On Thu, Jul 25, 2013 at 1:03 PM, Mark Brown <broo...@kernel.org> wrote: > On Thu, Jul 25, 2013 at 12:42:00PM -0700, Vincent Palatin wrote: > >> +- regulator-suspend-disk-microvolt: voltage applied when entering S2D >> +- regulator-suspend-disk-disabled: turn off when entering S2D >> +- regulator-suspend-mem-microvolt: voltage applied when entering S2M >> +- regulator-suspend-mem-disabled: turn off when entering S2M >> +- regulator-suspend-standby-microvolt: voltage applied when entering standby >> +- regulator-suspend-standby-disabled: turn off when entering standby > > The reason this isn't in device tree at the minute is that suspend to > disk and suspend to RAM are somewhat Linux specific concepts and the > whole thing gets more and more dynamic as time moves forwards with the > suspend state for practical systems depending on the instantaneous > device state prior to entering suspend and the bits that are fixed often > involving sequencing elements and so on which get fixed in hardware > and/or bootloader. Do you have practical systems where this is needed?
Yes, on a Chromebook machine, an internal USB device power rail is connected to one of the FET of a TPS65090, the device is leaking power in suspend-to-RAM, it would be nice to cut the FET during suspend. > It's also not clear to me hat the -disabled properties make sense; if we > have properties for the state when enabled I'd expect them to allow > things to be marked as enabled or disabled (with don't touch as the > default). you mean declaring an optional (string) property such as : regulator-suspend-mem-state which can take the value "enabled" or "disabled" e.g. power-regulator { compatible = "ti,tps65090"; reg = <0x48>; voltage-regulators { VFET4 { regulator-name = "usb_leaker"; regulator-suspend-mem-state = "disabled"; }; }; }; -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/