1 ==================== 2 PCI Power Management 3 ==================== 4 5 Copyright (c) 2010 Rafael J. Wysocki <rjw@sisk.pl>, Novell Inc. 6 7 An overview of concepts and the Linux kernel's interfaces related to PCI power 8 management. Based on previous work by Patrick Mochel <mochel@transmeta.com> 9 (and others). 10 11 This document only covers the aspects of power management specific to PCI 12 devices. For general description of the kernel's interfaces related to device 13 power management refer to Documentation/driver-api/pm/devices.rst and 14 Documentation/power/runtime_pm.rst. 15 16 .. contents: 17 18 1. Hardware and Platform Support for PCI Power Management 19 2. PCI Subsystem and Device Power Management 20 3. PCI Device Drivers and Power Management 21 4. Resources 22 23 24 1. Hardware and Platform Support for PCI Power Management 25 ========================================================= 26 27 1.1. Native and Platform-Based Power Management 28 ----------------------------------------------- 29 30 In general, power management is a feature allowing one to save energy by putting 31 devices into states in which they draw less power (low-power states) at the 32 price of reduced functionality or performance. 33 34 Usually, a device is put into a low-power state when it is underutilized or 35 completely inactive. However, when it is necessary to use the device once 36 again, it has to be put back into the "fully functional" state (full-power 37 state). This may happen when there are some data for the device to handle or 38 as a result of an external event requiring the device to be active, which may 39 be signaled by the device itself. 40 41 PCI devices may be put into low-power states in two ways, by using the device 42 capabilities introduced by the PCI Bus Power Management Interface Specification, 43 or with the help of platform firmware, such as an ACPI BIOS. In the first 44 approach, that is referred to as the native PCI power management (native PCI PM) 45 in what follows, the device power state is changed as a result of writing a 46 specific value into one of its standard configuration registers. The second 47 approach requires the platform firmware to provide special methods that may be 48 used by the kernel to change the device's power state. 49 50 Devices supporting the native PCI PM usually can generate wakeup signals called 51 Power Management Events (PMEs) to let the kernel know about external events 52 requiring the device to be active. After receiving a PME the kernel is supposed 53 to put the device that sent it into the full-power state. However, the PCI Bus 54 Power Management Interface Specification doesn't define any standard method of 55 delivering the PME from the device to the CPU and the operating system kernel. 56 It is assumed that the platform firmware will perform this task and therefore, 57 even though a PCI device is set up to generate PMEs, it also may be necessary to 58 prepare the platform firmware for notifying the CPU of the PMEs coming from the 59 device (e.g. by generating interrupts). 60 61 In turn, if the methods provided by the platform firmware are used for changing 62 the power state of a device, usually the platform also provides a method for 63 preparing the device to generate wakeup signals. In that case, however, it 64 often also is necessary to prepare the device for generating PMEs using the 65 native PCI PM mechanism, because the method provided by the platform depends on 66 that. 67 68 Thus in many situations both the native and the platform-based power management 69 mechanisms have to be used simultaneously to obtain the desired result. 70 71 1.2. Native PCI Power Management 72 -------------------------------- 73 74 The PCI Bus Power Management Interface Specification (PCI PM Spec) was 75 introduced between the PCI 2.1 and PCI 2.2 Specifications. It defined a 76 standard interface for performing various operations related to power 77 management. 78 79 The implementation of the PCI PM Spec is optional for conventional PCI devices, 80 but it is mandatory for PCI Express devices. If a device supports the PCI PM 81 Spec, it has an 8 byte power management capability field in its PCI 82 configuration space. This field is used to describe and control the standard 83 features related to the native PCI power management. 84 85 The PCI PM Spec defines 4 operating states for devices (D0-D3) and for buses 86 (B0-B3). The higher the number, the less power is drawn by the device or bus 87 in that state. However, the higher the number, the longer the latency for 88 the device or bus to return to the full-power state (D0 or B0, respectively). 89 90 There are two variants of the D3 state defined by the specification. The first 91 one is D3hot, referred to as the software accessible D3, because devices can be 92 programmed to go into it. The second one, D3cold, is the state that PCI devices 93 are in when the supply voltage (Vcc) is removed from them. It is not possible 94 to program a PCI device to go into D3cold, although there may be a programmable 95 interface for putting the bus the device is on into a state in which Vcc is 96 removed from all devices on the bus. 97 98 PCI bus power management, however, is not supported by the Linux kernel at the 99 time of this writing and therefore it is not covered by this document. 100 101 Note that every PCI device can be in the full-power state (D0) or in D3cold, 102 regardless of whether or not it implements the PCI PM Spec. In addition to 103 that, if the PCI PM Spec is implemented by the device, it must support D3hot 104 as well as D0. The support for the D1 and D2 power states is optional. 105 106 PCI devices supporting the PCI PM Spec can be programmed to go to any of the 107 supported low-power states (except for D3cold). While in D1-D3hot the 108 standard configuration registers of the device must be accessible to software 109 (i.e. the device is required to respond to PCI configuration accesses), although 110 its I/O and memory spaces are then disabled. This allows the device to be 111 programmatically put into D0. Thus the kernel can switch the device back and 112 forth between D0 and the supported low-power states (except for D3cold) and the 113 possible power state transitions the device can undergo are the following: 114 115 +----------------------------+ 116 | Current State | New State | 117 +----------------------------+ 118 | D0 | D1, D2, D3 | 119 +----------------------------+ 120 | D1 | D2, D3 | 121 +----------------------------+ 122 | D2 | D3 | 123 +----------------------------+ 124 | D1, D2, D3 | D0 | 125 +----------------------------+ 126 127 The transition from D3cold to D0 occurs when the supply voltage is provided to 128 the device (i.e. power is restored). In that case the device returns to D0 with 129 a full power-on reset sequence and the power-on defaults are restored to the 130 device by hardware just as at initial power up. 131 132 PCI devices supporting the PCI PM Spec can be programmed to generate PMEs 133 while in any power state (D0-D3), but they are not required to be capable 134 of generating PMEs from all supported power states. In particular, the 135 capability of generating PMEs from D3cold is optional and depends on the 136 presence of additional voltage (3.3Vaux) allowing the device to remain 137 sufficiently active to generate a wakeup signal. 138 139 1.3. ACPI Device Power Management 140 --------------------------------- 141 142 The platform firmware support for the power management of PCI devices is 143 system-specific. However, if the system in question is compliant with the 144 Advanced Configuration and Power Interface (ACPI) Specification, like the 145 majority of x86-based systems, it is supposed to implement device power 146 management interfaces defined by the ACPI standard. 