On Sun, Jan 8, 2012 at 4:32 PM, Jeff Garzik<jeff@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Summary (very little excitement at all this time):
0) Will play around with git signed tags with the next update.
1) PM improvements, including runtime suspend/resume work
Hmm. I don't know if this comes from the PM improvements or even this
particular pull, but links that aren't connected are *really* slow.
Annoyingly so.
My Macbook Air that I finally can resume reliably again used to come
back almost immediately from resume. No longer. And the reason seems
to be this:
[ 243.306149] ata_piix 0000:00:1f.2: setting latency timer to 64
[ 243.306180] bcma: Found rev 6 PMU (capabilities 0x108C2606)
[ 246.579648] ata1.01: failed to resume link (SControl 0)
[ 246.735472] ata1.00: SATA link up 3.0 Gbps (SStatus 123 SControl 300)
[ 246.735485] ata1.01: SATA link down (SStatus 0 SControl 0)
[ 246.743632] ata1.00: ACPI cmd ef/03:46:00:00:00:a0 (SET FEATURES)
filtered out
[ 246.744353] ata1.00: configured for UDMA/100
[ 246.744537] sd 0:0:0:0: [sda] Starting disk
[ 247.769806] ata2.00: failed to resume link (SControl 0)
[ 248.796207] ata2.01: failed to resume link (SControl 0)
[ 248.807665] ata2.00: SATA link down (SStatus 4 SControl 0)
[ 248.807681] ata2.01: SATA link down (SStatus 0 SControl 0)
[ 248.808338] PM: resume of devices complete after 5511.027 msecs
[ 248.882074] PM: Finishing wakeup.
Notice the basically five-second timeout all basically for "failed to
resume link: for things that didn't have anything connected to them
anyway.
This is a bog-standard Intel controller, there's nothing odd there.
I'm pretty sure this used to be much faster, but I haven't bisected
any of it (and with all the problems I had with resume both due to
wireless and MCE, I really wouldn't want to even try).
Taking 5.5 seconds to come back from suspend-to-ram really is too
long. Not *all* of it is the SATA part, but a lot of it is.
For ATA suspend/resume, could we perhaps only resume the ports that
*used* to have something on them? And then, if somebody has plugged
something into the others, not consider that a resume thing at all,
but a hotplug thing that happens *after* the resume?
If it takes five seconds to notice new hardware after a resume, nobody
cares. But the disk we had before obviously needs to get resumed.. But
it does seem like it's the "no link" part that takes long.