Like some other Bay and Cherry Trail SoC based devices the Dell Venue 10 Pro 5055 has an embedded-controller which uses ACPI GPIO events to report events instead of using the standard ACPI EC interface for this. The EC interrupt is only used to report battery-level changes and it keeps doing this while the system is suspended, causing the system to not stay suspended. Add an ignore-wake quirk for the GPIO pin used by the EC to fix the spurious wakeups from suspend. Signed-off-by: Hans de Goede <hdegoede@xxxxxxxxxx> --- drivers/gpio/gpiolib-acpi.c | 14 ++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 14 insertions(+) diff --git a/drivers/gpio/gpiolib-acpi.c b/drivers/gpio/gpiolib-acpi.c index 1aacd2a5a1fd..174839f3772f 100644 --- a/drivers/gpio/gpiolib-acpi.c +++ b/drivers/gpio/gpiolib-acpi.c @@ -1438,6 +1438,20 @@ static const struct dmi_system_id gpiolib_acpi_quirks[] __initconst = { .no_edge_events_on_boot = true, }, }, + { + /* + * The Dell Venue 10 Pro 5055, with Bay Trail SoC + TI PMIC uses an + * external embedded-controller connected via I2C + an ACPI GPIO + * event handler on INT33FFC:02 pin 12, causing spurious wakeups. + */ + .matches = { + DMI_MATCH(DMI_SYS_VENDOR, "Dell Inc."), + DMI_MATCH(DMI_PRODUCT_NAME, "Venue 10 Pro 5055"), + }, + .driver_data = &(struct acpi_gpiolib_dmi_quirk) { + .ignore_wake = "INT33FC:02@12", + }, + }, { /* * HP X2 10 models with Cherry Trail SoC + TI PMIC use an -- 2.30.2