Hi, Appended is the second version of the patch document the requirements with respect to the basic PM support in drivers and the testing of that. I have cleaned it up a bit and included some comments from Nigel. Greetings, Rafael --- Documentation/SubmittingDrivers | 10 ++ Documentation/power/drivers-testing.txt | 146 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 2 files changed, 156 insertions(+) Index: linux-2.6.20-git4/Documentation/SubmittingDrivers =================================================================== --- linux-2.6.20-git4.orig/Documentation/SubmittingDrivers +++ linux-2.6.20-git4/Documentation/SubmittingDrivers @@ -87,6 +87,16 @@ Clarity: It helps if anyone can see how driver that intentionally obfuscates how the hardware works it will go in the bitbucket. +PM support: Since Linux is used on many portable and desktop systems, your + driver is likely to be used on such a system and therefore it + should support basic power management by implementing, if + necessary, the .suspend and .resume methods used during the + system-wide suspend and resume transitions. You should verify + that your driver correctly handles the suspend and resume, but + if you are unable to ensure that, please at least define the + .suspend method returning the -ENOSYS ("Function not + implemented") error. + Control: In general if there is active maintainance of a driver by the author then patches will be redirected to them unless they are totally obvious and without need of checking. Index: linux-2.6.20-git4/Documentation/power/drivers-testing.txt =================================================================== --- /dev/null +++ linux-2.6.20-git4/Documentation/power/drivers-testing.txt @@ -0,0 +1,146 @@ +Testing suspend and resume support in drivers + (C) 2007 Rafael J. Wysocki <rjw at sisk.pl> + +Unfortunately, to effectively test the support for the system-wide suspend and +resume transitions in a driver, it is necessary to suspend and resume a fully +functional system with this driver loaded. Moreover, that should be done many +times, preferably many times in a row, and separately for the suspend to disk +(STD) and the suspend to RAM (STR) transitions, because each of these cases +involves different ordering of operations and different interactions with the +machine's BIOS. + +Of course, for this purpose the test system has to be known to suspend and +resume without the driver being tested. Thus, if possible, you should first +resolve all suspend/resume-related problems in the test system before you start +testing the new driver. + +I. Preparing the test system + +1. Testing suspend to disk (STD) + +To verify that the STD works, you can try to suspend in the "reboot" mode: + +# echo reboot > /sys/power/disk +# echo disk > /sys/power/state + +and the system should suspend, reboot, resume and get back to the command prompt +where you have started the transition. If that happens, the STD is most likely +to work correctly, but you need to repeat the test at least a couple of times in +a row for confidence. This is necessary because some problems only show up on a +second attempt at suspending and resuming a driver. You should also test the +"platform" and "shutdown" modes of suspend: + +# echo platform > /sys/power/disk +# echo disk > /sys/power/state + +or + +# echo shutdown > /sys/power/disk +# echo disk > /sys/power/state + +in which cases you will have to press the power button to make the system +resume. If that works, you are ready to test the STD with the new driver +loaded. Otherwise, you have to identify what is wrong. + +a) Test mode of STD + +To verify if there are any drivers that cause problems you can run the STD +in the test mode: + +# echo test > /sys/power/disk +# echo disk > /sys/power/state + +in which case the system should freeze tasks, suspend devices, disable nonboot +CPUs (if any), wait for 5 seconds, enable nonboot CPUs, resume devices, thaw +tasks and return to your command prompt. If that fails, most likely there is +a driver that fails to either suspend or resume (in the latter case the system +may hang or be unstable after the test, so please take that into consideration). +To find this driver, you can carry out a binary search according to the rules: +- if the test fails, unload a half of the drivers currently loaded and repeat +(that would probably involve rebooting the system, so always note what drivers +have been loaded before the test), +- if the test succeeds, load a half of the drivers you have unloaded most +recently and repeat. + +Once you have found the failing driver (there can be more than just one of +them), you have to unload it every time before the STD transition. In that case +please make sure to report the problem with the driver. + +It is also possible that a cycle can still fail after you have unloaded +all modules. In that case, you would want to look in your kernel configuration +for the drivers that can be compiled as modules (testing again with them as +modules), and possibly also try boot time options such as "noapic" or "noacpi". + +b) Testing minimal configuration + +If the test mode of STD works, you can boot the system with "init=/bin/bash" +and attempt to suspend in the "reboot", "shutdown" and "platform" modes. If +that does not work, there probably is a problem with a driver statically +compiled into the kernel and you can try to compile more drivers as modules, +so that they can be tested individually. Otherwise, there is a problem with a +modular driver and you can find it by loading a half of the modules you normally +use and binary searching in accordance with the algorithm: +- if there are n modules loaded and the attempt to suspend and resume fails, +unload n/2 of the modules and try again (that would probably involve rebooting +the system), +- if there are n modules loaded and the attempt to suspend and resume succeeds, +load n/2 modules more and try again. + +Again, if you find the offending module(s), it(they) must be unloaded every time +before the STD transition, and please report the problem with it(them). + +c) Advanced debugging + +In case the STD does not work on your system even in the minimal configuration +and compiling more drivers as modules is not practical or some modules cannot +be unloaded, you can use one of the more advanced debugging techniques to find +the problem. First, if there is a serial port in your box, you can set the +CONFIG_DISABLE_CONSOLE_SUSPEND kernel configuration option and try to log kernel +messages using the serial console. This may provide you with some information +about the reasons of the suspend (resume) failure. Alternatively, it may be +possible to use a FireWire port for debugging with firescope +(ftp://ftp.firstfloor.org/pub/ak/firescope/). On i386 it is also possible to +use the PM_TRACE mechanism documented in Documentation/s2ram.txt . + +2. Testing suspend to RAM (STR) + +To verify that the STR works, it is generally more convenient to use the s2ram +tool available from http://suspend.sf.net and documented at +http://en.opensuse.org/s2ram . However, before doing that it is recommended to +carry out the procedure described in section 1. + +Assume you have resolved the problems with the STD and you have found some +failing drivers. These drivers are also likely to fail during the STR or +during the resume, so it is better to unload them every time before the STR +transition. Now, you can follow the instructions at +http://en.opensuse.org/s2ram to test the system, but if it does not work +"out of the box", you may need to boot it with "init=/bin/bash" and test +s2ram in the minimal configuration. In that case, you may be able to search +for failing drivers by following the procedure analogous to the one described in +1b). If you find some failing drivers, you will have to unload them every time +before the STR transition (ie. before you run s2ram), and please report the +problem with them. + +II. Testing the driver + +Once you have resolved the suspend/resume-related problems with your test system +without the new driver, you are ready to test it: + +1. Build the driver as a module, load it and try the STD in the test mode +(cf. 1a)). + +2. Compile the driver directly into the kernel and try the STD in the test mode +(cf. 1a)). + +3. Build the driver as a module, load it and attempt to suspend to disk in the +"reboot", "shutdown" and "platform" modes (cf. 1). + +4. Compile the driver directly into the kernel and attempt to suspend to disk in +the "reboot", "shutdown" and "platform" modes (cf. 1). + +5. Build the driver as a module, load it and attempt to run s2ram (cf. 2). + +6. Compile the driver directly into the kernel and attempt to run s2ram (cf. 2). + +Each of the above tests should be repeated several times and if any of them +fails, the driver cannot be regarded as suspend/resume-safe.