AsiaBSDCon DEVSUMMIT patch
M. Warner Losh
imp at bsdimp.com
Thu Mar 27 13:23:35 PDT 2008
In message: <200803271105.18401.jhb at freebsd.org>
John Baldwin <jhb at freebsd.org> writes:
: On Thursday 27 March 2008 03:32:29 am M. Warner Losh wrote:
: > Greetings,
: >
: > We've been talking about the situation with suspend/resume in the
: > tree. Here's a quick hack to allow one to suspend/resume an
: > individual device. This may or may not work too well, but it is
: > offered up for testing and criticism.
: >
: > http://people.freebsd.org/~imp/devctl.diff
: >
: > devctl -s ath 0 suspend ath0
: > devctl -r ath 0 resume ath0
Wow, you have a lot of comments for a simple test program :-)
: Unfortunately, what you really need is to power down the device to D3 for
: suspend and then bring it up. Otherwise you might not lose enough state to
: notice that resume isn't restoring all of it. bge(4) doesn't survive resume
: on my laptop I think because brgphy doesn't re-patch the firmware on resume,
: and you'd need a full power down to run into that sort of thing.
True. I was going to implement this next as a bus method to have the
bus to the right thing.
: What I would actually prefer would be this:
:
: devctl ath0 power off (maps to D3 on PCI/ACPI)
: devctl ath0 power D1 (PCI/ACPI-specific)
: devctl ath0 power on (maps to D0 on PCI/APCI)
I'm not sure I like this at all. This is about completely suspending
a device, or completely resuming the device for testing purposes.
Randomly putting the device into D1 state is a bad idea. The device
driver itself should do that level of detail.
: You'd probably need a 'int BUS_SET_POWERSTATE(device_t parent, device_t child,
: const char *state)' and implement it for ACPI and PCI. You would then have
: the ioctl handler do:
:
: /* copy in state string */
: /* lookup device */
: error = BUS_SET_POWERSTATE(device_get_parent(device), device, state);
: I would also make devctl take a plain device name and figure out the
: devclass/unit from that. Either that or pass the device name as a string to
: the kernel and have it do a lookup (for a userland ioctl I don't think an
: O(n) walk over the device list is all that evil).
I'll leave that for someone else to implement :-).
: If you want to do named commands (like 'power') rather than getopt args for
: everything you can use a linker set to build a table of commands (I've done
: this for RAID management utils at work) that let you do something like:
:
: struct devctl_power_request {
: const char device[MAXDEVNAME];
: const char state[32];
: }
:
: #define DEVIOC_POWER _IOW('d', 1, struct devctl_power_request)
:
: /* av[0] will be 'power' */
: static void
: power_command(int ac, char **av)
: {
: struct devctl_power_request req;
:
: if (ac != 3)
: errx(1, "Usage: devctl power <device> <state>");
: strlcpy(req.device, av[1], sizeof(req.device));
: strlcpy(req.state, av[2], sizeof(req.state));
: if (ioctl(fd, DEVIOC_POWER, &req) < 0)
: err(1, "Set power state failed");
: }
: DEVCTL_COMMAND(power);
:
: (Using a linker set makes it easier to add new commands later and have them
: all be self-contained.)
Wow! that's a lot more complicated than I had in mind :-)
Warner
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