147 148 For this purpose the ACPI BIOS provides special functions called "control 149 methods" that may be executed by the kernel to perform specific tasks, such as 150 putting a device into a low-power state. These control methods are encoded 151 using special byte-code language called the ACPI Machine Language (AML) and 152 stored in the machine's BIOS. The kernel loads them from the BIOS and executes 153 them as needed using an AML interpreter that translates the AML byte code into 154 computations and memory or I/O space accesses. This way, in theory, a BIOS 155 writer can provide the kernel with a means to perform actions depending 156 on the system design in a system-specific fashion. 157 158 ACPI control methods may be divided into global control methods, that are not 159 associated with any particular devices, and device control methods, that have 160 to be defined separately for each device supposed to be handled with the help of 161 the platform. This means, in particular, that ACPI device control methods can 162 only be used to handle devices that the BIOS writer knew about in advance. The 163 ACPI methods used for device power management fall into that category. 164 165 The ACPI specification assumes that devices can be in one of four power states 166 labeled as D0, D1, D2, and D3 that roughly correspond to the native PCI PM 167 D0-D3 states (although the difference between D3hot and D3cold is not taken 168 into account by ACPI). Moreover, for each power state of a device there is a 169 set of power resources that have to be enabled for the device to be put into 170 that state. These power resources are controlled (i.e. enabled or disabled) 171 with the help of their own control methods, _ON and _OFF, that have to be 172 defined individually for each of them. 173 174 To put a device into the ACPI power state Dx (where x is a number between 0 and 175 3 inclusive) the kernel is supposed to (1) enable the power resources required 176 by the device in this state using their _ON control methods and (2) execute the 177 _PSx control method defined for the device. In addition to that, if the device 178 is going to be put into a low-power state (D1-D3) and is supposed to generate 179 wakeup signals from that state, the _DSW (or _PSW, replaced with _DSW by ACPI 180 3.0) control method defined for it has to be executed before _PSx. Power 181 resources that are not required by the device in the target power state and are 182 not required any more by any other device should be disabled (by executing their 183 _OFF control methods). If the current power state of the device is D3, it can 184 only be put into D0 this way. 185 186 However, quite often the power states of devices are changed during a 187 system-wide transition into a sleep state or back into the working state. ACPI 188 defines four system sleep states, S1, S2, S3, and S4, and denotes the system 189 working state as S0. In general, the target system sleep (or working) state 190 determines the highest power (lowest number) state the device can be put 191 into and the kernel is supposed to obtain this information by executing the 192 device's _SxD control method (where x is a number between 0 and 4 inclusive). 193 If the device is required to wake up the system from the target sleep state, the 194 lowest power (highest number) state it can be put into is also determined by the 195 target state of the system. The kernel is then supposed to use the device's 196 _SxW control method to obtain the number of that state. It also is supposed to 197 use the device's _PRW control method to learn which power resources need to be 198 enabled for the device to be able to generate wakeup signals. 199 200 1.4. Wakeup Signaling 201 --------------------- 202 203 Wakeup signals generated by PCI devices, either as native PCI PMEs, or as 204 a result of the execution of the _DSW (or _PSW) ACPI control method before 205 putting the device into a low-power state, have to be caught and handled as 206 appropriate. If they are sent while the system is in the working state 207 (ACPI S0), they should be translated into interrupts so that the kernel can 208 put the devices generating them into the full-power state and take care of the 209 events that triggered them. In turn, if they are sent while the system is 210 sleeping, they should cause the system's core logic to trigger wakeup. 211 212 On ACPI-based systems wakeup signals sent by conventional PCI devices are 213 converted into ACPI General-Purpose Events (GPEs) which are hardware signals 214 from the system core logic generated in response to various events that need to 215 be acted upon. Every GPE is associated with one or more sources of potentially 216 interesting events. In particular, a GPE may be associated with a PCI device 217 capable of signaling wakeup. The information on the connections between GPEs 218 and event sources is recorded in the system's ACPI BIOS from where it can be 219 read by the kernel. 220 221 If a PCI device known to the system's ACPI BIOS signals wakeup, the GPE 222 associated with it (if there is one) is triggered. The GPEs associated with PCI 223 bridges may also be triggered in response to a wakeup signal from one of the 224 devices below the bridge (this also is the case for root bridges) and, for 225 example, native PCI PMEs from devices unknown to the system's ACPI BIOS may be 226 handled this way. 227 228 A GPE may be triggered when the system is sleeping (i.e. when it is in one of 229 the ACPI S1-S4 states), in which case system wakeup is started by its core logic 230 (the device that was the source of the signal causing the system wakeup to occur 231 may be identified later). The GPEs used in such situations are referred to as 232 wakeup GPEs. 233 234 Usually, however, GPEs are also triggered when the system is in the working 235 state (ACPI S0) and in that case the system's core logic generates a System 236 Control Interrupt (SCI) to notify the kernel of the event. Then, the SCI 237 handler identifies the GPE that caused the interrupt to be generated which, 238 in turn, allows the kernel to identify the source of the event (that may be 239 a PCI device signaling wakeup). The GPEs used for notifying the kernel of 240 events occurring while the system is in the working state are referred to as 241 runtime GPEs. 242 243 Unfortunately, there is no standard way of handling wakeup signals sent by 244 conventional PCI devices on systems that are not ACPI-based, but there is one 245 for PCI Express devices. Namely, the PCI Express Base Specification introduced 246 a native mechanism for converting native PCI PMEs into interrupts generated by 247 root ports. For conventional PCI devices native PMEs are out-of-band, so they 248 are routed separately and they need not pass through bridges (in principle they 249 may be routed directly to the system's core logic), but for PCI Express devices 250 they are in-band messages that have to pass through the PCI Express hierarchy, 251 including the root port on the path from the device to the Root Complex. Thus 252 it was possible to introduce a mechanism by which a root port generates an 253 interrupt whenever it receives a PME message from one of the devices below it. 254 The PCI Express Requester ID of the device that sent the PME message is then 255 recorded in one of the root port's configuration registers from where it may be 256 read by the interrupt handler allowing the device to be identified. [PME 257 messages sent by PCI Express endpoints integrated with the Root Complex don't 258 pass through root ports, but instead they cause a Root Complex Event Collector 259 (if there is one) to generate interrupts.] 