Am Mittwoch, 29. Oktober 2014, 13:06:05 schrieb Kevin Hilman: > Hi Chris, > > Chris Zhong <zyw@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > > RK3288 can shut down the cpu, gpu and other device controllers in suspend, > > and it will pull the GLOBAL_PWROFF pin to high in the final stage of the > > process of suspend, pull the pin to low again when resume. > > I tried to test this on top of linux-next (next-20141029) and it doesn't > wake up from serial port activity. > > Can you describe how to test this, as well as describe dependencies on > other out-of-tree patches, including pointers to where they've been > posted. > > Also, please describe how you tested this and on which hardware > platforms. It's a big help to reviewers to know how it's been tested, > and for anyone with similar hardware to know what else it's been tested > on. When testing this series it did go to sleep with / # echo mem > /sys/power/state PM: Syncing filesystems ... done. Freezing user space processes ... (elapsed 0.010 seconds) done. Freezing remaining freezable tasks ... (elapsed 0.010 seconds) done. PM: suspend of devices complete after 0.001 msecs PM: late suspend of devices complete after 0.001 msecs PM: noirq suspend of devices complete after 0.001 msecs Disabling non-boot CPUs ... CPU1: shutdown CPU2: shutdown CPU3: shutdown and the change in pmic-noise lets me assume it's really asleep. But I'm not exactly sure how to wake it up again. I even hard-wired the gpio- keys to always enable the irq wake, but so far it didn't wake again when pressing the power-key on the evb. If anyone wants to peek, the collected patches (Doug's and Chris') can be found on [0]. Heiko [0] https://github.com/mmind/linux-rockchip/tree/wip/rk3288-suspend -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-gpio" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html