On Thursday 11 June 2009, Alan Stern wrote: > On Thu, 11 Jun 2009, Oliver Neukum wrote: > > > Am Donnerstag, 11. Juni 2009 15:48:33 schrieb Rafael J. Wysocki: > > > > > But after pm_request_resume() returns there's no means to make sure > > > > > nothing alters it back to RPM_SUSPENDED. The workqueue doesn't help > > > > > you because you've scheduled nothing by that time. The suspension will > > > > > work because C is still in RPM_SUSPENDED. > > > > > > > > This is an example where usage counters come in handy. > > > > > > Do you mean we can count suspend/resume requests for a device? > > > > No, we count reasons a device cannot be suspended. Drivers are allowed to > > add their own reasons. The core uses that mechanism to indicate that an > > ongoing resumption lower down is also a reason. > > The count going to zero is equivalent to a request to suspend. > > Right. Ah. *That* is what you had in mind. Yes, we can do that. > Here's a related thought. Change the resume routines as follows: > > void pm_runtime_resume(struct device *dev) > { > // Do the actual resume ... > } > EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(pm_runtime_resume); > > static void pm_runtime_resume_work(struct work_struct *work) > { > pm_runtime_resume(resume_work_to_device(work)); > } > > Then there's no need for a separate pm_resume_sync(); drivers can > simply call pm_runtime_resume() directly. The same trick works for > suspending. > > Of course, this means you have to give up the notion that all suspends > and resumes are funnelled through the workqueue. IMO that notion isn't > worth keeping in any case. That's already not the case for resuming. Well, ISTR a reason why I thought pm_resume_sync() was needed anyway, but the idea is actually good. Thanks, Rafael _______________________________________________ linux-pm mailing list linux-pm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.linux-foundation.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-pm