Hello,
(CC'ing the linux-pm mailing list)
On Tuesday 22 Nov 2016 21:58:32 Arnd Bergmann wrote:
> On Tuesday, November 22, 2016 8:31:42 PM CET Laurent Pinchart wrote:
> >>> @@ -2915,7 +2906,11 @@ static int smiapp_probe(struct i2c_client
> >>> *client,
> >>>
> >>> pm_runtime_enable(&client->dev);
> >>>
> >>> +#ifdef CONFIG_PM
> >>> rval = pm_runtime_get_sync(&client->dev);
> >>> +#else
> >>> + rval = smiapp_power_on(&client->dev);
> >>> +#endif
> >>> if (rval < 0) {
> >>> rval = -ENODEV;
> >>> goto out_power_off;
> >>
> >> I would suggest writing this as
> >>
> >> if (IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_PM))
> >> rval = pm_runtime_get_sync(&client->dev);
> >> else
> >> rval = smiapp_power_on(&client->dev);
> >>
> >> though that is a purely cosmetic change.
> >
> > Are all drivers really supposed to code this kind of construct ? Shouldn't
> > this be handled in the PM core ? A very naive approach would be to call
> > .runtime_resume() and .runtime_suspend() from the non-CONFIG_PM versions
> > of pm_runtime_enable() and pm_runtime_disable() respectively. I assume
> > that would break things, but can't we implement something similar to that
> > that wouldn't require all drivers to open-code it ?
>
> I know nothing about the details of how the suspend/resume code should
> do this, I was just commenting on the syntax above, preferring an
> IS_ENABLED() check over an #ifdef.
Dear linux-pm developers, what's the suggested way to ensure that a runtime-
pm-enabled driver can run fine on a system with CONFIG_PM disabled ?
--
Regards,
Laurent Pinchart
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