Alan Stern <st...@rowland.harvard.edu> writes:

> On Mon, 31 Jan 2011, Rajendra Nayak wrote:
>
>> Can you elaborate a bit more on how/why runtime PM transitions
>> are disabled during system suspend, and how is it taken care
>> of that a runtime resume of a device works however a subsequent
>> runtime (re)suspend does not?
>
> I'll answer for Kevin.  This is done by the PM core, in order to 
> prevent runtime power transitions from interfering with a system power 
> transition.  The PM core increments the device's usage_count; this 
> prevents the device from being runtime-suspended but it allows 
> runtime-resume calls to go through.

I understand how this works, but frankly I'm still a bit fuzzy on why.

I guess I'm still missing a good understanding of what "interfering with a
system power transition" means, and why a runtime suspend qualifies as
interfering but not a runtime resume.

More specifically, the reason for $SUBJECT patch is precisely because a
runtime resume is allowed, a runtime suspend is not, and thus a system
power transititon is prevented.

Kevin
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