On Mon, 29 Jun 2009, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote: > > > So, it seems, pm_request_resume() can't kill suspend requests by itself > > > and instead it has to queue up resume requests for this purpose, which > > > brings us right back to the problem of two requests queued up at a time > > > (a delayed suspend request and a resume request that is supposed to cancel it). > > > > No, you're trying to do too much. If the state is RPM_IDLE (i.e., a > > suspend request is pending) then rpm_request_resume doesn't need to do > > anything. The device is already resumed! Sure, it can try to kill the > > request and change the state to RPM_ACTIVE, but it doesn't need to. > > I think it does need to do that, because the reuqest may be scheduled way > in the future and we can't preserve its work structure until it runs. > pm_request_resume() doesn't know in advance when the suspend work function is > going to be queued up and run. It doesn't need to know. All it needs to do is guarantee that the device will be in a resumed state some time not long after the function returns. Thus calling rpm_request_resume while the status is RPM_IDLE is like calling it while the status is RPM_ACTIVE. In neither case does it have to do anything, because the device will already be resumed when it returns. Perhaps instead we should provide a way to kill a pending suspend request? It's not clear that anyone would need this. The only reason I can think of is if you wanted to change the timeout duration. But it wouldn't be able to run in interrupt context. > > Think about it. Even if the suspend request were killed off, there's > > always the possibility that someone could call rpm_runtime_suspend > > right afterward. If the driver really wants to resume the device and > > prevent it from suspending again, then the driver should call > > pm_runtime_get before pm_request_resume. Then it won't matter if the > > suspend request runs. > > No, it doesn't matter if the request runs, but it does matter if the work > structure used for queuing it up may be used for another purpose. :-) What else would it be used for? If rpm_request_resume returns without doing anything and leaves the status set to RPM_IDLE, then the work structure won't be reused until the status changes. > The problem with pm_<something>_put is that it does two things at a time, > decrements the resume counter and runs or queues up an idle notification. > Perhaps it's a good idea to call it after the second thing and change > pm_runtime_get() to pm_runtime_inuse(), so that we have: > > * pm_runtime_inuse() - increment the resume counter > * pm_runtime_idle() - decrement the resume counter and run idle notification > * pm_request_idle() - decrement the resume counter and queue idle notification > > and __pm_runtime_idle() as the "bare" idle notification function? I could live with that, but the nice thing about "get" and "put" is that they directly suggest a counter is being maintained and therefore the calls have to balance. Maybe we should just call it rpm_request_put and not worry that the put happens immediately. Alan Stern -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-acpi" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html