On Wed, Aug 02, 2023 at 03:10:13PM -0500, Mario Limonciello wrote: > Since commit 9d26d3a8f1b0 ("PCI: Put PCIe ports into D3 during suspend") > PCIe ports from modern machines (>=2015) are allowed to be put into D3 by > storing a value to the `bridge_d3` variable in the `struct pci_dev` > structure. > > pci_power_manageable() uses this variable to indicate a PCIe port can > enter D3. > pci_pm_suspend_noirq() uses the return from pci_power_manageable() to > decide whether to try to put a device into its target state for a sleep > cycle via pci_prepare_to_sleep(). > > For devices that support D3, the target state is selected by this policy: > 1. If platform_pci_power_manageable(): > Use platform_pci_choose_state() > 2. If the device is armed for wakeup: > Select the deepest D-state that supports a PME. > 3. Else: > Use D3hot. > > Devices are considered power manageable by the platform when they have > one or more objects described in the table in section 7.3 of the ACPI 6.5 > specification. > > When devices are not considered power manageable; specs are ambiguous as > to what should happen. In this situation Windows 11 seems to leave PCIe > root ports in D0 while Linux puts them into D3 due to the above mentioned > commit. > > In Windows systems that support Modern Standby specify hardware > pre-conditions for the SoC to achieve the lowest power state by device > constraints in a SOC specific "Power Engine Plugin" (PEP) [2] [3]. > They can be marked as disabled or enabled and when enabled can specify > the minimum power state required for an ACPI device. > > Instead of using a time based heuristic to decide if a port should go > into D3 use device constraints to decide. > * If the constraint is not present or disabled then choose D0. > * If the constraint is enabled, then enable D3 if the constraint is set > to 3 or greater. ... > +/* > + * acpi_get_lps0_constraint - get any LPS0 constraint for an acpi device > + * @handle: ACPI handle of the device > + * > + * If a constraint has been specified in the _DSM method for the device, > + * return it. Otherwise, return -ENODEV. > + */ > +int acpi_get_lps0_constraint(struct device *dev) > +{ > + acpi_handle handle = ACPI_HANDLE(dev); (see below) > + int i; > + > + if (!handle) > + return -ENODEV; > + > + for (i = 0; i < lpi_constraints_table_size; ++i) { > + if (lpi_constraints_table[i].handle != handle) Maybe device_match_acpi_handle() ? > + continue; > + return lpi_constraints_table[i].min_dstate; > + } > + > + return -ENODEV; > +} ... > +/* Is it deliberately non-kernel-doc while mimicking it? > + * acpi_pci_device_constraint_d3 - determine if device constraints require D3 > + * @dev: PCI device to check > + * > + * Returns true if the PEP constraints for the device is enabled and > + * requires D3. > + */ > +bool acpi_pci_device_constraint_d3(struct pci_dev *dev) > +{ > + int constraint = acpi_get_lps0_constraint(&dev->dev); > + > + if (constraint < 0) { I slightly prefer int constraint; constraint = acpi_get_lps0_constraint(&dev->dev); if (constraint < 0) { > + pci_dbg(dev, "ACPI device constraint not present\n"); > + return false; > + } > + > + return constraint >= 3; > +} -- With Best Regards, Andy Shevchenko