Joerg Reisenweber wrote:

I strongly recommend reading of Battery Charging
    Specification

will do...

First approach like above seems the right way to go. Though device should *try* to boot up anyway and simply die when current-limiter on USB-inbound current cuts out and we got no battery backup.

That's what breaks the GTA02v5 when the battery cutoff has activated - the PMU tries to go into Active state, but this triggers a brownout on Vsys when it activates some of the LDOs (based on how Andy explained it on the hardware ML), before the CPU can do anything. Not waking on insertion allows the charger to bring the battery out of the cutoff state, which takes ~10s.

If this problem does not exist on newer models then this behaviour of disabling wake-on-USB could be applied only to the older hardware revisions (although it would be more confusing to users if older and newer units behaved differently on charger insertion).

I suppose we can live with the need for a "jump-start" battery once the rest of the power-management code matures to a point where the battery will never become discharged far enough to trigger the cutoff.


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