Re: [PATCH] PM / sleep: enable suspend-to-idle even without registered suspend_ops

From: Sudeep Holla
Date: Thu Aug 18 2016 - 09:12:53 EST




On 18/08/16 12:06, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote:
On Thursday, August 18, 2016 10:19:24 AM Sudeep Holla wrote:
Suspend-to-idle (aka the "freeze" sleep state) is a system sleep state
in which all of the processors enter deepest possible idle state and
wait for interrupts right after suspending all the devices.

There is no hard requirement for a platform to support and register
platform specific suspend_ops to enter suspend-to-idle/freeze state.
Only deeper system sleep states like PM_SUSPEND_STANDBY and
PM_SUSPEND_MEM rely on such low level support/implementation.

suspend-to-idle can be entered as along as all the devices can be
suspended. This patch enables the support for suspend-to-idle even on
systems that don't have any low level support for deeper system sleep
states and/or don't register any platform specific suspend_ops.

Cc: "Rafael J. Wysocki" <rjw@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Signed-off-by: Sudeep Holla <sudeep.holla@xxxxxxx>
---
kernel/power/main.c | 5 +++++
kernel/power/suspend.c | 8 +++++---
2 files changed, 10 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)

Hi Rafael,

I am not sure if you like this approach. I found this to be the simplest
but I may have missed to consider all possible corner cases especially
for x86 and other platforms. I don't see any such issues/cases with ARM
systems.

diff --git a/kernel/power/main.c b/kernel/power/main.c
index 5ea50b1b7595..0f0fd9184f39 100644
--- a/kernel/power/main.c
+++ b/kernel/power/main.c
@@ -651,6 +651,11 @@ static int __init pm_init(void)
if (error)
return error;
pm_print_times_init();
+ /*
+ * freeze state should be supported even without any suspend_ops,
+ * calling suspend_set_ops without any ops will setup freeze state
+ */
+ suspend_set_ops(NULL);

Well, this is a core initcall, so suspend_set_ops() invocations from platforms
really should happen after that, so something like this should be sufficient here:

pm_state[PM_SUSPEND_FREEZE] = pm_labels[relative_states ? PM_SUSPEND_MEM : PM_SUSPEND_FREEZE];

if I'm not mistaken.


But won't this show up as "standby" state in /sys/power/state ?
Or did you mean:
pm_state[PM_SUSPEND_FREEZE] = pm_labels[relative_states ? 0 : 2];

which will be "mem" or "freeze" based on relative_states.

In-fact, I did exactly this when I first hacked. Since it exposed
incorrectly to sysfs and I was not sure of these relative_states and
it's usage, I preferred re-using suspend_set_ops for this.

IIUC showing freeze state as "mem" in sysfs is fine as that's the
deepest possible state when relative_states=1. But showing it as freeze
as "standby" in sysfs when relative_states=0 looked wrong to me though
it works as freeze state.

As a side-note with psci, it get called quite early before
core_initcall. But that can be fixed if needed and is different issue.

--
Regards,
Sudeep