I'm reading up on device controllers and am rather confused about the following point:
The device controller informs the CPU that it has finished its operation by causing an interrupt
To me, this seems to defy the intuitive notion of what an interrupt is, ie to "to stop the continuous progress of (an activity or process)". Shouldn't the interrupt occur at the beginning or throughout the controller's execution, and then stop once the controller is finished?
For example, if I send a command on my computer to print a document, I'm imagining there's a message being sent from the printer to the PC to signal the end of its execution, but I certainly wouldn't think of it as an interrupt. If the I/O device has finished execution, shouldn't that free up more resources to the OS?