suspend-to-mem on the mpc8349e-mitx-gp?

Soohyung Cho celius202 at gmail.com
Mon Mar 23 17:17:18 EST 2009


2009/3/23 Li Yang-R58472 <LeoLi at freescale.com>

> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Wood Scott-B07421
> > Sent: Friday, March 20, 2009 10:42 PM
> > To: Li Yang-R58472
> > Cc: Soohyung Cho; linuxppc-dev at ozlabs.org
> > Subject: Re: suspend-to-mem on the mpc8349e-mitx-gp?
> >
> > Li Yang-R58472 wrote:
> > >> However, the code should treat "mem" as "standby" on chips
> > that don't
> > >> support deep sleep.  What does the device tree
> > >
> > > Well, shouldn't the valid() callback reject unsupported
> > states instead
> > > of covering up?
> >
> > I don't think so, in this case.  The user is not asking for
> > "sleep" or deep sleep"; they are asking for a power state
> > that meets the definition of "standby" (which sleep does) or
> > which meets the definition of "mem"
> > (which both sleep and deep sleep do).  When the user asks for
> > "mem", we provide the lowest power mode that qualifies.
>
> In my understanding, "mem" which is suspend-to-ram means all CPU states and
> registers are kept in memory and the CPU is completely off during
> suspension.  I don't think the sleep mode of 8349 qualifies, does it?
>
> - Leo
>


I also agree to Leo.
It can be confusing, if "mem" means both sleep and deep sleep.
It would be better not to show "mem", if 8349 don't have deep sleep mode.

- Soohyung
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.ozlabs.org/pipermail/linuxppc-dev/attachments/20090323/bdace798/attachment.htm>


More information about the Linuxppc-dev mailing list