diff options
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-power | 29 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/kernel-parameters.txt | 7 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/power/states.txt | 87 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | kernel/power/main.c | 12 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | kernel/power/suspend.c | 32 |
5 files changed, 119 insertions, 48 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-power b/Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-power index 64c9276e9421..f4551816329e 100644 --- a/Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-power +++ b/Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-power @@ -7,19 +7,30 @@ Description: subsystem. What: /sys/power/state -Date: August 2006 +Date: May 2014 Contact: Rafael J. Wysocki <rjw@rjwysocki.net> Description: - The /sys/power/state file controls the system power state. - Reading from this file returns what states are supported, - which is hard-coded to 'freeze' (Low-Power Idle), 'standby' - (Power-On Suspend), 'mem' (Suspend-to-RAM), and 'disk' - (Suspend-to-Disk). + The /sys/power/state file controls system sleep states. + Reading from this file returns the available sleep state + labels, which may be "mem", "standby", "freeze" and "disk" + (hibernation). The meanings of the first three labels depend on + the relative_sleep_states command line argument as follows: + 1) relative_sleep_states = 1 + "mem", "standby", "freeze" represent non-hibernation sleep + states from the deepest ("mem", always present) to the + shallowest ("freeze"). "standby" and "freeze" may or may + not be present depending on the capabilities of the + platform. "freeze" can only be present if "standby" is + present. + 2) relative_sleep_states = 0 (default) + "mem" - "suspend-to-RAM", present if supported. + "standby" - "power-on suspend", present if supported. + "freeze" - "suspend-to-idle", always present. Writing to this file one of these strings causes the system to - transition into that state. Please see the file - Documentation/power/states.txt for a description of each of - these states. + transition into the corresponding state, if available. See + Documentation/power/states.txt for a description of what + "suspend-to-RAM", "power-on suspend" and "suspend-to-idle" mean. What: /sys/power/disk Date: September 2006 diff --git a/Documentation/kernel-parameters.txt b/Documentation/kernel-parameters.txt index 43842177b771..e19a88b63eeb 100644 --- a/Documentation/kernel-parameters.txt +++ b/Documentation/kernel-parameters.txt @@ -2889,6 +2889,13 @@ bytes respectively. Such letter suffixes can also be entirely omitted. [KNL, SMP] Set scheduler's default relax_domain_level. See Documentation/cgroups/cpusets.txt. + relative_sleep_states= + [SUSPEND] Use sleep state labeling where the deepest + state available other than hibernation is always "mem". + Format: { "0" | "1" } + 0 -- Traditional sleep state labels. + 1 -- Relative sleep state labels. + reserve= [KNL,BUGS] Force the kernel to ignore some iomem area reservetop= [X86-32] diff --git a/Documentation/power/states.txt b/Documentation/power/states.txt index 442d43df9b25..50f3ef9177c1 100644 --- a/Documentation/power/states.txt +++ b/Documentation/power/states.txt @@ -1,62 +1,87 @@ +System Power Management Sleep States -System Power Management States +(C) 2014 Intel Corp., Rafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com> +The kernel supports up to four system sleep states generically, although three +of them depend on the platform support code to implement the low-level details +for each state. -The kernel supports four power management states generically, though -one is generic and the other three are dependent on platform support -code to implement the low-level details for each state. -This file describes each state, what they are -commonly called, what ACPI state they map to, and what string to write -to /sys/power/state to enter that state +The states are represented by strings that can be read or written to the +/sys/power/state file. Those strings may be "mem", "standby", "freeze" and +"disk", where the last one always represents hibernation (Suspend-To-Disk) and +the meaning of the remaining ones depends on the relative_sleep_states command +line argument. -state: Freeze / Low-Power Idle +For relative_sleep_states=1, the strings "mem", "standby" and "freeze" label the +available non-hibernation sleep states from the deepest to the shallowest, +respectively. In that case, "mem" is always present in /sys/power/state, +because there is at least one non-hibernation sleep state in every system. If +the given system supports two non-hibernation sleep states, "standby" is present +in /sys/power/state in addition to "mem". If the system supports three +non-hibernation sleep states, "freeze" will be present in /sys/power/state in +addition to "mem" and "standby". + +For relative_sleep_states=0, which is the default, the following descriptions +apply. + +state: Suspend-To-Idle ACPI state: S0 -String: "freeze" +Label: "freeze" -This state is a generic, pure software, light-weight, low-power state. -It allows more energy to be saved relative to idle by freezing user +This state is a generic, pure software, light-weight, system sleep state. +It allows more energy to be saved relative to runtime idle by freezing user space and putting all I/O devices into low-power states (possibly lower-power than available at run time), such that the processors can spend more time in their idle states. -This state can be used for platforms without Standby/Suspend-to-RAM + +This state can be used for platforms without Power-On Suspend/Suspend-to-RAM support, or it can be used in addition to Suspend-to-RAM (memory sleep) -to provide