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MINIPORT_MESSAGE_INTERRUPT callback function (ndis.h)

NDIS calls the MiniportMessageInterrupt function when a NIC generates a message-based interrupt.

Note  You must declare the function by using the MINIPORT_MESSAGE_INTERRUPT type. For more information, see the following Examples section.
 

Syntax

MINIPORT_MESSAGE_INTERRUPT MiniportMessageInterrupt;

BOOLEAN MiniportMessageInterrupt(
  [in]  NDIS_HANDLE MiniportInterruptContext,
  [in]  ULONG MessageId,
  [out] PBOOLEAN QueueDefaultInterruptDpc,
  [out] PULONG TargetProcessors
)
{...}

Parameters

[in] MiniportInterruptContext

A handle to a block of interrupt context information. The miniport driver supplied this handle in the MiniportInterruptContext parameter that the miniport driver passed to the NdisMRegisterInterruptEx function.

[in] MessageId

A message-signaled interrupt (MSI) message identifier. MessageId is an index to an IO_INTERRUPT_MESSAGE_INFO_ENTRY structure inside a IO_INTERRUPT_MESSAGE_INFO structure. NDIS passes a pointer to the associated IO_INTERRUPT_MESSAGE_INFO structure at the MessageInfoTable member when the driver successfully registers for MSI with the NdisMRegisterInterruptEx function.

[out] QueueDefaultInterruptDpc

A pointer to a Boolean variable that the miniport driver sets before returning from this call. A miniport driver sets this value to TRUE to indicate that the driver requires a DPC on the default (current) CPU. If set to TRUE, NDIS ignores the value of the TargetProcessors parameter. If set to FALSE, NDIS uses the value of the TargetProcessors parameter to schedule DPCs.

[out] TargetProcessors

A bitmask that indicates the target processors for which NDIS should schedule a DPC. This bitmask represents the first 32 processors in processor group 0. Each bit in the bitmask identifies a CPU. If the caller sets bit 0, NDIS schedules a DPC for CPU 0. If the caller sets bit 1, NDIS schedules a DPC for CPU 1, and so on.

Note  NDIS 6.20 and later drivers should not use this parameter to schedule DPCs. Instead, they should set this parameter to zero and use the NdisMQueueDpcEx function to schedule DPCs.
 

Return value

MiniportMessageInterrupt returns TRUE if the underlying NIC generated the interrupt; otherwise, it returns FALSE.

Remarks

Miniport drivers that register for message-signaled interrupts (MSI) support with the NdisMRegisterInterruptEx function must provide a MiniportMessageInterrupt function.

A miniport driver should do as little work as possible in its MiniportMessageInterrupt function. It should defer I/O operations for the interrupts that the NIC generates to the MiniportMessageInterruptDPC function.

When a NIC generates an MSI, NDIS calls the miniport driver's MiniportMessageInterrupt function.

MiniportMessageInterrupt saves required state information about the interrupt and defers as much of the I/O processing as possible to the MiniportMessageInterruptDPC function.

If the miniport driver requests deferred procedure calls (DPCs) for a specified message, the miniport driver should disable all further interrupts for that message and reenable the interrupts after all the DPCs are finished.

The miniport driver should set QueueDefaultInterruptDpc to TRUE to schedule a DPC for the default CPU only. The driver can do this, for example, if:

  • The NIC generated the interrupt to signal the completion of a send operation or any other request that doesn't run on other CPUs.
  • The NIC generated the interrupt to signal received data and the miniport driver cannot process received packets in separate DPCs.
  • The interrupt indicates received packets and the miniport driver can process received packets in separate DPCs, but receive side scaling (RSS) is not enabled for the miniport driver. For more information, see OID_GEN_RECEIVE_SCALE_CAPABILITIES and OID_GEN_RECEIVE_SCALE_PARAMETERS.
  • Receive side scaling is enabled for the miniport driver, and the miniport driver can generate different messages on every receive queue.
If a miniport driver processes received packets in separate DPCs, the miniport driver sets the QueueDefaultInterruptDpc parameter to FALSE. The miniport driver should set the TargetProcessors bit for the CPU that is associated with each nonempty receive queue. NDIS will schedule a DPC on each of the indicated CPUs in processor group 0.

If MiniportMessageInterrupt shares resources for a specified message, such as NIC registers or state variables, with another MiniportXxx function that runs at a lower IRQL, that MiniportXxx function must call the NdisMSynchronizeWithInterruptEx function. This ensures that the driver's MiniportSynchronizeMessageInterrupt function accesses the shared resources in a synchronized and multiprocessor-safe manner.

A miniport driver can call the NdisMDeregisterInterruptEx function from its MiniportInitializeEx or MiniportHaltEx function to release resources that it allocated with NdisMRegisterInterruptEx. After NdisMDeregisterInterruptEx returns, NDIS does not call a miniport driver's MiniportMessageInterrupt or MiniportMessageInterruptDPC function.

NDIS calls MiniportMessageInterrupt at the DIRQL of the MSI that the miniport driver registered in a previous call to NdisMRegisterInterruptEx. Therefore, MiniportMessageInterrupt must call the subset of the NDIS functions, such as the NdisRawXxx or NdisRead/WriteRegisterXxx functions, that are safe to call at any IRQL.

Examples

To define a MiniportMessageInterrupt function, you must first provide a function declaration that identifies the type of function you're defining. Windows provides a set of function types for drivers. Declaring a function using the function types helps Code Analysis for Drivers, Static Driver Verifier (SDV), and other verification tools find errors, and it's a requirement for writing drivers for the Windows operating system.

For example, to define a MiniportMessageInterrupt function that is named "MyMessageInterrupt", use the MINIPORT_MESSAGE_INTERRUPT type as shown in this code example:

MINIPORT_MESSAGE_INTERRUPT MyMessageInterrupt;

Then, implement your function as follows:

_Use_decl_annotations_
BOOLEAN
 MyMessageInterrupt(
    NDIS_HANDLE  MiniportInterruptContext,
    ULONG  MessageId,
    PBOOLEAN  QueueDefaultInterruptDpc,
    PULONG  TargetProcessors
    )
  {...}

The MINIPORT_MESSAGE_INTERRUPT function type is defined in the Ndis.h header file. To more accurately identify errors when you run the code analysis tools, be sure to add the Use_decl_annotations annotation to your function definition. The Use_decl_annotations annotation ensures that the annotations that are applied to the MINIPORT_MESSAGE_INTERRUPT function type in the header file are used. For more information about the requirements for function declarations, see Declaring Functions by Using Function Role Types for NDIS Drivers.

For information about Use_decl_annotations, see Annotating Function Behavior.

Requirements

Requirement Value
Minimum supported client Supported in NDIS 6.0 and later.
Target Platform Windows
Header ndis.h (include Ndis.h)
IRQL See Remarks section

See also

IO_INTERRUPT_MESSAGE_INFO

IO_INTERRUPT_MESSAGE_INFO_ENTRY

MiniportHaltEx

MiniportInitializeEx

MiniportMessageInterruptDPC

MiniportSynchronizeMessageInterrupt

NDIS_MINIPORT_INTERRUPT_CHARACTERISTICS

NdisMDeregisterInterruptEx

NdisMQueueDpcEx

NdisMRegisterInterruptEx

NdisMSynchronizeWithInterruptEx OID_GEN_RECEIVE_SCALE_CAPABILITIES OID_GEN_RECEIVE_SCALE_PARAMETERS

Receive Side Scaling (RSS)