On Thu, 2012-02-23 at 17:59 -0800, Shannon Dealy wrote: [...] > While the firmware may play a role in the problem, at its core, there > are issues that must be occurring outside the firmware or even the iwlagn > driver, namely a kernel bug or bug in a supporting driver - there is > simply no way around this. When a machine has been through a hibernation > cycle and completely powered off with the driver unloaded before shutdown, > it simply cannot come back up with the "deep sleep" problem still in place > unless there is a bug in the kernel or some other driver involved. At > some point, outside software MUST be providing bogus information to the > driver. I say this because after the deep sleep bug occcurs and the > hardware has been power cycled (through hibernate), the device driver and > firmware have been reloaded and right from the start they show the "deep > sleep" state again.
For a complete power-cycle, you may need to remove both the power cord and the battery. I don't think the Intel wireless cards have any support for wake-on-WAN, but in general devices may still be partly powered as long as any power source is connected to the system. The log messages you sent are indicative of a total failure of communication with the card. My suspicion would be that the hardware has developed a fault, but it could be as simple as the card being slightly loose in its slot. Having said that, are you setting the pcie_aspm kernel parameter? [...] > Based on this behavior and the fact that Juha appears to have similar > hardware (though not the same model), and my previously noting that > many of the people complaining on the internet seemed to be using Lenovo > hardware, my recommendation to anyone who has time to investigate would be > to look at the Linux driver(s) for the flavor of PCI interface bus these > cards plug-in to and the particular chip sets used to implement this > bus on the known Lenovo machines having the problem (x201i, x200, ...). > My guess is they are using the same hardware and therefore, the same > interface driver. I don't know where else the bogus device status > information might come from or be stored, but I haven't been keeping up > with the Linux kernel for quite a while. [...] The same code is used for PCI and PCIe devices and bridges of all kinds. The only slot drivers are there to support hotplug. Ben. -- Ben Hutchings Lowery's Law: If it jams, force it. If it breaks, it needed replacing anyway.
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