On Fri, May 07, 2010 at 01:53:29PM -0700, Tony Lindgren wrote: > So for example, if I leave ping running in a a terminal, do you > have some way of preventing that from eating the battery? It depends on policy. If all network packets generate wakeup events then no, that will carry on eating battery. If ICMP doesn't generate a wakeup event then the process won't be run. > Do you just suspend the whole system anyways at some point, > or do you have some other trick? If nothing's holding any suspend blocks then the system will enter suspend. If the packet generates a wakeup then the kernel would block suspend until userspace has had the opportunity to do so. Once userspace has handled the packet then it could release the block and the system will immediately transition back into suspend. Here's a different example. A process is waiting for a keypress, but because it's badly written it's also drawing to the screen at 60 frames per second and preventing the system from every going to idle. How do you quiesce the system while still ensuring that the keypress will be delivered to the application? -- Matthew Garrett | mjg59@xxxxxxxxxxxxx _______________________________________________ linux-pm mailing list linux-pm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.linux-foundation.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-pm