"Rafael J. Wysocki" <[email protected]> writes:

> On Friday, February 11, 2011, Kevin Hilman wrote:
>> "Rafael J. Wysocki" <[email protected]> writes:
>> 
>> > On Monday, January 31, 2011, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote:
>> >> On Monday, January 31, 2011, Alan Stern wrote:
>> >> > On Mon, 31 Jan 2011, Kevin Hilman wrote:
>> >> > 
>> >> > > I understand how this works, but frankly I'm still a bit fuzzy on why.
>> >> > > 
>> >> > > I guess I'm still missing a good understanding of what "interfering 
>> >> > > with a
>> >> > > system power transition" means, and why a runtime suspend qualifies as
>> >> > > interfering but not a runtime resume.
>> >> > 
>> >> > These are good questions.  Rafael implemented this design originally; 
>> >> > my contribution was only to warn him of the potential for problems.  
>> >> > Therefore he should explain the rationale for the design.
>> >> 
>> >> The reason why runtime resume is allowed during system power transitions 
>> >> is
>> >> because in some cases during system suspend we simply have to resume 
>> >> devices
>> >> that were previously runtime-suspended (for example, the PCI bus type does
>> >> that).
>> >> 
>> >> The reason why runtime suspend is not allowed during system power 
>> >> transitions
>> >> if the following race:
>> >> 
>> >> - A device has been suspended via a system suspend callback.
>> >> - The runtime PM framework executes a (scheduled) suspend on that device,
>> >>   not knowing that it's already been suspended, which potentially results 
>> >> in
>> >>   accessing the device's registers in a low-power state.
>> >> 
>> >> Now, it can be avoided if every driver does the right thing and checks 
>> >> whether
>> >> the device is already suspended in its runtime suspend callback, but that 
>> >> would
>> >> kind of defeat the purpose of the runtime PM framework, at least 
>> >> partially.
>> >
>> > In fact, I've just realized that the above race cannot really occur, 
>> > because
>> > pm_wq is freezable, so I'm proposing the following change.
>> >
>> > Of course, it still doesn't prevent user space from disabling the runtime 
>> > PM
>> > framework's helpers via /sys/devices/.../power/control.
>> >
>> > Thanks,
>> > Rafael
>> >
>> >
>> > ---
>> > From: Rafael J. Wysocki <[email protected]>
>> > Subject: PM: Allow pm_runtime_suspend() to succeed during system suspend
>> >
>> > The dpm_prepare() function increments the runtime PM reference
>> > counters of all devices to prevent pm_runtime_suspend() from
>> > executing subsystem-level callbacks.  However, this was supposed to
>> > guard against a specific race condition that cannot happen, because
>> > the power management workqueue is freezable, so pm_runtime_suspend()
>> > can only be called synchronously during system suspend and we can
>> > rely on subsystems and device drivers to avoid doing that
>> > unnecessarily.
>> >
>> > Make dpm_prepare() drop the runtime PM reference to each device
>> > after making sure that runtime resume is not pending for it.
>> >
>> > Signed-off-by: Rafael J. Wysocki <[email protected]>
>> > ---
>> 
>> Yes!
>> 
>> Acked-by: Kevin Hilman <[email protected]>
>
> Well, I hope you realize that it doesn't help you a lot?
>

If you mean that because we still have to implement system PM methods
because of /sys/devices/.../power/control, I agree.

If something else, please explain.

But to me it is still very helpful in terms of consistency and what
driver writers would expect to happen if they used pm_runtime_suspend()
in their system suspend method.

Thanks,

Kevin


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