-----Original Message-----
From: Thomas Gleixner [mailto:tglx@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]
on PPC architectures, the flag did the job. When did this change? Since
when using IRQF_NO_SUSPEND is a "misuse"?
It always was. Simply because IRQF_NO_SUSPEND has absolutely nothing
to do with wakeup interrupt sources. It's a flag which excludes the
interrupt from the suspend mechanism, but it does not flag it a wakeup
source.
I'm seeing also a "powerpc: mpic" patch in the series, unfortunately I can't
afford to test it right now. However I ran a quick test with this gianfar patch
in isolation on a powerpc system, and seen some difference in the behavior
(with and w/o the patch). In both cases the system wakes up from standby
by magic packet. However, without the IRQF_NO_SUSPEND flag 2 wake-up
interrupts are reported in /proc/interrupts for one magic packet; with the
flag on there's just 1 interrupt. Maybe this is not relevant, maybe the
"powerpc: mpic" patch from this series changes this behavior.
But if this is the API, what can I say? We'll see in time. Btw, enable_irq_wake()
returns an error code, normally it should be handled by printing a warning
message at least, right? But since most drivers don't handle that, I'm assuming
it should be left unhandled to avoid overcomplicating things.
FWIW
Acked-by: Claudiu Manoil <claudiu.manoil@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>