reduced resume latency. +to provide reduced resume latency. It is always supported. State: Standby / Power-On Suspend ACPI State: S1 -String: "standby" +Label: "standby" -This state offers minimal, though real, power savings, while providing -a very low-latency transition back to a working system. No operating -state is lost (the CPU retains power), so the system easily starts up +This state, if supported, offers moderate, though real, power savings, while +providing a relatively low-latency transition back to a working system. No +operating state is lost (the CPU retains power), so the system easily starts up again where it left off. -We try to put devices in a low-power state equivalent to D1, which -also offers low power savings, but low resume latency. Not all devices -support D1, and those that don't are left on. +In addition to freezing user space and putting all I/O devices into low-power +states, which is done for Suspend-To-Idle too, nonboot CPUs are taken offline +and all low-level system functions are suspended during transitions into this +state. For this reason, it should allow more energy to be saved relative to +Suspend-To-Idle, but the resume latency will generally be greater than for that +state. State: Suspend-to-RAM ACPI State: S3 -String: "mem" +Label: "mem" -This state offers significant power savings as everything in the -system is put into a low-power state, except for memory, which is -placed in self-refresh mode to retain its contents. +This state, if supported, offers significant power savings as everything in the +system is put into a low-power state, except for memory, which should be placed +into the self-refresh mode to retain its contents. All of the steps carried out +when entering Power-On Suspend are also carried out during transitions to STR. +Additional operations may take place depending on the platform capabilities. In +particular, on ACPI systems the kernel passes control to the BIOS (platform +firmware) as the last step during STR transitions and that usually results in +powering down some more low-level components that aren't directly controlled by +the kernel. -System and device state is saved and kept in memory. All devices are -suspended and put into D3. In many cases, all peripheral buses lose -power when entering STR, so devices must be able to handle the -transition back to the On state. +System and device state is saved and kept in memory. All devices are suspended +and put into low-power states. In many cases, all peripheral buses lose power +when entering STR, so devices must be able to handle the transition back to the +"on" state. -For at least ACPI, STR requires some minimal boot-strapping code to -resume the system from STR. This may be true on other platforms. +For at least ACPI, STR requires some minimal boot-strapping code to resume the +system from it. This may be the case on other platforms too. State: Suspend-to-disk ACPI State: S4 -String: "disk" +Label: "disk" This state offers the greatest power savings, and can be used even in the absence of low-level platform support for power management. This diff --git a/kernel/power/main.c b/kernel/power/main.c index 9f51f0ab3d86..573410d6647e 100644 --- a/kernel/power/main.c +++ b/kernel/power/main.c @@ -279,14 +279,14 @@ static inline void pm_print_times_init(void) {} struct kobject *power_kobj; /** - * state - control system power state. + * state - control system sleep states. * - * show() returns what states are supported, which is hard-coded to - * 'freeze' (Low-Power Idle), 'standby' (Power-On Suspend), - * 'mem' (Suspend-to-RAM), and 'disk' (Suspend-to-Disk). + * show() returns available sleep state labels, which may be "mem", "standby", + * "freeze" and "disk" (hibernation). See Documentation/power/states.txt for a + * description of what they mean. * - * store() accepts one of those strings, translates it into the - * proper enumerated value, and initiates a suspend transition. + * store() accepts one of those strings, translates it into the proper + * enumerated value, and initiates a suspend transition. */ static ssize_t state_show(struct kobject *kobj, struct kobj_attribute *attr, char *buf) diff --git a/kernel/power/suspend.c b/kernel/power/suspend.c index 00aca60904b0..338a6f147974 100644 --- a/kernel/power/suspend.c +++ b/kernel/power/suspend.c @@ -78,6 +78,26 @@ static bool valid_state(suspend_state_t state) return suspend_ops && suspend_ops->valid && suspend_ops->valid(state); } +/* + * If this is set, the "mem" label always corresponds to the deepest sleep state + * available, the "standby" label corresponds to the second deepest sleep state + * available (if any), and the "freeze" label corresponds to the remaining + * available sleep state (if there is one). + */ +static bool relative_states; + +static int __init sleep_states_setup(char *str) +{ + relative_states = !strncmp(str, "1", 1); + if (relative_states) { + pm_states[PM_SUSPEND_MEM].state = PM_SUSPEND_FREEZE; + pm_states[PM_SUSPEND_FREEZE].state = 0; + } + return 1; +} + +__setup("relative_sleep_states=", sleep_states_setup); + /** * suspend_set_ops - Set the global suspend method table. * @ops: Suspend operations to use. @@ -85,12 +105,20 @@ static bool valid_state(suspend_state_t state) void suspend_set_ops(const struct platform_suspend_ops *ops) { suspend_state_t i; + int j = PM_SUSPEND_MAX - 1; lock_system_sleep(); suspend_ops = ops; - for (i = PM_SUSPEND_STANDBY; i <= PM_SUSPEND_MEM; i++) - pm_states[i].state = valid_state(i) ? i : 0; + for (i = PM_SUSPEND_MEM; i >= PM_SUSPEND_STANDBY; i--) + if (valid_state(i)) + pm_states[j--].state = i; + else if (!relative_states) + pm_states[j--].state = 0; + + pm_states[j--].state = PM_SUSPEND_FREEZE; + while (j >= PM_SUSPEND_MIN) + pm_states[j--].state = 0; unlock_system_sleep(); } |