260 261 In principle the native PCI Express PME signaling may also be used on ACPI-based 262 systems along with the GPEs, but to use it the kernel has to ask the system's 263 ACPI BIOS to release control of root port configuration registers. The ACPI 264 BIOS, however, is not required to allow the kernel to control these registers 265 and if it doesn't do that, the kernel must not modify their contents. Of course 266 the native PCI Express PME signaling cannot be used by the kernel in that case. 267 268 269 2. PCI Subsystem and Device Power Management 270 ============================================ 271 272 2.1. Device Power Management Callbacks 273 -------------------------------------- 274 275 The PCI Subsystem participates in the power management of PCI devices in a 276 number of ways. First of all, it provides an intermediate code layer between 277 the device power management core (PM core) and PCI device drivers. 278 Specifically, the pm field of the PCI subsystem's struct bus_type object, 279 pci_bus_type, points to a struct dev_pm_ops object, pci_dev_pm_ops, containing 280 pointers to several device power management callbacks:: 281 282 const struct dev_pm_ops pci_dev_pm_ops = { 283 .prepare = pci_pm_prepare, 284 .complete = pci_pm_complete, 285 .suspend = pci_pm_suspend, 286 .resume = pci_pm_resume, 287 .freeze = pci_pm_freeze, 288 .thaw = pci_pm_thaw, 289 .poweroff = pci_pm_poweroff, 290 .restore = pci_pm_restore, 291 .suspend_noirq = pci_pm_suspend_noirq, 292 .resume_noirq = pci_pm_resume_noirq, 293 .freeze_noirq = pci_pm_freeze_noirq, 294 .thaw_noirq = pci_pm_thaw_noirq, 295 .poweroff_noirq = pci_pm_poweroff_noirq, 296 .restore_noirq = pci_pm_restore_noirq, 297 .runtime_suspend = pci_pm_runtime_suspend, 298 .runtime_resume = pci_pm_runtime_resume, 299 .runtime_idle = pci_pm_runtime_idle, 300 }; 301 302 These callbacks are executed by the PM core in various situations related to 303 device power management and they, in turn, execute power management callbacks 304 provided by PCI device drivers. They also perform power management operations 305 involving some standard configuration registers of PCI devices that device 306 drivers need not know or care about. 307 308 The structure representing a PCI device, struct pci_dev, contains several fields 309 that these callbacks operate on:: 310 311 struct pci_dev { 312 ... 313 pci_power_t current_state; /* Current operating state. */ 314 int pm_cap; /* PM capability offset in the 315 configuration space */ 316 unsigned int pme_support:5; /* Bitmask of states from which PME# 317 can be generated */ 318 unsigned int pme_poll:1; /* Poll device's PME status bit */ 319 unsigned int d1_support:1; /* Low power state D1 is supported */ 320 unsigned int d2_support:1; /* Low power state D2 is supported */ 321 unsigned int no_d1d2:1; /* D1 and D2 are forbidden */ 322 unsigned int wakeup_prepared:1; /* Device prepared for wake up */ 323 unsigned int d3hot_delay; /* D3hot->D0 transition time in ms */ 324 ... 325 }; 326 327 They also indirectly use some fields of the struct device that is embedded in 328 struct pci_dev. 329 330 2.2. Device Initialization 331 -------------------------- 332 333 The PCI subsystem's first task related to device power management is to 334 prepare the device for power management and initialize the fields of struct 335 pci_dev used for this purpose. This happens in two functions defined in 336 drivers/pci/, pci_pm_init() and pci_acpi_setup(). 337 338 The first of these functions checks if the device supports native PCI PM 339 and if that's the case the offset of its power management capability structure 340 in the configuration space is stored in the pm_cap field of the device's struct 341 pci_dev object. Next, the function checks which PCI low-power states are 342 supported by the device and from which low-power states the device can generate 343 native PCI PMEs. The power management fields of the device's struct pci_dev and 344 the struct device embedded in it are updated accordingly and the generation of 345 PMEs by the device is disabled. 346 347 The second function checks if the device can be prepared to signal wakeup with 348 the help of the platform firmware, such as the ACPI BIOS. If that is the case, 349 the function updates the wakeup fields in struct device embedded in the 350 device's struct pci_dev and uses the firmware-provided method to prevent the 351 device from signaling wakeup. 352 353 At this point the device is ready for power management. For driverless devices, 354 however, this functionality is limited to a few basic operations carried out 355 during system-wide transitions to a sleep state and back to the working state. 356 357 2.3. Runtime Device Power Management 358 ------------------------------------ 359 360 The PCI subsystem plays a vital role in the runtime power management of PCI 361 devices. For this purpose it uses the general runtime power management 362 (runtime PM) framework described in Documentation/power/runtime_pm.rst. 363 Namely, it provides subsystem-level callbacks:: 364 365 pci_pm_runtime_suspend() 366 pci_pm_runtime_resume() 367 pci_pm_runtime_idle() 368 369 that are executed by the core runtime PM routines. It also implements the 370 entire mechanics necessary for handling runtime wakeup signals from PCI devices 371 in low-power states, which at the time of this writing works for both the native 372 PCI Express PME signaling and the ACPI GPE-based wakeup signaling described in 373 Section 1. 374 375 First, a PCI device is put into a low-power state, or suspended, with the help 376 of pm_schedule_suspend() or pm_runtime_suspend() which for PCI devices call 377 pci_pm_runtime_suspend() to do the actual job. For this to work, the device's 378 driver has to provide a pm->runtime_suspend() callback (see below), which is 379 run by pci_pm_runtime_suspend() as the first action. If the driver's callback 380 returns successfully, the device's standard configuration registers are saved, 381 the device is prepared to generate wakeup signals and, finally, it is put into 382 the target low-power state. 383 384 The low-power state to put the device into is the lowest-power (highest number) 385 state from which it can signal wakeup. The exact method of signaling wakeup is 386 system-dependent and is determined by the PCI subsystem on the basis of the 387 reported capabilities of the device and the platform firmware. To prepare the 388 device for signaling wakeup and put it into the selected low-power state, the 389 PCI subsystem can use the platform firmware as well as the device's native PCI 390 PM capabilities, if supported. 391 392 It is expected that the device driver's pm->runtime_suspend() callback will 393 not attempt to prepare the device for signaling wakeup or to put it into a 394 low-power state. The driver ought to leave these tasks to the PCI subsystem 395 that has all of the information necessary to perform them. 396 397 A suspended device is brought back into the "active" state, or resumed, 398 with the help of pm_request_resume() or pm_runtime_resume() which both call 399 pci_pm_runtime_resume() for PCI devices. Again, this only works if the device's 400 driver provides a pm->runtime_resume() callback (see below). However, before 401 the driver's callback is executed, pci_pm_runtime_resume() brings the device 402 back into the full-power state, prevents it from signaling wakeup while in that 403 state and restores its standard configuration registers. Thus the driver's 404 callback need not worry about the PCI-specific aspects of the device resume. 405 406 Note that generally pci_pm_runtime_resume() may be called in two different 407 situations. First, it may be called at the request of the device's driver, for 408 example if there are some data for it to process. Second, it may be called 409 as a result of a wakeup signal from the device itself (this sometimes is 410 referred to as "remote wakeup"). Of course, for this purpose the wakeup signal 411 is handled in one of the ways described in Section 1 and finally converted into 412 a notification for the PCI subsystem after the source device has been 413 identified. 