Hi Sudeep, On Wed, Feb 22, 2017 at 3:32 PM, Sudeep Holla <sudeep.holla@xxxxxxx> wrote: > On 22/02/17 13:38, Geert Uytterhoeven wrote: >> On Wed, Feb 22, 2017 at 12:03 PM, Sudeep Holla <sudeep.holla@xxxxxxx> wrote: >>> On 22/02/17 01:14, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote: >>>> On Tuesday, February 21, 2017 06:45:13 PM Sudeep Holla wrote: >>> Geert, so far you have failed to explain what's different from the new >>> state you are adding and the existing s2idle. >> >> I did explain, cfr.: >> 1. The power consumption figures in the cover letter: >> - shallow: 8.4 W 6.2 W (secondary CPU cores off) > > That's because your CPU_SUSPEND implementation is incomplete. You can > enter the same state as secondary CPU core off even with idle. It's just > that we can save by not entering and exiting the CPU hotplug state > machine. So this "shallow" state can be achieved if your CPU_SUSPEND > implements that state. Does that include power areas? >> 2. The description for patch 3/6: >> As secondary CPU cores are taken offline, "shallow" suspend mode saves >> slightly more power than "s2idle", but less than "deep" suspend mode. >> However, unlike "deep" suspend mode, "shallow" suspend mode can be used >> regardless of the presence of support for PSCI_SYSTEM_SUSPEND, which is >> an optional API in PSCI v1.0. > > Yes I understood that, you need to add an extra idle states to get that > shallow state. We have discussed this in past to depth. On ARM64/PSCI, > we will that support "shallow" system suspend mode which can't be > defined generically. Also we can support this shallow state with s2idle. > > Your system probably not supporting all the CPU idle states. E.g.: it > may just support CPU ON/OFF/RET and not cluster ON/OFF/RET. Please add > that state to CPU_SUSPEND implementation in the firmware. I can find CPU_ON and CPU_OFF in the PSCI specification, but not CPU_RET? How is the cluster ON/OFF/RET called exactly? I can't find any CLUSTER_* calls in the PSCI specification. >From a quick glance in the PSCI sources, there's some support for powering down clusters. >> Perhaps, I didn't make myself clear. Let's summarize: >> 1. On Renesas R-Car Gen3 platforms, PSCI SYSTEM_SUSPEND is implemented, > > OK got that. > >> 2. On these platforms, PSCI SYSTEM_SUSPEND powers down the SoC, and supports >> wake-up from PMIC only, > > OK > >> 3. If the user wants to use a different wake-up source, these other >> wake-up sources fail to wake up the system from PSCI SYSTEM_SUSPEND. > > In that case don't enter PSCI SYSTEM_SUSPEND Or prevent the system from doing that... >> 4. Patch 3/6 adds a new "shallow" state, as it allows to save more >> power (the difference may be due to suboptimal cpuidle platform support on R-Car Gen3, though), > > Why can't you do that in s2idle mode. Please give me the difference > between your shallow state and s2idle state, not just power numbers > but the actual state of CPUs and the devices in the system. >From the Linux side, there's not much difference, except that the secondary CPU cores are disabled. As that is handled by PSCI, the difference may be in the PSCI implementation. I will have to check that... On these SoCs, the individual CPU cores and the SCU/L2 are in separate (nested) power areas. Perhaps these power areas are turned off when disabling the CPU cores, but not when suspending them. >> E.g. on non-PSCI platforms with an Ethernet driver that supports >> Wake-on-LAN, I can do: >> >> ethtool -s eth0 wol g >> echo mem > /sys/power/state >> >> and be sure that the system can be woken up by sending a WoL MagicPacket. > > Still possible with s2idle if CPU_SUSPEND is correctly implemented by > the platform. Sure. But not automatic, as it needs fiddling with mem_sleep. >> On PSCI systems, the above may work, or may not work. And there's no way to >> find out (in an automated way) whether it will work or not. >> >> If it doesn't work, the user has to configure his system (manually) to >> not use "mem" state. >> Since v4.10-rc1, that can be done using e.g. >> >> echo s2idle > /sys/power/mem_sleep >> >> and my patches make that automatic (for a new "shallow" state instead >> of "s2idle", though). > > How is that ? If "deep" is available as in your case too, why will > shallow become default. IIUC the user still have to write "shallow" > to mem_sleep. After patch 4, if needed (DT property + extra wake-up sources configured), psci_system_suspend_enter() will call cpu_do_idle() instead of psci_system_suspend(). No need to fiddle with mem_sleep manually. > Does this platform use generic arm64 DT cpuidle driver ? I don't see so > from the DT. I think that task isn't complete yet. Gr{oetje,eeting}s, Geert -- Geert Uytterhoeven -- There's lots of Linux beyond ia32 -- geert@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx In personal conversations with technical people, I call myself a hacker. But when I'm talking to journalists I just say "programmer" or something like that. -- Linus Torvalds -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe devicetree" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html