On Tue, Apr 11, 2017 at 05:54:07PM +0100, Chris Wilson wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 11, 2017 at 07:12:35PM +0300, Imre Deak wrote:
> > +static int i915_pm_prepare(struct device *kdev)
> > +{
> > +   /*
> > +    * Get a reference to disable the direct complete optimization. This
> > +    * is needed, since we have a suspend sequence specific to system
> > +    * suspend (that is different from runtime suspend) and because we
> > +    * need to provide power to the sound driver while its system suspend
> > +    * handler is running. This is not possible with the optimization in
> > +    * effect, when the i915 runtime PM is disabled for the whole duration
> > +    * of the suspend sequence if the device was already runtime
> > +    * suspended at the beginning of the sequence. In this case the i915
> > +    * suspend/resume hooks would be also skipped (besides its prepare and
> > +    * complete hooks).
> > +    */
> > +   intel_runtime_pm_get(kdev_to_i915(kdev));
> > +
> > +   return 0;
> > +}
> > +
> > +static void i915_pm_complete(struct device *kdev)
> > +{
> > +   /* Put the ref taken in the prepare step. */
> > +   intel_runtime_pm_put(kdev_to_i915(kdev));
> 
> Do we always call i915_pm_complete() if any of the post-prepare suspend
> steps fail? Otherwise, it looks very sensible from our pov.

Yes, it's called even in the failure case (for S3 for example
suspend_devices_and_enter()->Recover_platform:->Resume_devices:->
dpm_resume_end()->dpm_complete()).

--Imre
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