414 415 The pci_pm_runtime_idle() function, called for PCI devices by pm_runtime_idle() 416 and pm_request_idle(), executes the device driver's pm->runtime_idle() 417 callback, if defined, and if that callback doesn't return error code (or is not 418 present at all), suspends the device with the help of pm_runtime_suspend(). 419 Sometimes pci_pm_runtime_idle() is called automatically by the PM core (for 420 example, it is called right after the device has just been resumed), in which 421 cases it is expected to suspend the device if that makes sense. Usually, 422 however, the PCI subsystem doesn't really know if the device really can be 423 suspended, so it lets the device's driver decide by running its 424 pm->runtime_idle() callback. 425 426 2.4. System-Wide Power Transitions 427 ---------------------------------- 428 There are a few different types of system-wide power transitions, described in 429 Documentation/driver-api/pm/devices.rst. Each of them requires devices to be 430 handled in a specific way and the PM core executes subsystem-level power 431 management callbacks for this purpose. They are executed in phases such that 432 each phase involves executing the same subsystem-level callback for every device 433 belonging to the given subsystem before the next phase begins. These phases 434 always run after tasks have been frozen. 435 436 2.4.1. System Suspend 437 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 438 439 When the system is going into a sleep state in which the contents of memory will 440 be preserved, such as one of the ACPI sleep states S1-S3, the phases are: 441 442 prepare, suspend, suspend_noirq. 443 444 The following PCI bus type's callbacks, respectively, are used in these phases:: 445 446 pci_pm_prepare() 447 pci_pm_suspend() 448 pci_pm_suspend_noirq() 449 450 The pci_pm_prepare() routine first puts the device into the "fully functional" 451 state with the help of pm_runtime_resume(). Then, it executes the device 452 driver's pm->prepare() callback if defined (i.e. if the driver's struct 453 dev_pm_ops object is present and the prepare pointer in that object is valid). 454 455 The pci_pm_suspend() routine first checks if the device's driver implements 456 legacy PCI suspend routines (see Section 3), in which case the driver's legacy 457 suspend callback is executed, if present, and its result is returned. Next, if 458 the device's driver doesn't provide a struct dev_pm_ops object (containing 459 pointers to the driver's callbacks), pci_pm_default_suspend() is called, which 460 simply turns off the device's bus master capability and runs 461 pcibios_disable_device() to disable it, unless the device is a bridge (PCI 462 bridges are ignored by this routine). Next, the device driver's pm->suspend() 463 callback is executed, if defined, and its result is returned if it fails. 464 Finally, pci_fixup_device() is called to apply hardware suspend quirks related 465 to the device if necessary. 466 467 Note that the suspend phase is carried out asynchronously for PCI devices, so 468 the pci_pm_suspend() callback may be executed in parallel for any pair of PCI 469 devices that don't depend on each other in a known way (i.e. none of the paths 470 in the device tree from the root bridge to a leaf device contains both of them). 471 472 The pci_pm_suspend_noirq() routine is executed after suspend_device_irqs() has 473 been called, which means that the device driver's interrupt handler won't be 474 invoked while this routine is running. It first checks if the device's driver 475 implements legacy PCI suspends routines (Section 3), in which case the legacy 476 late suspend routine is called and its result is returned (the standard 477 configuration registers of the device are saved if the driver's callback hasn't 478 done that). Second, if the device driver's struct dev_pm_ops object is not 479 present, the device's standard configuration registers are saved and the routine 480 returns success. Otherwise the device driver's pm->suspend_noirq() callback is 481 executed, if present, and its result is returned if it fails. Next, if the 482 device's standard configuration registers haven't been saved yet (one of the 483 device driver's callbacks executed before might do that), pci_pm_suspend_noirq() 484 saves them, prepares the device to signal wakeup (if necessary) and puts it into 485 a low-power state. 486 487 The low-power state to put the device into is the lowest-power (highest number) 488 state from which it can signal wakeup while the system is in the target sleep 489 state. Just like in the runtime PM case described above, the mechanism of 490 signaling wakeup is system-dependent and determined by the PCI subsystem, which 491 is also responsible for preparing the device to signal wakeup from the system's 492 target sleep state as appropriate. 493 494 PCI device drivers (that don't implement legacy power management callbacks) are 495 generally not expected to prepare devices for signaling wakeup or to put them 496 into low-power states. However, if one of the driver's suspend callbacks 497 (pm->suspend() or pm->suspend_noirq()) saves the device's standard configuration 498 registers, pci_pm_suspend_noirq() will assume that the device has been prepared 499 to signal wakeup and put into a low-power state by the driver (the driver is 500 then assumed to have used the helper functions provided by the PCI subsystem for 501 this purpose). PCI device drivers are not encouraged to do that, but in some 502 rare cases doing that in the driver may be the optimum approach. 503 504 2.4.2. System Resume 505 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 506 507 When the system is undergoing a transition from a sleep state in which the 508 contents of memory have been preserved, such as one of the ACPI sleep states 509 S1-S3, into the working state (ACPI S0), the phases are: 510 511 resume_noirq, resume, complete. 512 513 The following PCI bus type's callbacks, respectively, are executed in these 514 phases:: 515 516 pci_pm_resume_noirq() 517 pci_pm_resume() 518 pci_pm_complete() 519 520 The pci_pm_resume_noirq() routine first puts the device into the full-power 521 state, restores its standard configuration registers and applies early resume 522 hardware quirks related to the device, if necessary. This is done 523 unconditionally, regardless of whether or not the device's driver implements 524 legacy PCI power management callbacks (this way all PCI devices are in the 525 full-power state and their standard configuration registers have been restored 526 when their interrupt handlers are invoked for the first time during resume, 527 which allows the kernel to avoid problems with the handling of shared interrupts 528 by drivers whose devices are still suspended). If legacy PCI power management 529 callbacks (see Section 3) are implemented by the device's driver, the legacy 530 early resume callback is executed and its result is returned. Otherwise, the 531 device driver's pm->resume_noirq() callback is executed, if defined, and its 532 result is returned. 533 534 The pci_pm_resume() routine first checks if the device's standard configuration 535 registers have been restored and restores them if that's not the case (this 536 only is necessary in the error path during a failing suspend). Next, resume 537 hardware quirks related to the device are applied, if necessary, and if the 538 device's driver implements legacy PCI power management callbacks (see 539 Section 3), the driver's legacy resume callback is executed and its result is 540 returned. Otherwise, the device's wakeup signaling mechanisms are blocked and 541 its driver's pm->resume() callback is executed, if defined (the callback's 542 result is then returned). 