Re: [Suspend2-devel] Re: uswsusp history lesson
From: Nigel Cunningham
Date: Mon Jul 10 2006 - 02:18:50 EST
Hi.
On Monday 10 July 2006 13:57, Jason Lunz wrote:
> ncunningham@xxxxxxxxxxxxx said:
> > If Suspend2 added code in a way that broke swsusp, I would agree. But
> > it=20 doesn't.
>
> That isn't true. I stopped using the suspend2 patches after they broke
> the in-kernel suspend twice in the last year, since 2.6.14 or so. (The
> first time I reported one of these bugs is here:
> http://article.gmane.org/gmane.linux.swsusp.general/3243)
The switch to using the swsusp lowlevel code was a bit bumpy, and I do admit
that I broke swsusp from time to time, but these are the exceptions (as you
say), and the general design is such that they should be coexist. I'll freely
admit that I don't regularly test swsusp, but I'm also not reguarly changing
things that should break it.
> Before I stopped using suspend2, there was a 6-8 month period where I
> could easily use both in-kernel swsusp and suspend2 on my laptop. I kept
> using suspend2 because it was faster, but I eventually stopped because
> it locked up the machine during suspend or crashed it during resume on
> one out of every 20-30 tries (and the crashes weren't in some driver
> - the backtrace always pointed down into the guts of suspend code).
Did you report them to the list? I try to be responsive (although, again, I
don't always succeed to the extent that I'd like.
> In-kernel swsusp, on the other hand, aside from being slower, has never
> crashed or frozen the machine. The same is true of the new uswsusp code,
> which i'd say subjectively feels nearly as fast as suspend2 was, with
> both using lzf compression.
Yeah, being much simpler does have its advantages, and Rafael has done a good
job with the uswsusp code. Hopefully I'll get to test it properly soon.
Regards,
Nigel
--
Nigel, Michelle and Alisdair Cunningham
5 Mitchell Street
Cobden 3266
Victoria, Australia
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