ifndef CONFIG_IDEPCI_SHARE_IRQ
- sa |= SA_INTERRUPT;
+ sa |= IRQF_DISABLED;
#endif /* CONFIG_IDEPCI_SHARE_IRQ */
}
};
/*
- * This is the hard disk IRQ description. The SA_INTERRUPT in sa_flags
+ * This is the hard disk IRQ description. The IRQF_DISABLED in sa_flags
* means we run the IRQ-handler with interrupts disabled: this is bad for
* interrupt latency, but anything else has led to problems on some
* machines.
p->cyl, p->head, p->sect);
}
- if (request_irq(HD_IRQ, hd_interrupt, SA_INTERRUPT, "hd", NULL)) {
+ if (request_irq(HD_IRQ, hd_interrupt, IRQF_DISABLED, "hd", NULL)) {
printk("hd: unable to get IRQ%d for the hard disk driver\n",
HD_IRQ);
goto out1;