543 544 The resume phase is carried out asynchronously for PCI devices, like the 545 suspend phase described above, which means that if two PCI devices don't depend 546 on each other in a known way, the pci_pm_resume() routine may be executed for 547 the both of them in parallel. 548 549 The pci_pm_complete() routine only executes the device driver's pm->complete() 550 callback, if defined. 551 552 2.4.3. System Hibernation 553 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 554 555 System hibernation is more complicated than system suspend, because it requires 556 a system image to be created and written into a persistent storage medium. The 557 image is created atomically and all devices are quiesced, or frozen, before that 558 happens. 559 560 The freezing of devices is carried out after enough memory has been freed (at 561 the time of this writing the image creation requires at least 50% of system RAM 562 to be free) in the following three phases: 563 564 prepare, freeze, freeze_noirq 565 566 that correspond to the PCI bus type's callbacks:: 567 568 pci_pm_prepare() 569 pci_pm_freeze() 570 pci_pm_freeze_noirq() 571 572 This means that the prepare phase is exactly the same as for system suspend. 573 The other two phases, however, are different. 574 575 The pci_pm_freeze() routine is quite similar to pci_pm_suspend(), but it runs 576 the device driver's pm->freeze() callback, if defined, instead of pm->suspend(), 577 and it doesn't apply the suspend-related hardware quirks. It is executed 578 asynchronously for different PCI devices that don't depend on each other in a 579 known way. 580 581 The pci_pm_freeze_noirq() routine, in turn, is similar to 582 pci_pm_suspend_noirq(), but it calls the device driver's pm->freeze_noirq() 583 routine instead of pm->suspend_noirq(). It also doesn't attempt to prepare the 584 device for signaling wakeup and put it into a low-power state. Still, it saves 585 the device's standard configuration registers if they haven't been saved by one 586 of the driver's callbacks. 587 588 Once the image has been created, it has to be saved. However, at this point all 589 devices are frozen and they cannot handle I/O, while their ability to handle 590 I/O is obviously necessary for the image saving. Thus they have to be brought 591 back to the fully functional state and this is done in the following phases: 592 593 thaw_noirq, thaw, complete 594 595 using the following PCI bus type's callbacks:: 596 597 pci_pm_thaw_noirq() 598 pci_pm_thaw() 599 pci_pm_complete() 600 601 respectively. 602 603 The first of them, pci_pm_thaw_noirq(), is analogous to pci_pm_resume_noirq(). 604 It puts the device into the full power state and restores its standard 605 configuration registers. It also executes the device driver's pm->thaw_noirq() 606 callback, if defined, instead of pm->resume_noirq(). 607 608 The pci_pm_thaw() routine is similar to pci_pm_resume(), but it runs the device 609 driver's pm->thaw() callback instead of pm->resume(). It is executed 610 asynchronously for different PCI devices that don't depend on each other in a 611 known way. 612 613 The complete phase is the same as for system resume. 614 615 After saving the image, devices need to be powered down before the system can 616 enter the target sleep state (ACPI S4 for ACPI-based systems). This is done in 617 three phases: 618 619 prepare, poweroff, poweroff_noirq 620 621 where the prepare phase is exactly the same as for system suspend. The other 622 two phases are analogous to the suspend and suspend_noirq phases, respectively. 623 The PCI subsystem-level callbacks they correspond to:: 624 625 pci_pm_poweroff() 626 pci_pm_poweroff_noirq() 627 628 work in analogy with pci_pm_suspend() and pci_pm_suspend_noirq(), respectively, 629 although they don't attempt to save the device's standard configuration 630 registers. 631 632 2.4.4. System Restore 633 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 634 635 System restore requires a hibernation image to be loaded into memory and the 636 pre-hibernation memory contents to be restored before the pre-hibernation system 637 activity can be resumed. 638 639 As described in Documentation/driver-api/pm/devices.rst, the hibernation image 640 is loaded into memory by a fresh instance of the kernel, called the boot kernel, 641 which in turn is loaded and run by a boot loader in the usual way. After the 642 boot kernel has loaded the image, it needs to replace its own code and data with 643 the code and data of the "hibernated" kernel stored within the image, called the 644 image kernel. For this purpose all devices are frozen just like before creating 645 the image during hibernation, in the 646 647 prepare, freeze, freeze_noirq 648 649 phases described above. However, the devices affected by these phases are only 650 those having drivers in the boot kernel; other devices will still be in whatever 651 state the boot loader left them. 652 653 Should the restoration of the pre-hibernation memory contents fail, the boot 654 kernel would go through the "thawing" procedure described above, using the 655 thaw_noirq, thaw, and complete phases (that will only affect the devices having 656 drivers in the boot kernel), and then continue running normally. 657 658 If the pre-hibernation memory contents are restored successfully, which is the 659 usual situation, control is passed to the image kernel, which then becomes 660 responsible for bringing the system back to the working state. To achieve this, 661 it must restore the devices' pre-hibernation functionality, which is done much 662 like waking up from the memory sleep state, although it involves different 663 phases: 664 665 restore_noirq, restore, complete 666 667 The first two of these are analogous to the resume_noirq and resume phases 668 described above, respectively, and correspond to the following PCI subsystem 669 callbacks:: 670 671 pci_pm_restore_noirq() 672 pci_pm_restore() 673 674 These callbacks work in analogy with pci_pm_resume_noirq() and pci_pm_resume(), 675 respectively, but they execute the device driver's pm->restore_noirq() and 676 pm->restore() callbacks, if available. 677 678 The complete phase is carried out in exactly the same way as during system 679 resume. 680 681 682 3. PCI Device Drivers and Power Management 683 ========================================== 684 685 3.1. Power Management Callbacks 686 ------------------------------- 687 688 PCI device drivers participate in power management by providing callbacks to be 689 executed by the PCI subsystem's power management routines described above and by 690 controlling the runtime power management of their devices. 691 692 At the time of this writing there are two ways to define power management 693 callbacks for a PCI device driver, the recommended one, based on using a 694 dev_pm_ops structure described in Documentation/driver-api/pm/devices.rst, and 695 the "legacy" one, in which the .suspend() and .resume() callbacks from struct 696 pci_driver are used. The legacy approach, however, doesn't allow one to define 697 runtime power management callbacks and is not really suitable for any new 698 drivers. Therefore it is not covered by this document (refer to the source code 699 to learn more about it). 700 701 It is recommended that all PCI device drivers define a struct dev_pm_ops object 702 containing pointers to power management (PM) callbacks that will be executed by 703 the PCI subsystem's PM routines in various circumstances. A pointer to the 704 driver's struct dev_pm_ops object has to be assigned to the driver.pm field in 705 its struct pci_driver object. Once that has happened, the "legacy" PM callbacks 706 in struct pci_driver are ignored (even if they are not NULL). 