Re: [PATCH: 2/2] [SERIAL] avoid stalling suspend if serial port won't drain

From: Russell King
Date: Mon Jan 14 2008 - 05:04:51 EST


On Mon, Jan 14, 2008 at 01:40:16PM +1100, nigel@xxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
> Hi.
>
> Alan Cox wrote:
> >>> Is printk() enough for 'we've just lost your data' condition? Maybe we
> >>> should abort suspend if we can't drain fifo?
> >> No way. Think about this from a users' perspective. No one wants suspend
> >> to ram or hibernate functionality that works sometimes and not others.
> >> They want it to work reliably so they don't have to worry about their
> >> laptop overheating while they're getting on the bus or airplane.
> >> Aborting isn't an option.
> >
> > Dumb question on the printk however - what if the port that is sticking
> > is the console - don't we recurse and die ?
>
> I don't know, but I'd argue that we shouldn't die. Things should be as
> robust as possible.

Of course we should never die. That's precisely what I'm trying to work
towards here.

Currently without this patch, various platforms I have here do precisely
that - you ask them to suspend and they shut down the majority of devices
and then die. The recovery is either system reboot or a power cycle -
especially when the port in question is connected to something other than
an external serial port (eg, a serial port for connection to a non-existent
bluetooth module.)

While we're talking about robustness, since the serial wakeup support has
gone in, another couple of issues have appeared:

1. We no longer suspend ports marked as wakeup sources. That means we
never place them into a low power state (which might be required by
hardware) - we need a flag from the driver or something to indicate
that.

2. As a direct consequence, we no longer re-initialise the port at resume
time, resulting in a completely deconfigured but open port. Such a
port may be the system console, which will cause any printks may be
damned slow and the output will be garbage.

(2) is quite a serious problem for ARM platforms - you lose the console
entirely and you also lose control of the system. Again, recovery from
such events is by either a power cycle or system reboot.

--
Russell King
Linux kernel 2.6 ARM Linux - http://www.arm.linux.org.uk/
maintainer of:
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