| Most of the code in Linux is device drivers, so most of the Linux power |
| management code is also driver-specific. Most drivers will do very little; |
| others, especially for platforms with small batteries (like cell phones), |
| will do a lot. |
| |
| This writeup gives an overview of how drivers interact with system-wide |
| power management goals, emphasizing the models and interfaces that are |
| shared by everything that hooks up to the driver model core. Read it as |
| background for the domain-specific work you'd do with any specific driver. |
| |
| |
| Two Models for Device Power Management |
| ====================================== |
| Drivers will use one or both of these models to put devices into low-power |
| states: |
| |
| System Sleep model: |
| Drivers can enter low power states as part of entering system-wide |
| low-power states like "suspend-to-ram", or (mostly for systems with |
| disks) "hibernate" (suspend-to-disk). |
| |
| This is something that device, bus, and class drivers collaborate on |
| by implementing various role-specific suspend and resume methods to |
| cleanly power down hardware and software subsystems, then reactivate |
| them without loss of data. |
| |
| Some drivers can manage hardware wakeup events, which make the system |
| leave that low-power state. This feature may be disabled using the |
| relevant /sys/devices/.../power/wakeup file; enabling it may cost some |
| power usage, but let the whole system enter low power states more often. |
| |
| Runtime Power Management model: |
| Drivers may also enter low power states while the system is running, |
| independently of other power management activity. Upstream drivers |
| will normally not know (or care) if the device is in some low power |
| state when issuing requests; the driver will auto-resume anything |
| that's needed when it gets a request. |
| |
| This doesn't have, or need much infrastructure; it's just something you |
| should do when writing your drivers. For example, clk_disable() unused |
| clocks as part of minimizing power drain for currently-unused hardware. |
| Of course, sometimes clusters of drivers will collaborate with each |
| other, which could involve task-specific power management. |
| |
| There's not a lot to be said about those low power states except that they |
| are very system-specific, and often device-specific. Also, that if enough |
| drivers put themselves into low power states (at "runtime"), the effect may be |
| the same as entering some system-wide low-power state (system sleep) ... and |
| that synergies exist, so that several drivers using runtime pm might put the |
| system into a state where even deeper power saving options are available. |
| |
| Most suspended devices will have quiesced all I/O: no more DMA or irqs, no |
| more data read or written, and requests from upstream drivers are no longer |
| accepted. A given bus or platform may have different requirements though. |
| |
| Examples of hardware wakeup events include an alarm from a real time clock, |
| network wake-on-LAN packets, keyboard or mouse activity, and media insertion |
| or removal (for PCMCIA, MMC/SD, USB, and so on). |
| |
| |
| Interfaces for Entering System Sleep States |
| =========================================== |
| Most of the programming interfaces a device driver needs to know about |
| relate to that first model: entering a system-wide low power state, |
| rather than just minimizing power consumption by one device. |
| |
| |
| Bus Driver Methods |
| ------------------ |
| The core methods to suspend and resume devices reside in struct bus_type. |
| These are mostly of interest to people writing infrastructure for busses |
| like PCI or USB, or because they define the primitives that device drivers |
| may need to apply in domain-specific ways to their devices: |
| |
| struct bus_type { |
| ... |
| int (*suspend)(struct device *dev, pm_message_t state); |
| int (*resume)(struct device *dev); |
| }; |
| |
| Bus drivers implement those methods as appropriate for the hardware and |
| the drivers using it; PCI works differently from USB, and so on. Not many |
| people write bus drivers; most driver code is a "device driver" that |
| builds on top of bus-specific framework code. |
| |
| For more information on these driver calls, see the description later; |
| they are called in phases for every device, respecting the parent-child |
| sequencing in the driver model tree. Note that as this is being written, |
| only the suspend() and resume() are widely available; not many bus drivers |
| leverage all of those phases, or pass them down to lower driver levels. |
| |
| |
| /sys/devices/.../power/wakeup files |
| ----------------------------------- |
| All devices in the driver model have two flags to control handling of |
| wakeup events, which are hardware signals that can force the device and/or |
| system out of a low power state. These are initialized by bus or device |
