On Fri, Jan 16, 2015 at 11:10:18AM +0100, Hans de Goede wrote: > On 16-01-15 10:27, Gregory CLEMENT wrote: > >>>+ reg_sata0: pwr-sata0 { > >>>+ compatible = "regulator-fixed"; > >>>+ regulator-name = "pwr_en_sata0"; > >>>+ enable-active-high; > >>>+ regulator-always-on; > >>done, but we're not using a power on delay anyways. > >But if regulator-always-on prevent to switch it off in > >suspend then yes using regulator-boot-on is better. > AFAIK regulator-always-on means exactly that and thus likely > is not what you want. As for using regulator-off-in-suspend > that is not necessary as the suspend method for the acpi > driver will already turn it off. regulator-always-on is a bit fuzzy for suspend, if the regulator has suspend control it'll kick in - it's really about the Linux refcounting while it's running. What's more concerning here is that the quick sample of the regulators flagged as always on like the above that I looked at in the patch don't seem to have any enable control in the DT so this will have absolutely no effect. > It is probably a good idea to use regulator-boot-on and > then test things this way, and if that works use > regulator-boot-on. No, it's unlikely that boot-on makes sense here - it's there for cases where we can't read back the hardware state at power on. Generally drivers should work regardless of the initial state of the regulator (and modular drivers will actually break if they try to rely on boot-on since we clean up unused regulators at boot).
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