On Wednesday 16 December 2009, Linus Torvalds wrote: > > On Wed, 16 Dec 2009, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote: > > > > > > Do you have any sample timing output with devices listed? > > > > I'm going to generate one shortly. I've just put the first set of data, for the HP nx6325 at: http://www.sisk.pl/kernel/data/nx6325/ The *-dmesg.log files contain full dmesg outputs starting from a cold boot and including one suspend-resume cycle in each case, with debug_initcall enabled. The *-suspend.log files are excerpts from the *-dmesg.log files containing the suspend messages only, and analogously for *-resume.log. The *-times.txt files contain suspend/resume time for every device sorted in the decreasing order. > From my bootup timings, I have this memory of SATA link bringup being > noticeable. I wonder if that is the case on resume too... There's no SATA in the nx6325, only IDE, so we'd need to wait for the Wind data (in the works). The slowest suspending device in the nx6325 is the audio chip (surprise, surprise), it takes ~220 ms alone. Then - serio, but since i8042 was not async, the async suspend of serio didn't really help (another ~140 ms). Then network, FireWire, MMC, USB, SD host (~15 ms each). [I think we can help suspend a bit by making i8042 async, although I'm not sure that's going to be safe.] The slowest resuming are USB (by far) and then CardBus, audio, USB controllers, FireWire, network and IDE (but that only takes about 7 ms). But the main problem with async resume is that the USB devices are at the beginning of dpm_list, so the resume of them is not even started until _all_ of the slow devices behind them are woken up. That's why the extra patch helps so much IMO. Rafael _______________________________________________ linux-pm mailing list linux-pm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.linux-foundation.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-pm