On Tue, Oct 22, 2019 at 02:51:53PM +0200, Karol Herbst wrote: > On Tue, Oct 22, 2019 at 2:45 PM Mika Westerberg > <mika.westerberg@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > On Tue, Oct 22, 2019 at 11:16:14AM +0200, Karol Herbst wrote: > > > I think there is something I totally forgot about: > > > > > > When there was never a driver bound to the GPU, and if runtime power > > > management gets enabled on that device, runtime suspend/resume works > > > as expected (I am not 100% sure on if that always works, but I will > > > recheck that). > > > > AFAIK, if there is no driver bound to the PCI device it is left to D0 > > regardless of the runtime PM state which could explain why it works in > > that case (it is never put into D3hot). > > > > I looked at the acpidump you sent and there is one thing that may > > explain the differences between Windows and Linux. Not sure if you were > > aware of this already, though. The power resource PGOF() method has > > this: > > > > If (((OSYS <= 0x07D9) || ((OSYS == 0x07DF) && (_REV == 0x05)))) { > > ... > > } > > > > I think this is the fallback to some older method of runtime > suspending the device, and I think it will end up touching different > registers on the bridge controller which do not show the broken > behaviour. I think it actually tries to identify older Windows and then Linux (the _REV == 0x05 check comes from that). So at least some point Dell people have experiment this on Linux.