707 708 The PM callbacks in struct dev_pm_ops are not mandatory and if they are not 709 defined (i.e. the respective fields of struct dev_pm_ops are unset) the PCI 710 subsystem will handle the device in a simplified default manner. If they are 711 defined, though, they are expected to behave as described in the following 712 subsections. 713 714 3.1.1. prepare() 715 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 716 717 The prepare() callback is executed during system suspend, during hibernation 718 (when a hibernation image is about to be created), during power-off after 719 saving a hibernation image and during system restore, when a hibernation image 720 has just been loaded into memory. 721 722 This callback is only necessary if the driver's device has children that in 723 general may be registered at any time. In that case the role of the prepare() 724 callback is to prevent new children of the device from being registered until 725 one of the resume_noirq(), thaw_noirq(), or restore_noirq() callbacks is run. 726 727 In addition to that the prepare() callback may carry out some operations 728 preparing the device to be suspended, although it should not allocate memory 729 (if additional memory is required to suspend the device, it has to be 730 preallocated earlier, for example in a suspend/hibernate notifier as described 731 in Documentation/driver-api/pm/notifiers.rst). 732 733 3.1.2. suspend() 734 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 735 736 The suspend() callback is only executed during system suspend, after prepare() 737 callbacks have been executed for all devices in the system. 738 739 This callback is expected to quiesce the device and prepare it to be put into a 740 low-power state by the PCI subsystem. It is not required (in fact it even is 741 not recommended) that a PCI driver's suspend() callback save the standard 742 configuration registers of the device, prepare it for waking up the system, or 743 put it into a low-power state. All of these operations can very well be taken 744 care of by the PCI subsystem, without the driver's participation. 745 746 However, in some rare case it is convenient to carry out these operations in 747 a PCI driver. Then, pci_save_state(), pci_prepare_to_sleep(), and 748 pci_set_power_state() should be used to save the device's standard configuration 749 registers, to prepare it for system wakeup (if necessary), and to put it into a 750 low-power state, respectively. Moreover, if the driver calls pci_save_state(), 751 the PCI subsystem will not execute either pci_prepare_to_sleep(), or 752 pci_set_power_state() for its device, so the driver is then responsible for 753 handling the device as appropriate. 754 755 While the suspend() callback is being executed, the driver's interrupt handler 756 can be invoked to handle an interrupt from the device, so all suspend-related 757 operations relying on the driver's ability to handle interrupts should be 758 carried out in this callback. 759 760 3.1.3. suspend_noirq() 761 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 762 763 The suspend_noirq() callback is only executed during system suspend, after 764 suspend() callbacks have been executed for all devices in the system and 765 after device interrupts have been disabled by the PM core. 766 767 The difference between suspend_noirq() and suspend() is that the driver's 768 interrupt handler will not be invoked while suspend_noirq() is running. Thus 769 suspend_noirq() can carry out operations that would cause race conditions to 770 arise if they were performed in suspend(). 771 772 3.1.4. freeze() 773 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 774 775 The freeze() callback is hibernation-specific and is executed in two situations, 776 during hibernation, after prepare() callbacks have been executed for all devices 777 in preparation for the creation of a system image, and during restore, 778 after a system image has been loaded into memory from persistent storage and the 779 prepare() callbacks have been executed for all devices. 780 781 The role of this callback is analogous to the role of the suspend() callback 782 described above. In fact, they only need to be different in the rare cases when 783 the driver takes the responsibility for putting the device into a low-power 784 state. 785 786 In that cases the freeze() callback should not prepare the device system wakeup 787 or put it into a low-power state. Still, either it or freeze_noirq() should 788 save the device's standard configuration registers using pci_save_state(). 789 790 3.1.5. freeze_noirq() 791 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 792 793 The freeze_noirq() callback is hibernation-specific. It is executed during 794 hibernation, after prepare() and freeze() callbacks have been executed for all 795 devices in preparation for the creation of a system image, and during restore, 796 after a system image has been loaded into memory and after prepare() and 797 freeze() callbacks have been executed for all devices. It is always executed 798 after device interrupts have been disabled by the PM core. 799 800 The role of this callback is analogous to the role of the suspend_noirq() 801 callback described above and it very rarely is necessary to define 802 freeze_noirq(). 803 804 The difference between freeze_noirq() and freeze() is analogous to the 805 difference between suspend_noirq() and suspend(). 806 807 3.1.6. poweroff() 808 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 809 810 The poweroff() callback is hibernation-specific. It is executed when the system 811 is about to be powered off after saving a hibernation image to a persistent 812 storage. prepare() callbacks are executed for all devices before poweroff() is 813 called. 814 815 The role of this callback is analogous to the role of the suspend() and freeze() 816 callbacks described above, although it does not need to save the contents of 817 the device's registers. In particular, if the driver wants to put the device 818 into a low-power state itself instead of allowing the PCI subsystem to do that, 819 the poweroff() callback should use pci_prepare_to_sleep() and 820 pci_set_power_state() to prepare the device for system wakeup and to put it 821 into a low-power state, respectively, but it need not save the device's standard 822 configuration registers. 823 824 3.1.7. poweroff_noirq() 825 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 826 827 The poweroff_noirq() callback is hibernation-specific. It is executed after 828 poweroff() callbacks have been executed for all devices in the system. 829 830 The role of this callback is analogous to the role of the suspend_noirq() and 831 freeze_noirq() callbacks described above, but it does not need to save the 832 contents of the device's registers. 833 834 The difference between poweroff_noirq() and poweroff() is analogous to the 835 difference between suspend_noirq() and suspend(). 836 837 3.1.8. resume_noirq() 838 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 839 840 The resume_noirq() callback is only executed during system resume, after the 841 PM core has enabled the non-boot CPUs. The driver's interrupt handler will not 842 be invoked while resume_noirq() is running, so this callback can carry out 843 operations that might race with the interrupt handler. 844 845 Since the PCI subsystem unconditionally puts all devices into the full power 846 state in the resume_noirq phase of system resume and restores their standard 847 configuration registers, resume_noirq() is usually not necessary. In general 848 it should only be used for performing operations that would lead to race 849 conditions if carried out by resume(). 