| driver code using device_init_wakeup(dev,can_wakeup). |
| |
| The "can_wakeup" flag just records whether the device (and its driver) can |
| physically support wakeup events. When that flag is clear, the sysfs |
| "wakeup" file is empty, and device_may_wakeup() returns false. |
| |
| For devices that can issue wakeup events, a separate flag controls whether |
| that device should try to use its wakeup mechanism. The initial value of |
| device_may_wakeup() will be true, so that the device's "wakeup" file holds |
| the value "enabled". Userspace can change that to "disabled" so that |
| device_may_wakeup() returns false; or change it back to "enabled" (so that |
| it returns true again). |
| |
| |
| EXAMPLE: PCI Device Driver Methods |
| ----------------------------------- |
| PCI framework software calls these methods when the PCI device driver bound |
| to a device device has provided them: |
| |
| struct pci_driver { |
| ... |
| int (*suspend)(struct pci_device *pdev, pm_message_t state); |
| int (*suspend_late)(struct pci_device *pdev, pm_message_t state); |
| |
| int (*resume_early)(struct pci_device *pdev); |
| int (*resume)(struct pci_device *pdev); |
| }; |
| |
| Drivers will implement those methods, and call PCI-specific procedures |
| like pci_set_power_state(), pci_enable_wake(), pci_save_state(), and |
| pci_restore_state() to manage PCI-specific mechanisms. (PCI config space |
| could be saved during driver probe, if it weren't for the fact that some |
| systems rely on userspace tweaking using setpci.) Devices are suspended |
| before their bridges enter low power states, and likewise bridges resume |
| before their devices. |
| |
| |
| Upper Layers of Driver Stacks |
| ----------------------------- |
| Device drivers generally have at least two interfaces, and the methods |
| sketched above are the ones which apply to the lower level (nearer PCI, USB, |
| or other bus hardware). The network and block layers are examples of upper |
| level interfaces, as is a character device talking to userspace. |
| |
| Power management requests normally need to flow through those upper levels, |
| which often use domain-oriented requests like "blank that screen". In |
| some cases those upper levels will have power management intelligence that |
| relates to end-user activity, or other devices that work in cooperation. |
| |
| When those interfaces are structured using class interfaces, there is a |
| standard way to have the upper layer stop issuing requests to a given |
| class device (and restart later): |
| |
| struct class { |
| ... |
| int (*suspend)(struct device *dev, pm_message_t state); |
| int (*resume)(struct device *dev); |
| }; |
| |
| Those calls are issued in specific phases of the process by which the |
| system enters a low power "suspend" state, or resumes from it. |
| |
| |
| Calling Drivers to Enter System Sleep States |
| ============================================ |
| When the system enters a low power state, each device's driver is asked |
| to suspend the device by putting it into state compatible with the target |
| system state. That's usually some version of "off", but the details are |
| system-specific. Also, wakeup-enabled devices will usually stay partly |
| functional in order to wake the system. |
| |
| When the system leaves that low power state, the device's driver is asked |
| to resume it. The suspend and resume operations always go together, and |
| both are multi-phase operations. |
| |
| For simple drivers, suspend might quiesce the device using the class code |
| and then turn its hardware as "off" as possible with late_suspend. The |
| matching resume calls would then completely reinitialize the hardware |
| before reactivating its class I/O queues. |
| |
| More power-aware drivers drivers will use more than one device low power |
| state, either at runtime or during system sleep states, and might trigger |
| system wakeup events. |
| |
| |
| Call Sequence Guarantees |
| ------------------------ |
| To ensure that bridges and similar links needed to talk to a device are |
| available when the device is suspended or resumed, the device tree is |
| walked in a bottom-up order to suspend devices. A top-down order is |
| used to resume those devices. |
| |
| The ordering of the device tree is defined by the order in which devices |
| get registered: a child can never be registered, probed or resumed before |
| its parent; and can't be removed or suspended after that parent. |
| |
| The policy is that the device tree should match hardware bus topology. |
| (Or at least the control bus, for devices which use multiple busses.) |
| In particular, this means that a device registration may fail if the parent of |
| the device is suspending (ie. has been chosen by the PM core as the next |
| device to suspend) or has already suspended, as well as after all of the other |
| devices have been suspended. Device drivers must be prepared to cope with such |
| situations. |
| |
| |
| Suspending Devices |
