From 2fb242adcaab5defa2f208775ac4f181ac998fdd Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Ming Lei Date: Sun, 9 Oct 2011 11:40:25 +0800 Subject: [PATCH] PM / Runtime: Update document about callbacks Support for device power domains has been introduced in commit 9659cc0678b954f187290c6e8b247a673c5d37e1 (PM: Make system-wide PM and runtime PM treat subsystems consistently), also power domain callbacks will take precedence over subsystem ones from commit 4d27e9dcff00a6425d779b065ec8892e4f391661(PM: Make power domain callbacks take precedence over subsystem ones). So update part of "Device Runtime PM Callbacks" in Documentation/power/runtime_pm.txt. Signed-off-by: Ming Lei Signed-off-by: Rafael J. Wysocki --- Documentation/power/runtime_pm.txt | 19 ++++++++++++------- 1 file changed, 12 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-) diff --git a/Documentation/power/runtime_pm.txt b/Documentation/power/runtime_pm.txt index 1750740..f670836 100644 --- a/Documentation/power/runtime_pm.txt +++ b/Documentation/power/runtime_pm.txt @@ -43,13 +43,18 @@ struct dev_pm_ops { ... }; -The ->runtime_suspend(), ->runtime_resume() and ->runtime_idle() callbacks are -executed by the PM core for either the device type, or the class (if the device -type's struct dev_pm_ops object does not exist), or the bus type (if the -device type's and class' struct dev_pm_ops objects do not exist) of the given -device (this allows device types to override callbacks provided by bus types or -classes if necessary). The bus type, device type and class callbacks are -referred to as subsystem-level callbacks in what follows. +The ->runtime_suspend(), ->runtime_resume() and ->runtime_idle() callbacks +are executed by the PM core for either the power domain, or the device type +(if the device power domain's struct dev_pm_ops does not exist), or the class +(if the device power domain's and type's struct dev_pm_ops object does not +exist), or the bus type (if the device power domain's, type's and class' +struct dev_pm_ops objects do not exist) of the given device, so the priority +order of callbacks from high to low is that power domain callbacks, device +type callbacks, class callbacks and bus type callbacks, and the high priority +one will take precedence over low priority one. The bus type, device type and +class callbacks are referred to as subsystem-level callbacks in what follows, +and generally speaking, the power domain callbacks are used for representing +power domains within a SoC. By default, the callbacks are always invoked in process context with interrupts enabled. However, subsystems can use the pm_runtime_irq_safe() helper function -- 2.7.4