850 851 3.1.9. resume() 852 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 853 854 The resume() callback is only executed during system resume, after 855 resume_noirq() callbacks have been executed for all devices in the system and 856 device interrupts have been enabled by the PM core. 857 858 This callback is responsible for restoring the pre-suspend configuration of the 859 device and bringing it back to the fully functional state. The device should be 860 able to process I/O in a usual way after resume() has returned. 861 862 3.1.10. thaw_noirq() 863 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 864 865 The thaw_noirq() callback is hibernation-specific. It is executed after a 866 system image has been created and the non-boot CPUs have been enabled by the PM 867 core, in the thaw_noirq phase of hibernation. It also may be executed if the 868 loading of a hibernation image fails during system restore (it is then executed 869 after enabling the non-boot CPUs). The driver's interrupt handler will not be 870 invoked while thaw_noirq() is running. 871 872 The role of this callback is analogous to the role of resume_noirq(). The 873 difference between these two callbacks is that thaw_noirq() is executed after 874 freeze() and freeze_noirq(), so in general it does not need to modify the 875 contents of the device's registers. 876 877 3.1.11. thaw() 878 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 879 880 The thaw() callback is hibernation-specific. It is executed after thaw_noirq() 881 callbacks have been executed for all devices in the system and after device 882 interrupts have been enabled by the PM core. 883 884 This callback is responsible for restoring the pre-freeze configuration of 885 the device, so that it will work in a usual way after thaw() has returned. 886 887 3.1.12. restore_noirq() 888 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 889 890 The restore_noirq() callback is hibernation-specific. It is executed in the 891 restore_noirq phase of hibernation, when the boot kernel has passed control to 892 the image kernel and the non-boot CPUs have been enabled by the image kernel's 893 PM core. 894 895 This callback is analogous to resume_noirq() with the exception that it cannot 896 make any assumption on the previous state of the device, even if the BIOS (or 897 generally the platform firmware) is known to preserve that state over a 898 suspend-resume cycle. 899 900 For the vast majority of PCI device drivers there is no difference between 901 resume_noirq() and restore_noirq(). 902 903 3.1.13. restore() 904 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 905 906 The restore() callback is hibernation-specific. It is executed after 907 restore_noirq() callbacks have been executed for all devices in the system and 908 after the PM core has enabled device drivers' interrupt handlers to be invoked. 909 910 This callback is analogous to resume(), just like restore_noirq() is analogous 911 to resume_noirq(). Consequently, the difference between restore_noirq() and 912 restore() is analogous to the difference between resume_noirq() and resume(). 913 914 For the vast majority of PCI device drivers there is no difference between 915 resume() and restore(). 916 917 3.1.14. complete() 918 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 919 920 The complete() callback is executed in the following situations: 921 922 - during system resume, after resume() callbacks have been executed for all 923 devices, 924 - during hibernation, before saving the system image, after thaw() callbacks 925 have been executed for all devices, 926 - during system restore, when the system is going back to its pre-hibernation 927 state, after restore() callbacks have been executed for all devices. 928 929 It also may be executed if the loading of a hibernation image into memory fails 930 (in that case it is run after thaw() callbacks have been executed for all 931 devices that have drivers in the boot kernel). 932 933 This callback is entirely optional, although it may be necessary if the 934 prepare() callback performs operations that need to be reversed. 935 936 3.1.15. runtime_suspend() 937 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 938 939 The runtime_suspend() callback is specific to device runtime power management 940 (runtime PM). It is executed by the PM core's runtime PM framework when the 941 device is about to be suspended (i.e. quiesced and put into a low-power state) 942 at run time. 943 944 This callback is responsible for freezing the device and preparing it to be 945 put into a low-power state, but it must allow the PCI subsystem to perform all 946 of the PCI-specific actions necessary for suspending the device. 947 948 3.1.16. runtime_resume() 949 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 950 951 The runtime_resume() callback is specific to device runtime PM. It is executed 952 by the PM core's runtime PM framework when the device is about to be resumed 953 (i.e. put into the full-power state and programmed to process I/O normally) at 954 run time. 955 956 This callback is responsible for restoring the normal functionality of the 957 device after it has been put into the full-power state by the PCI subsystem. 958 The device is expected to be able to process I/O in the usual way after 959 runtime_resume() has returned. 960 961 3.1.17. runtime_idle() 962 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 963 964 The runtime_idle() callback is specific to device runtime PM. It is executed 965 by the PM core's runtime PM framework whenever it may be desirable to suspend 966 the device according to the PM core's information. In particular, it is 967 automatically executed right after runtime_resume() has returned in case the 968 resume of the device has happened as a result of a spurious event. 969 970 This callback is optional, but if it is not implemented or if it returns 0, the 971 PCI subsystem will call pm_runtime_suspend() for the device, which in turn will 972 cause the driver's runtime_suspend() callback to be executed. 973 974 3.1.18. Pointing Multiple Callback Pointers to One Routine 975 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 976 977 Although in principle each of the callbacks described in the previous 978 subsections can be defined as a separate function, it often is convenient to 979 point two or more members of struct dev_pm_ops to the same routine. There are 980 a few convenience macros that can be used for this purpose. 981 982 The SIMPLE_DEV_PM_OPS macro declares a struct dev_pm_ops object with one 983 suspend routine pointed to by the .suspend(), .freeze(), and .poweroff() 984 members and one resume routine pointed to by the .resume(), .thaw(), and 985 .restore() members. The other function pointers in this struct dev_pm_ops are 986 unset. 987 988 The UNIVERSAL_DEV_PM_OPS macro is similar to SIMPLE_DEV_PM_OPS, but it 989 additionally sets the .runtime_resume() pointer to the same value as 990 .resume() (and .thaw(), and .restore()) and the .runtime_suspend() pointer to 991 the same value as .suspend() (and .freeze() and .poweroff()). 992 993 The SET_SYSTEM_SLEEP_PM_OPS can be used inside of a declaration of struct 994 dev_pm_ops to indicate that one suspend routine is to be pointed to by the 995 .suspend(), .freeze(), and .poweroff() members and one resume routine is to 996 be pointed to by the .resume(), .thaw(), and .restore() members. 997 998 3.1.19. Driver Flags for Power Management 999 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 1000 1001 The PM core allows device drivers to set flags that influence the handling of 1002 power management for the devices by the core itself and by middle layer code 1003 including the PCI bus type. The flags should be set once at the driver probe 1004 time with the help of the dev_pm_set_driver_flags() function and they should not 1005 be updated directly afterwards. 