| ------------------ |
| Suspending a given device is done in several phases. Suspending the |
| system always includes every phase, executing calls for every device |
| before the next phase begins. Not all busses or classes support all |
| these callbacks; and not all drivers use all the callbacks. |
| |
| The phases are seen by driver notifications issued in this order: |
| |
| 1 class.suspend(dev, message) is called after tasks are frozen, for |
| devices associated with a class that has such a method. This |
| method may sleep. |
| |
| Since I/O activity usually comes from such higher layers, this is |
| a good place to quiesce all drivers of a given type (and keep such |
| code out of those drivers). |
| |
| 2 bus.suspend(dev, message) is called next. This method may sleep, |
| and is often morphed into a device driver call with bus-specific |
| parameters and/or rules. |
| |
| This call should handle parts of device suspend logic that require |
| sleeping. It probably does work to quiesce the device which hasn't |
| been abstracted into class.suspend(). |
| |
| The pm_message_t parameter is currently used to refine those semantics |
| (described later). |
| |
| At the end of those phases, drivers should normally have stopped all I/O |
| transactions (DMA, IRQs), saved enough state that they can re-initialize |
| or restore previous state (as needed by the hardware), and placed the |
| device into a low-power state. On many platforms they will also use |
| clk_disable() to gate off one or more clock sources; sometimes they will |
| also switch off power supplies, or reduce voltages. Drivers which have |
| runtime PM support may already have performed some or all of the steps |
| needed to prepare for the upcoming system sleep state. |
| |
| When any driver sees that its device_can_wakeup(dev), it should make sure |
| to use the relevant hardware signals to trigger a system wakeup event. |
| For example, enable_irq_wake() might identify GPIO signals hooked up to |
| a switch or other external hardware, and pci_enable_wake() does something |
| similar for PCI's PME# signal. |
| |
| If a driver (or bus, or class) fails it suspend method, the system won't |
| enter the desired low power state; it will resume all the devices it's |
| suspended so far. |
| |
| Note that drivers may need to perform different actions based on the target |
| system lowpower/sleep state. At this writing, there are only platform |
| specific APIs through which drivers could determine those target states. |
| |
| |
| Device Low Power (suspend) States |
| --------------------------------- |
| Device low-power states aren't very standard. One device might only handle |
| "on" and "off, while another might support a dozen different versions of |
| "on" (how many engines are active?), plus a state that gets back to "on" |
| faster than from a full "off". |
| |
| Some busses define rules about what different suspend states mean. PCI |
| gives one example: after the suspend sequence completes, a non-legacy |
| PCI device may not perform DMA or issue IRQs, and any wakeup events it |
| issues would be issued through the PME# bus signal. Plus, there are |
| several PCI-standard device states, some of which are optional. |
| |
| In contrast, integrated system-on-chip processors often use irqs as the |
| wakeup event sources (so drivers would call enable_irq_wake) and might |
| be able to treat DMA completion as a wakeup event (sometimes DMA can stay |
| active too, it'd only be the CPU and some peripherals that sleep). |
| |
| Some details here may be platform-specific. Systems may have devices that |
| can be fully active in certain sleep states, such as an LCD display that's |
| refreshed using DMA while most of the system is sleeping lightly ... and |
| its frame buffer might even be updated by a DSP or other non-Linux CPU while |
| the Linux control processor stays idle. |
| |
| Moreover, the specific actions taken may depend on the target system state. |
| One target system state might allow a given device to be very operational; |
| another might require a hard shut down with re-initialization on resume. |
| And two different target systems might use the same device in different |
| ways; the aforementioned LCD might be active in one product's "standby", |
| but a different product using the same SOC might work differently. |
| |
| |
| Meaning of pm_message_t.event |
| ----------------------------- |
| Parameters to suspend calls include the device affected and a message of |
| type pm_message_t, which has one field: the event. If driver does not |
| recognize the event code, suspend calls may abort the request and return |
| a negative errno. However, most drivers will be fine if they implement |
| PM_EVENT_SUSPEND semantics for all messages. |
| |
| The event codes are used to refine the goal of suspending the device, and |
| mostly matter when creating or resuming system memory image snapshots, as |
| used with suspend-to-disk: |
