Re: cpufreq problem wrt suspend/resume on Athlon64

From: Dominik Brodowski
Date: Thu Feb 03 2005 - 07:45:36 EST


On Thu, Feb 03, 2005 at 12:30:19PM +0100, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote:
> On Thursday, 3 of February 2005 12:01, Dominik Brodowski wrote:
> > On Thu, Feb 03, 2005 at 11:58:46AM +0100, Pavel Machek wrote:
> > > Hi!
> > >
> > > > On Thu, Feb 03, 2005 at 11:41:26AM +0100, Pavel Machek wrote:
> > > > > Okay, you are right, restoring it unconditionaly would be bad
> > > > > idea. Still it would be nice to tell cpufreq governor "please change
> > > > > the frequency ASAP" so it does not run at 800MHz for half an hour
> > > > > compiling kernels on AC power.
> > > >
> > > > It already does that... or at least it should. in cpufreq_resume() there is
> > > > a call to schedule_work(&cpu_policy->update); which will cause a call
> > > > cpufreq_update_policy() in due course. And cpufreq_update_policy() calls the
> > > > governor, and it is supposed to adjust the frequency to the user's wish
> > > > then.
> > >
> > > Ok, so Rafael's suspend() routine seems like good fix...
> >
> > No. I don't see a reason why my desktop P4 should drop to 12.5 frequency
> > (p4-clockmod) if I ask it to suspend to mem.
>
> So, would it be acceptable to check in _suspend() if the state is S4
> and drop the frequency in that case or do nothing otherwise?

No. The point is that this is _very_ system-specific. Some systems resume
always at full speed, some always at low speed; for S4 the behaviour may be
completely unpredictable. And in fact I wouldn't want my desktop P4 drop th
12.5 % frequency if I ask it to suspend to disk, too. "Ignoring" the warning
seems to be the best thing to me. The good thing is, after all, that cpufreq
detected this situation and tries to correct for it.

Dominik


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