1006 1007 The DPM_FLAG_NO_DIRECT_COMPLETE flag prevents the PM core from using the 1008 direct-complete mechanism allowing device suspend/resume callbacks to be skipped 1009 if the device is in runtime suspend when the system suspend starts. That also 1010 affects all of the ancestors of the device, so this flag should only be used if 1011 absolutely necessary. 1012 1013 The DPM_FLAG_SMART_PREPARE flag causes the PCI bus type to return a positive 1014 value from pci_pm_prepare() only if the ->prepare callback provided by the 1015 driver of the device returns a positive value. That allows the driver to opt 1016 out from using the direct-complete mechanism dynamically (whereas setting 1017 DPM_FLAG_NO_DIRECT_COMPLETE means permanent opt-out). 1018 1019 The DPM_FLAG_SMART_SUSPEND flag tells the PCI bus type that from the driver's 1020 perspective the device can be safely left in runtime suspend during system 1021 suspend. That causes pci_pm_suspend(), pci_pm_freeze() and pci_pm_poweroff() 1022 to avoid resuming the device from runtime suspend unless there are PCI-specific 1023 reasons for doing that. Also, it causes pci_pm_suspend_late/noirq() and 1024 pci_pm_poweroff_late/noirq() to return early if the device remains in runtime 1025 suspend during the "late" phase of the system-wide transition under way. 1026 Moreover, if the device is in runtime suspend in pci_pm_resume_noirq() or 1027 pci_pm_restore_noirq(), its runtime PM status will be changed to "active" (as it 1028 is going to be put into D0 going forward). 1029 1030 Setting the DPM_FLAG_MAY_SKIP_RESUME flag means that the driver allows its 1031 "noirq" and "early" resume callbacks to be skipped if the device can be left 1032 in suspend after a system-wide transition into the working state. This flag is 1033 taken into consideration by the PM core along with the power.may_skip_resume 1034 status bit of the device which is set by pci_pm_suspend_noirq() in certain 1035 situations. If the PM core determines that the driver's "noirq" and "early" 1036 resume callbacks should be skipped, the dev_pm_skip_resume() helper function 1037 will return "true" and that will cause pci_pm_resume_noirq() and 1038 pci_pm_resume_early() to return upfront without touching the device and 1039 executing the driver callbacks. 1040 1041 3.2. Device Runtime Power Management 1042 ------------------------------------ 1043 1044 In addition to providing device power management callbacks PCI device drivers 1045 are responsible for controlling the runtime power management (runtime PM) of 1046 their devices. 1047 1048 The PCI device runtime PM is optional, but it is recommended that PCI device 1049 drivers implement it at least in the cases where there is a reliable way of 1050 verifying that the device is not used (like when the network cable is detached 1051 from an Ethernet adapter or there are no devices attached to a USB controller). 1052 1053 To support the PCI runtime PM the driver first needs to implement the 1054 runtime_suspend() and runtime_resume() callbacks. It also may need to implement 1055 the runtime_idle() callback to prevent the device from being suspended again 1056 every time right after the runtime_resume() callback has returned 1057 (alternatively, the runtime_suspend() callback will have to check if the 1058 device should really be suspended and return -EAGAIN if that is not the case). 1059 1060 The runtime PM of PCI devices is enabled by default by the PCI core. PCI 1061 device drivers do not need to enable it and should not attempt to do so. 1062 However, it is blocked by pci_pm_init() that runs the pm_runtime_forbid() 1063 helper function. In addition to that, the runtime PM usage counter of 1064 each PCI device is incremented by local_pci_probe() before executing the 1065 probe callback provided by the device's driver. 1066 1067 If a PCI driver implements the runtime PM callbacks and intends to use the 1068 runtime PM framework provided by the PM core and the PCI subsystem, it needs 1069 to decrement the device's runtime PM usage counter in its probe callback 1070 function. If it doesn't do that, the counter will always be different from 1071 zero for the device and it will never be runtime-suspended. The simplest 1072 way to do that is by calling pm_runtime_put_noidle(), but if the driver 1073 wants to schedule an autosuspend right away, for example, it may call 1074 pm_runtime_put_autosuspend() instead for this purpose. Generally, it 1075 just needs to call a function that decrements the devices usage counter 1076 from its probe routine to make runtime PM work for the device. 1077 1078 It is important to remember that the driver's runtime_suspend() callback 1079 may be executed right after the usage counter has been decremented, because 1080 user space may already have caused the pm_runtime_allow() helper function 1081 unblocking the runtime PM of the device to run via sysfs, so the driver must 1082 be prepared to cope with that. 1083 1084 The driver itself should not call pm_runtime_allow(), though. Instead, it 1085 should let user space or some platform-specific code do that (user space can 1086 do it via sysfs as stated above), but it must be prepared to handle the 1087 runtime PM of the device correctly as soon as pm_runtime_allow() is called 1088 (which may happen at any time, even before the driver is loaded). 1089 1090 When the driver's remove callback runs, it has to balance the decrementation 1091 of the device's runtime PM usage counter at the probe time. For this reason, 1092 if it has decremented the counter in its probe callback, it must run 1093 pm_runtime_get_noresume() in its remove callback. [Since the core carries 1094 out a runtime resume of the device and bumps up the device's usage counter 1095 before running the driver's remove callback, the runtime PM of the device 1096 is effectively disabled for the duration of the remove execution and all 1097 runtime PM helper functions incrementing the device's usage counter are 1098 then effectively equivalent to pm_runtime_get_noresume().] 1099 1100 The runtime PM framework works by processing requests to suspend or resume 1101 devices, or to check if they are idle (in which cases it is reasonable to 1102 subsequently request that they be suspended). These requests are represented 1103 by work items put into the power management workqueue, pm_wq. Although there 1104 are a few situations in which power management requests are automatically 1105 queued by the PM core (for example, after processing a request to resume a 1106 device the PM core automatically queues a request to check if the device is 1107 idle), device drivers are generally responsible for queuing power management 1108 requests for their devices. For this purpose they should use the runtime PM 1109 helper functions provided by the PM core, discussed in 1110 Documentation/power/runtime_pm.rst. 1111 1112 Devices can also be suspended and resumed synchronously, without placing a 1113 request into pm_wq. In the majority of cases this also is done by their 1114 drivers that use helper functions provided by the PM core for this purpose. 1115 1116 For more information on the runtime PM of devices refer to 1117 Documentation/power/runtime_pm.rst. 1118 1119 1120 4. Resources 1121 ============ 1122 1123 PCI Local Bus Specification, Rev. 3.0 1124 1125 PCI Bus Power Management Interface Specification, Rev. 1.2 1126 1127 Advanced Configuration and Power Interface (ACPI) Specification, Rev. 3.0b 1128 1129 PCI Express Base Specification, Rev. 2.0 1130 1131 Documentation/driver-api/pm/devices.rst 1132 1133 Documentation/power/runtime_pm.rst
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