| |
| PM_EVENT_SUSPEND -- quiesce the driver and put hardware into a low-power |
| state. When used with system sleep states like "suspend-to-RAM" or |
| "standby", the upcoming resume() call will often be able to rely on |
| state kept in hardware, or issue system wakeup events. |
| |
| PM_EVENT_HIBERNATE -- Put hardware into a low-power state and enable wakeup |
| events as appropriate. It is only used with hibernation |
| (suspend-to-disk) and few devices are able to wake up the system from |
| this state; most are completely powered off. |
| |
| PM_EVENT_FREEZE -- quiesce the driver, but don't necessarily change into |
| any low power mode. A system snapshot is about to be taken, often |
| followed by a call to the driver's resume() method. Neither wakeup |
| events nor DMA are allowed. |
| |
| PM_EVENT_PRETHAW -- quiesce the driver, knowing that the upcoming resume() |
| will restore a suspend-to-disk snapshot from a different kernel image. |
| Drivers that are smart enough to look at their hardware state during |
| resume() processing need that state to be correct ... a PRETHAW could |
| be used to invalidate that state (by resetting the device), like a |
| shutdown() invocation would before a kexec() or system halt. Other |
| drivers might handle this the same way as PM_EVENT_FREEZE. Neither |
| wakeup events nor DMA are allowed. |
| |
| To enter "standby" (ACPI S1) or "Suspend to RAM" (STR, ACPI S3) states, or |
| the similarly named APM states, only PM_EVENT_SUSPEND is used; the other event |
| codes are used for hibernation ("Suspend to Disk", STD, ACPI S4). |
| |
| There's also PM_EVENT_ON, a value which never appears as a suspend event |
| but is sometimes used to record the "not suspended" device state. |
| |
| |
| Resuming Devices |
| ---------------- |
| Resuming is done in multiple phases, much like suspending, with all |
| devices processing each phase's calls before the next phase begins. |
| |
| The phases are seen by driver notifications issued in this order: |
| |
| 1 bus.resume(dev) reverses the effects of bus.suspend(). This may |
| be morphed into a device driver call with bus-specific parameters; |
| implementations may sleep. |
| |
| 2 class.resume(dev) is called for devices associated with a class |
| that has such a method. Implementations may sleep. |
| |
| This reverses the effects of class.suspend(), and would usually |
| reactivate the device's I/O queue. |
| |
| At the end of those phases, drivers should normally be as functional as |
| they were before suspending: I/O can be performed using DMA and IRQs, and |
| the relevant clocks are gated on. The device need not be "fully on"; it |
| might be in a runtime lowpower/suspend state that acts as if it were. |
| |
| However, the details here may again be platform-specific. For example, |
| some systems support multiple "run" states, and the mode in effect at |
| the end of resume() might not be the one which preceded suspension. |
| That means availability of certain clocks or power supplies changed, |
| which could easily affect how a driver works. |
| |
| |
| Drivers need to be able to handle hardware which has been reset since the |
| suspend methods were called, for example by complete reinitialization. |
| This may be the hardest part, and the one most protected by NDA'd documents |
| and chip errata. It's simplest if the hardware state hasn't changed since |
| the suspend() was called, but that can't always be guaranteed. |
| |
| Drivers must also be prepared to notice that the device has been removed |
| while the system was powered off, whenever that's physically possible. |
| PCMCIA, MMC, USB, Firewire, SCSI, and even IDE are common examples of busses |
| where common Linux platforms will see such removal. Details of how drivers |
| will notice and handle such removals are currently bus-specific, and often |
| involve a separate thread. |
| |
| |
| Note that the bus-specific runtime PM wakeup mechanism can exist, and might |
| be defined to share some of the same driver code as for system wakeup. For |
| example, a bus-specific device driver's resume() method might be used there, |
| so it wouldn't only be called from bus.resume() during system-wide wakeup. |
| See bus-specific information about how runtime wakeup events are handled. |
| |
| |
| System Devices |
| -------------- |
| System devices follow a slightly different API, which can be found in |
| |
| include/linux/sysdev.h |
| drivers/base/sys.c |
| |
| System devices will only be suspended with interrupts disabled, and after |
| all other devices have been suspended. On resume, they will be resumed |
| before any other devices, and also with interrupts disabled. |
| |
| That is, IRQs are disabled, the suspend_late() phase begins, then the |
| sysdev_driver.suspend() phase, and the system enters a sleep state. Then |
| the sysdev_driver.resume() phase begins, followed by the resume_early() |
| phase, after which IRQs are enabled. |
| |
