| ============================= |
| Suspend/Hibernation Notifiers |
| ============================= |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Copyright (c) 2016 Intel Corp., Rafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com> |
| |
| There are some operations that subsystems or drivers may want to carry out |
| before hibernation/suspend or after restore/resume, but they require the system |
| to be fully functional, so the drivers' and subsystems' ``->suspend()`` and |
| ``->resume()`` or even ``->prepare()`` and ``->complete()`` callbacks are not |
| suitable for this purpose. |
| |
| For example, device drivers may want to upload firmware to their devices after |
| resume/restore, but they cannot do it by calling :c:func:`request_firmware()` |
| from their ``->resume()`` or ``->complete()`` callback routines (user land |
| processes are frozen at these points). The solution may be to load the firmware |
| into memory before processes are frozen and upload it from there in the |
| ``->resume()`` routine. A suspend/hibernation notifier may be used for that. |
| |
| Subsystems or drivers having such needs can register suspend notifiers that |
| will be called upon the following events by the PM core: |
| |
| ``PM_HIBERNATION_PREPARE`` |
| The system is going to hibernate, tasks will be frozen immediately. This |
| is different from ``PM_SUSPEND_PREPARE`` below, because in this case |
| additional work is done between the notifiers and the invocation of PM |
| callbacks for the "freeze" transition. |
| |
| ``PM_POST_HIBERNATION`` |
| The system memory state has been restored from a hibernation image or an |
| error occurred during hibernation. Device restore callbacks have been |
| executed and tasks have been thawed. |
| |
| ``PM_RESTORE_PREPARE`` |
| The system is going to restore a hibernation image. If all goes well, |
| the restored image kernel will issue a ``PM_POST_HIBERNATION`` |
| notification. |
| |
| ``PM_POST_RESTORE`` |
| An error occurred during restore from hibernation. Device restore |
| callbacks have been executed and tasks have been thawed. |
| |
| ``PM_SUSPEND_PREPARE`` |
| The system is preparing for suspend. |
| |
| ``PM_POST_SUSPEND`` |
| The system has just resumed or an error occurred during suspend. Device |
| resume callbacks have been executed and tasks have been thawed. |
| |
| It is generally assumed that whatever the notifiers do for |
| ``PM_HIBERNATION_PREPARE``, should be undone for ``PM_POST_HIBERNATION``. |
| Analogously, operations carried out for ``PM_SUSPEND_PREPARE`` should be |
| reversed for ``PM_POST_SUSPEND``. |
| |
| Moreover, if one of the notifiers fails for the ``PM_HIBERNATION_PREPARE`` or |
| ``PM_SUSPEND_PREPARE`` event, the notifiers that have already succeeded for that |
| event will be called for ``PM_POST_HIBERNATION`` or ``PM_POST_SUSPEND``, |
| respectively. |
| |
| The hibernation and suspend notifiers are called with :c:data:`pm_mutex` held. |
| They are defined in the usual way, but their last argument is meaningless (it is |
| always NULL). |
| |
| To register and/or unregister a suspend notifier use |
| :c:func:`register_pm_notifier()` and :c:func:`unregister_pm_notifier()`, |
| respectively (both defined in :file:`include/linux/suspend.h`). If you don't |
| need to unregister the notifier, you can also use the :c:func:`pm_notifier()` |
| macro defined in :file:`include/linux/suspend.h`. |