On Mon, Mar 04, 2013 at 06:54:34PM +0100, Marco Porsch wrote: > Configure the device for PS mode if the local mesh PS parameters > allow so and the driver supports it. > > Add two callbacks to ieee80211_ops for mesh powersave: > - mesh_ps_doze - put the device to sleep now, wake up at given > TBTT > - mesh_ps_wakeup - wake the device up now for frame RX > These ops may be extended in the future to allow drivers/HW to > implement mesh PS themselves. (Current design goal was to > concentrate most mesh PS routines in mac80211 to keep driver > modifications minimal.) > > Track beacon timing information of peers we are in PS mode > towards. Calculate the next TBTT per STA. Stay awake to receive > multicast traffic after DTIM beacons. > > When going to doze state, get the most imminent STA TBTT and > configure the device to trigger a wakeup on time to catch that > beacon. After successful receipt put the device to doze again. > Set a timeout for the case that the beacon is not received on > time. In this case calculate the following TBTT and go to doze > again. > > For mesh Awake Windows wakeup on PreTBTT/SWBA (beacon_get_tim) > and start a timer which triggers a doze call on expiry. > Similarly, stay awake for the Awake Window duration after > sending probe response frames. > > Signed-off-by: Marco Porsch <marco@xxxxxxxxxxx> I've been looking at power save in mac80211 over the past few days with an eye towards allowing multiple interface to be supported, as a result of comments Johannes made at [1]. It seems like adding driver callbacks for PS which are specific to the interface type is contrary to this goal. The basic idea that's been forming on my mind is add PS states to vifs and make the managed, mesh, etc. code manipulate vif PS states rather than hw states. Then a PS module would manage the hw state based on the aggregate of the vif states. I don't have a lot of the details worked out yet, and my knowledge of PS in mesh networks (and of mesh network operation in general) is pretty rudimentary at this point. But afaict any modes which support PS define the same two hw states, awake and doze. I wonder whether we should instead aim for a single interface into the driver for PS that's capable of supporting all interface types. Anyway, I just wanted to throw this out for discussion. Thanks, Seth [1] http://article.gmane.org/gmane.linux.kernel.wireless.general/104064 -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-wireless" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html