| Code to actually enter and exit the system-wide low power state sometimes |
| involves hardware details that are only known to the boot firmware, and |
| may leave a CPU running software (from SRAM or flash memory) that monitors |
| the system and manages its wakeup sequence. |
| |
| |
| Runtime Power Management |
| ======================== |
| Many devices are able to dynamically power down while the system is still |
| running. This feature is useful for devices that are not being used, and |
| can offer significant power savings on a running system. These devices |
| often support a range of runtime power states, which might use names such |
| as "off", "sleep", "idle", "active", and so on. Those states will in some |
| cases (like PCI) be partially constrained by a bus the device uses, and will |
| usually include hardware states that are also used in system sleep states. |
| |
| However, note that if a driver puts a device into a runtime low power state |
| and the system then goes into a system-wide sleep state, it normally ought |
| to resume into that runtime low power state rather than "full on". Such |
| distinctions would be part of the driver-internal state machine for that |
| hardware; the whole point of runtime power management is to be sure that |
| drivers are decoupled in that way from the state machine governing phases |
| of the system-wide power/sleep state transitions. |
| |
| |
| Power Saving Techniques |
| ----------------------- |
| Normally runtime power management is handled by the drivers without specific |
| userspace or kernel intervention, by device-aware use of techniques like: |
| |
| Using information provided by other system layers |
| - stay deeply "off" except between open() and close() |
| - if transceiver/PHY indicates "nobody connected", stay "off" |
| - application protocols may include power commands or hints |
| |
| Using fewer CPU cycles |
| - using DMA instead of PIO |
| - removing timers, or making them lower frequency |
| - shortening "hot" code paths |
| - eliminating cache misses |
| - (sometimes) offloading work to device firmware |
| |
| Reducing other resource costs |
| - gating off unused clocks in software (or hardware) |
| - switching off unused power supplies |
| - eliminating (or delaying/merging) IRQs |
| - tuning DMA to use word and/or burst modes |
| |
| Using device-specific low power states |
| - using lower voltages |
| - avoiding needless DMA transfers |
| |
| Read your hardware documentation carefully to see the opportunities that |
| may be available. If you can, measure the actual power usage and check |
| it against the budget established for your project. |
| |
| |
| Examples: USB hosts, system timer, system CPU |
| ---------------------------------------------- |
| USB host controllers make interesting, if complex, examples. In many cases |
| these have no work to do: no USB devices are connected, or all of them are |
| in the USB "suspend" state. Linux host controller drivers can then disable |
| periodic DMA transfers that would otherwise be a constant power drain on the |
| memory subsystem, and enter a suspend state. In power-aware controllers, |
| entering that suspend state may disable the clock used with USB signaling, |
| saving a certain amount of power. |
| |
| The controller will be woken from that state (with an IRQ) by changes to the |
| signal state on the data lines of a given port, for example by an existing |
| peripheral requesting "remote wakeup" or by plugging a new peripheral. The |
| same wakeup mechanism usually works from "standby" sleep states, and on some |
| systems also from "suspend to RAM" (or even "suspend to disk") states. |
| (Except that ACPI may be involved instead of normal IRQs, on some hardware.) |
| |
| System devices like timers and CPUs may have special roles in the platform |
| power management scheme. For example, system timers using a "dynamic tick" |
| approach don't just save CPU cycles (by eliminating needless timer IRQs), |
| but they may also open the door to using lower power CPU "idle" states that |
| cost more than a jiffie to enter and exit. On x86 systems these are states |
| like "C3"; note that periodic DMA transfers from a USB host controller will |
| also prevent entry to a C3 state, much like a periodic timer IRQ. |
| |
| That kind of runtime mechanism interaction is common. "System On Chip" (SOC) |
| processors often have low power idle modes that can't be entered unless |
| certain medium-speed clocks (often 12 or 48 MHz) are gated off. When the |
| drivers gate those clocks effectively, then the system idle task may be able |
| to use the lower power idle modes and thereby increase battery life. |
| |
| If the CPU can have a "cpufreq" driver, there also may be opportunities |
| to shift to lower voltage settings and reduce the power cost of executing |
| a given number of instructions. (Without voltage adjustment, it's rare |
| for cpufreq to save much power; the cost-per-instruction must go down.) |