From 737eb0301f296d55c22350c6968ff1ef51bacb5f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Mark Rutland Date: Fri, 20 Feb 2015 14:53:46 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] genirq / PM: better describe IRQF_NO_SUSPEND semantics The IRQF_NO_SUSPEND flag is intended to be used for interrupts required to be enabled during the suspend-resume cycle. This mostly consists of IPIs and timer interrupts, potentially including chained irqchip interrupts if these are necessary to handle timers or IPIs. If an interrupt does not fall into one of the aforementioned categories, requesting it with IRQF_NO_SUSPEND is likely incorrect. Using IRQF_NO_SUSPEND does not guarantee that the interrupt can wake the system from a suspended state. For an interrupt to be able to trigger a wakeup, it may be necessary to program various components of the system. In these cases it is necessary to use {enable,disabled}_irq_wake. Unfortunately, several drivers assume that IRQF_NO_SUSPEND ensures that an IRQ can wake up the system, and the documentation can be read ambiguously w.r.t. this property. This patch updates the documentation regarding IRQF_NO_SUSPEND to make this caveat explicit, hopefully making future misuse rarer. Cleanup of existing misuse will occur as part of later patch series. Signed-off-by: Mark Rutland Acked-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) Signed-off-by: Rafael J. Wysocki --- Documentation/power/suspend-and-interrupts.txt | 6 ++++-- include/linux/interrupt.h | 4 +++- 2 files changed, 7 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) diff --git a/Documentation/power/suspend-and-interrupts.txt b/Documentation/power/suspend-and-interrupts.txt index 2f9c5a5fcb25..50493c9284b4 100644 --- a/Documentation/power/suspend-and-interrupts.txt +++ b/Documentation/power/suspend-and-interrupts.txt @@ -40,8 +40,10 @@ but also to IPIs and to some other special-purpose interrupts. The IRQF_NO_SUSPEND flag is used to indicate that to the IRQ subsystem when requesting a special-purpose interrupt. It causes suspend_device_irqs() to -leave the corresponding IRQ enabled so as to allow the interrupt to work all -the time as expected. +leave the corresponding IRQ enabled so as to allow the interrupt to work as +expected during the suspend-resume cycle, but does not guarantee that the +interrupt will wake the system from a suspended state -- for such cases it is +necessary to use enable_irq_wake(). Note that the IRQF_NO_SUSPEND flag affects the entire IRQ and not just one user of it. Thus, if the IRQ is shared, all of the interrupt handlers installed diff --git a/include/linux/interrupt.h b/include/linux/interrupt.h index d9b05b5bf8c7..606771c7cac2 100644 --- a/include/linux/interrupt.h +++ b/include/linux/interrupt.h @@ -52,7 +52,9 @@ * IRQF_ONESHOT - Interrupt is not reenabled after the hardirq handler finished. * Used by threaded interrupts which need to keep the * irq line disabled until the threaded handler has been run. - * IRQF_NO_SUSPEND - Do not disable this IRQ during suspend + * IRQF_NO_SUSPEND - Do not disable this IRQ during suspend. Does not guarantee + * that this interrupt will wake the system from a suspended + * state. See Documentation/power/suspend-and-interrupts.txt * IRQF_FORCE_RESUME - Force enable it on resume even if IRQF_NO_SUSPEND is set * IRQF_NO_THREAD - Interrupt cannot be threaded * IRQF_EARLY_RESUME - Resume IRQ early during syscore instead of at device -- 2.34.1