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author | Rafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com> | 2019-07-15 23:52:03 +0200 |
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committer | Rafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com> | 2019-07-23 09:46:40 +0200 |
commit | 56b991849009f5def0443bfb2f48c8321d888e15 (patch) | |
tree | f10a7a5b6d84f4d72a902931b297e1189f65a7e0 /kernel/power | |
parent | 41275eb5c7181febdfaa63c3a0ad9b7acdadcd52 (diff) | |
download | linux-stable-56b991849009f5def0443bfb2f48c8321d888e15.tar.gz linux-stable-56b991849009f5def0443bfb2f48c8321d888e15.tar.bz2 linux-stable-56b991849009f5def0443bfb2f48c8321d888e15.zip |
PM: sleep: Simplify suspend-to-idle control flow
After commit 33e4f80ee69b ("ACPI / PM: Ignore spurious SCI wakeups
from suspend-to-idle") the "noirq" phases of device suspend and
resume may run for multiple times during suspend-to-idle, if there
are spurious system wakeup events while suspended. However, this
is complicated and fragile and actually unnecessary.
The main reason for doing this is that on some systems the EC may
signal system wakeup events (power button events, for example) as
well as events that should not cause the system to resume (spurious
system wakeup events). Thus, in order to determine whether or not
a given event signaled by the EC while suspended is a proper system
wakeup one, the EC GPE needs to be dispatched and to start with that
was achieved by allowing the ACPI SCI action handler to run, which
was only possible after calling resume_device_irqs().
However, dispatching the EC GPE this way turned out to take too much
time in some cases and some EC events might be missed due to that, so
commit 68e22011856f ("ACPI: EC: Dispatch the EC GPE directly on
s2idle wake") started to dispatch the EC GPE right after a wakeup
event has been detected, so in fact the full ACPI SCI action handler
doesn't need to run any more to deal with the wakeups coming from the
EC.
Use this observation to simplify the suspend-to-idle control flow
so that the "noirq" phases of device suspend and resume are each
run only once in every suspend-to-idle cycle, which is reported to
significantly reduce power drawn by some systems when suspended to
idle (by allowing them to reach a deep platform-wide low-power state
through the suspend-to-idle flow). [What appears to happen is that
the "noirq" resume of devices after a spurious EC wakeup brings some
devices into a state in which they prevent the platform from reaching
the deep low-power state going forward, even after a subsequent
"noirq" suspend phase, and on some systems the EC triggers such
wakeups already when the "noirq" suspend of devices is running for
the first time in the given suspend/resume cycle, so the platform
cannot reach the deep low-power state at all.]
First, make acpi_s2idle_wake() use the acpi_ec_dispatch_gpe() return
value to determine whether or not the wakeup may have been triggered
by the EC (in which case the system wakeup is canceled and ACPI
events are processed in order to determine whether or not the event
is a proper system wakeup one) and use rearm_wake_irq() (introduced
by a previous change) in it to rearm the ACPI SCI for system wakeup
detection in case the system will remain suspended.
Second, drop acpi_s2idle_sync(), which is not needed any more, and
the corresponding global platform suspend-to-idle callback.
Next, drop the pm_wakeup_pending() check (which is an optimization
only) from __device_suspend_noirq() to prevent it from returning
errors on system wakeups occurring before the "noirq" phase of
device suspend is complete (as in the case of suspend-to-idle it is
not known whether or not these wakeups are suprious at that point),
in order to avoid having to carry out a "noirq" resume of devices
on a spurious system wakeup.
Finally, change the code flow in s2idle_loop() to (1) run the
"noirq" suspend of devices once before starting the loop, (2) check
for spurious EC wakeups (via the platform ->wake callback) for the
first time before calling s2idle_enter(), and (3) run the "noirq"
resume of devices once after leaving the loop.
Signed-off-by: Rafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com>
Acked-by: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
Diffstat (limited to 'kernel/power')
-rw-r--r-- | kernel/power/suspend.c | 53 |
1 files changed, 23 insertions, 30 deletions
diff --git a/kernel/power/suspend.c b/kernel/power/suspend.c index c874a7026e24..907b2be0372f 100644 --- a/kernel/power/suspend.c +++ b/kernel/power/suspend.c @@ -119,48 +119,41 @@ static void s2idle_enter(void) static void s2idle_loop(void) { + int error; + + dpm_noirq_begin(); + error = dpm_noirq_suspend_devices(PMSG_SUSPEND); + if (error) + goto resume; + pm_pr_dbg("suspend-to-idle\n"); + /* + * Suspend-to-idle equals: + * frozen processes + suspended devices + idle processors. + * Thus s2idle_enter() should be called right after all devices have + * been suspended. + * + * Wakeups during the noirq suspend of devices may be spurious, so try + * to avoid them upfront. + */ for (;;) { - int error; - - dpm_noirq_begin(); - - /* - * Suspend-to-idle equals - * frozen processes + suspended devices + idle processors. - * Thus s2idle_enter() should be called right after - * all devices have been suspended. - * - * Wakeups during the noirq suspend of devices may be spurious, - * so prevent them from terminating the loop right away. - */ - error = dpm_noirq_suspend_devices(PMSG_SUSPEND); - if (!error) - s2idle_enter(); - else if (error == -EBUSY && pm_wakeup_pending()) - error = 0; - - if (!error && s2idle_ops && s2idle_ops->wake) + if (s2idle_ops && s2idle_ops->wake) s2idle_ops->wake(); - dpm_noirq_resume_devices(PMSG_RESUME); - - dpm_noirq_end(); - - if (error) - break; - - if (s2idle_ops && s2idle_ops->sync) - s2idle_ops->sync(); - if (pm_wakeup_pending()) break; pm_wakeup_clear(false); + + s2idle_enter(); } pm_pr_dbg("resume from suspend-to-idle\n"); + +resume: + dpm_noirq_resume_devices(PMSG_RESUME); + dpm_noirq_end(); } void s2idle_wake(void) |