On Fri, Aug 11, 2017 at 01:53:44PM +0530, Rushikesh S Kadam wrote: > The fix prevents unintended wakes from second level GPIO pin interrupts. > > On some Intel Kabylake platforms, it is observed that GPIO pin interrupts > can wake the platform from suspend-to-idle, even though the IRQ is not > configured as IRQF_NO_SUSPEND or enable_irq_wake(). > > This can cause undesired wakes on Mobile devices such as Laptops and > Chromebook devices. For example a headset jack insertion is not a desired > wake source on Chromebook devices. > > The pinctrl-intel (GPIO controller) driver implements a "Shared IRQ" model. > All GPIO pin interrupts are OR'ed and mapped to a first level IRQ14 (or > IRQ15). The driver registers an irq_chip struct and maps an irq_domain for > the GPIO pin interrupts. The IRQ14 handler demuxes and calls the second > level IRQ for the respective pin. > > In the suspend entry flow, at suspend_noirq stage, the kernel disables IRQs > that are not marked for wake. The pinctrl-intel driver does not implement a > irq_disable() callback (to take advantage of lazy disabling). The > pinctrl-intel GPIO interrupts are not disabled in hardware during suspend > entry, and thus are able to wake the SoC out of suspend-to-idle. > > This patch sets the IRQCHIP_MASK_ON_SUSPEND flag for the GPIO irq_chip, to > disable the second level interrupts at suspend_noirq stage via the irq_mask > callbacks. The irq_mask callback disables the IRQs in hardware by > programming the corresponding GPIO pad registers. Only IRQs that are not > marked for wake are disabled. This is really good changelog! > Signed-off-by: Rushikesh S Kadam <rushikesh.s.kadam@xxxxxxxxx> Acked-by: Mika Westerberg <mika.westerberg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> -- 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