On Tue, Nov 1, 2016 at 3:00 PM, Peter Wu <peter@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Tue, Nov 01, 2016 at 09:24:23AM -0400, Alex Deucher wrote: >> On Tue, Nov 1, 2016 at 12:55 AM, Dave Airlie <airlied@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> > On 1 November 2016 at 08:48, Peter Wu <peter@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> Check whether the kernel really supports power resources for a device, >> >> otherwise the power might not be removed when the device is runtime >> >> suspended (DSM should still work in these cases where PR does not). >> >> >> >> This is a workaround for a problem where ACPICA and Windows 10 differ in >> >> behavior. ACPICA does not correctly enumerate power resources within a >> >> conditional block (due to delayed execution of such blocks) and as a >> >> result power_resources is set to false even if _PR3 exists. >> >> >> >> Fixes: 692a17dcc292 ("drm/nouveau/acpi: fix lockup with PCIe runtime PM") >> >> Link: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=98398 >> >> Reported-and-tested-by: Rick Kerkhof <rick.2889@xxxxxxxxx> >> >> Reviewed-by: Mika Westerberg <mika.westerberg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> >> >> Signed-off-by: Peter Wu <peter@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> >> > >> > I've appled it this and cc'ed stable to drm-fixes. >> > >> > Are we going to get ACPICA fixed? > > The ACPI folks are aware of the problem, see this thread and its > follow-ups: > http://www.spinics.net/lists/linux-acpi/msg70050.html > >> Looks like we may have hit this on radeon/amdgpu as well: >> https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=98505 >> >> Alex > > That log seems to suggest that resume fails while this nouveau issue is > related to suspend not powering off a device. The root cause might be > different. Resume (from runtime suspend) is failing because the device is not getting powered off. Reverting the patch that enables the use of PR3 to power off the dGPU and falls back to the old ATPX power off method fixes the issue. So it would appear that PR3 is either not getting enabled for this system (perhaps due to the date check in the pci code) or due to some problem in the ACPICA. Note that on A+I or A+A systems, if PR3 is available (determined by the OSI setting), it should be used so the date shouldn't really matter in the case of those systems. In practice ATPX generally still works on those systems as well, but it's not a requirement so OEMs/ODMs may not always make it available if PR3 is exposed. Alex _______________________________________________ dri-devel mailing list dri-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/dri-devel