On 26.06.20 17:44, Alan Stern wrote: > On Fri, Jun 26, 2020 at 08:07:51AM -0700, Bart Van Assche wrote: >> On 2020-06-25 01:16, Martin Kepplinger wrote: >>> here's roughly what happens when enabling runtime PM in sysfs (again, >>> because sd_probe() calls autopm_put() and thus allows it: >>> >>> [ 27.384446] sd 0:0:0:0: scsi_runtime_suspend >>> [ 27.432282] blk_pre_runtime_suspend >>> [ 27.435783] sd_suspend_common >>> [ 27.438782] blk_post_runtime_suspend >>> [ 27.442427] scsi target0:0:0: scsi_runtime_suspend >>> [ 27.447303] scsi host0: scsi_runtime_suspend >>> >>> then I "mount /dev/sda1 /mnt" and none of the resume() functions get >>> called. To me it looks like the sd driver should initiate resuming, and >>> that's not implemented. >>> >>> what am I doing wrong or overlooking? how exactly does (or should) the >>> block layer initiate resume here? >> >> As far as I know runtime power management support in the sd driver is working >> fine and is being used intensively by the UFS driver. The following commit was >> submitted to fix a bug encountered by an UFS developer: 05d18ae1cc8a ("scsi: >> pm: Balance pm_only counter of request queue during system resume") # v5.7. > > I just looked at that commit for the first time. > > Instead of making the SCSI driver do the work of deciding what routine to > call, why not redefine blk_set_runtime_active(q) to simply call > blk_post_runtime_resume(q, 0)? Or vice versa: if err == 0 have > blk_post_runtime_resume call blk_set_runtime_active? > > After all, the two routines do almost the same thing -- and the bug > addressed by this commit was caused by the difference in their behaviors. > > If the device was already runtime-active during the system suspend, doing > an extra clear of the pm_only counter won't hurt anything. > >> I'm not sure which bug is causing trouble on your setup but I think it's likely >> that the root cause is somewhere else than in the block layer, the SCSI core >> or the SCSI sd driver. >> >> Bart. > > Martin's best approach would be to add some debugging code to find out why > blk_queue_enter() isn't calling bkl_pm_request_resume(), or why that call > doesn't lead to pm_request_resume(). > > Alan Stern > Hi Alan, blk_queue_enter() always - especially when sd is runtime suspended and I try to mount as above - sets success to be true for me, so never continues down to bkl_pm_request_resume(). All I see is "PM: Removing info for No Bus:sda1". thanks, martin