Re: Attempted summary of suspend-blockers LKML thread

From: Arjan van de Ven
Date: Tue Aug 03 2010 - 23:58:20 EST


On Tue, 3 Aug 2010 17:10:15 -0700
"Paul E. McKenney" <paulmck@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> OK, I'll bite...
>
> >From an Android perspective, the differences are as follows:
>
> 1. Deep idle states are entered only if there are no runnable
> tasks. In contrast, opportunistic suspend can happen even when there
> are tasks that are ready, willing, and able to run.

for "system suspend", this is an absolutely valid statement.
for "use suspend as idle state", it's not so clearly valid.
(but this is sort of a separate problem, basically the "when do we
freeze the tasks that we don't like for power reasons" problem,
which in first order is independent on what kind of idle power state
you pick, and discussed extensively elsewhere in this thread)

>
> 2. There can be a set of input events that do not bring the
> system out of suspend, but which would bring the system out of a deep
> idle state. For example, I believe that it was stated that
> one of the Android-based smartphones ignores touchscreen input while
> suspended, but pays attention to it while in deep idle states.

I would argue that this is both a hardware specific issue, but also a
policy issue. From the user point of view, screen off with idle and
screen off with suspend aren't all that different (if my phone would
decide to idle rather than suspend because some app blocks suspend... I
wouldn't expect a difference in behavior when I touch the screen).
"Screen off -> don't honor touch after a bit" is almost an independent,
but very real, policy problem (and a forced one in suspend, I'll grant
you that). I could even argue that the policy decision "we don't care
about the touch screen input" is a pre-condition for entering suspend
(or in android speak, caring for touch screen input/having the touch
screen path active would be a suspend blocker)

>
> 3. The system comes out of a deep idle state when a timer
> expires. In contrast, timers cannot expire while the
> system is suspended. (This one is debatable: some people
> argue that timers are subject to jitter, and the suspend
> case for timers is the same as that for deep idle states,
> but with unbounded timer jitter. Others disagree. The
> resulting discussions have produced much heat, but little
> light. Such is life.)

I'll debate it even harder in that it's platform specific whether
timers can get the system out of suspend or not. Clearly on the Android
platform in question that's not the case, but for some of the Intel
phone silicon for example, timers CAN be wake sources to get you out of
suspend just fine. It just depend on which exact hw you talk about.
Generally, even if the fast timers aren't wake up sources, there'll be
some sort of alarm thing that you can pre-wake.. but yes you are right
in saying that's rather lame.
Either way, it's not a general property of suspend, but a property of
suspend on the specific platform in question.





--
Arjan van de Ven Intel Open Source Technology Centre
For development, discussion and tips for power savings,
visit http://www.lesswatts.org
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/