Assuming that you've got a system where you can't change context when interrupts are disabled, then what you've got is fine, assuming you keep careful track of when call the enable().
In the usage you're describing in the comments below, you plan on using these sections from within an interrupt service routine. Your main use is blocking higher-priority interrupts from running for a certain portion of an ISR.
Be aware that you'll have to consider the stack depth of these nested ISRs, as when you enable interrupts before your return from interrupt, you'll have interrupts enabled in the ISR.
Regarding other answers: the lack of thread-safety of the enable() (due to the if(IrqCounter > 0)
) doesn't matter, because anytime you're in the enable() context switches are already disabled due to interrupts being off. (Unless for some reason you have unmatched disable/enable pairs, and in that case you've got other issues.)
The only suggestion I'd have would be to add an ASSERT to the enable instead of the run-time check, as you should never be enabling interrupts that you didn't disable.
void EnableIRQ()
{
ASSERT(IrqCounter != 0) //should never be 0, or we'd have an unmatched enable/disable pair
IrqCounter--; //doesn't matter that this isn't thread safe, as the enable is always called with interrupts disabled.
if(IrqCounter == 0)
{
__enable_irq();
}
}
I prefer the technique you've listed over the save(); disable(); restore();
technique as I don't like having to keep track of a piece of the OS' data every time I work with the interrupts. But, you do have to be aware of when you (directly or indirectly) make a call to the enable() from an ISR.