diff mbox

[linux-pm] calling runtime PM from system PM methods

Message ID 8739jhs2hv.fsf@ti.com (mailing list archive)
State Not Applicable
Delegated to: Kevin Hilman
Headers show

Commit Message

Kevin Hilman June 10, 2011, 11:14 p.m. UTC
"Rafael J. Wysocki" <rjw@sisk.pl> writes:

[...]

> Whether or not user space has disabled runtime PM _doesn't_ _matter_ for
> system suspend, because _you_ _can't_ call pm_runtime_suspend(), or
> pm_runtime_put_sunc(), from a driver's .suspend() callback _anyway_.
> The reason is that doing that would cause the subsystem's (or power
> domain's in this case) .runtime_suspend() callback to be invoked and
> that's incorrect.  Namely, it would require the subsystem (power domain)
> to expect that its .runtime_suspend() would always be executed indirectly
> as a result of calling its .suspend() (through the driver's callback)
> and that expectation may or may not be met (depending on the driver's
> design).

So here's an interesting scenario which I think it triggers the same
problem as you highlight above.

Assume you have a driver that's using runtime PM on a per-xfer basis.
Before each xfer, it does a pm_runtime_get_sync(), after each xfer it
does a pm_runtime_put_sync() (for this example, it's important that it's
a _put_sync()).  The _put_sync() might happen in an ISR, or possibly in
a thread waiting on a completion which is awoken by the ISR, etc. etc.
(the runtime PM callbacks are IRQ safe, and device is marked as such.)

The driver is in the middle of an xfer and a system suspend request
happens.

The driver's ->suspend() callback happens, and the driver

- enables/disables wakeups based on device_may_wakeup()
- prevents future xfers
- waits for current xfer to finish

As soon as the xfer finishes, the driver gets notified (completion,
callback, IRQ, whatever) and calls pm_runtime_put_sync(), which triggers
subsys->runtime_suspend --> driver->runtime_suspend.

While the driver's ->suspend() callback doesn't directly call
pm_runtime_put_sync(), the act of waiting for the xfer to finish
causes the subsystem/driver->runtime_suspend callbacks to be called
during the subsytem/driver->suspend callback, which is the same problem
as you highlight above.  

Based on your commit that removed incrementing the usage count across
suspend[1], you mentioned "we can rely on subsystems and device drivers
to avoid doing that unnecessarily."  The above example shows that this
type of thing might not be that obvious to detect and thus avoid.

I suspect the solution to the above will be to add back the usage count
increment across system suspend, but I'm hoping not.  IMO, it would be
more flexible to allow the subsystems to decide.  The subsystems could
provide locking (or manage dev->power.usage_count) themselves if
necessary.  For example, leave it to the subsystem->prepare() to
pm_runtime_get_noresume() if it wants to avoid the "nesting" of
callbacks.

A related question: does the pm_wq need to be freezable?  From
Documentation/power/runtime_pm.txt:

* The power management workqueue pm_wq in which bus types and device drivers can
  put their PM-related work items.  It is strongly recommended that pm_wq be
  used for queuing all work items related to run-time PM, because this allows
  them to be synchronized with system-wide power transitions (suspend to RAM,
  hibernation and resume from system sleep states).  pm_wq is declared in
  include/linux/pm_runtime.h and defined in kernel/power/main.c.

Is "synchronized with system-wide power transistions" correct here?
Rather than synchronize, using a freezable workqueue actually _prevents_
runtime PM events (at least async ones.)

Again, proper locking (or management of dev->power.usage_count) at the
subsystem level would get you the same effect, but still leave
flexibility to the subsystem/pwr_domain layer.

Kevin

P.S. the commit below[1] removed the usage count increment/decrement
     across system suspend/resume, but Documentation/power/runtime_pm.txt 
     still refers to it.   Patch below[2] removes it, ssuming you're
     not planning on adding it back.  ;)

[1]
commit e8665002477f0278f84f898145b1f141ba26ee26
Author: Rafael J. Wysocki <rjw@sisk.pl>
Date:   Sat Feb 12 01:42:41 2011 +0100

    PM: Allow pm_runtime_suspend() to succeed during system suspend
    
    The dpm_prepare() function increments the runtime PM reference
    counters of all devices to prevent pm_runtime_suspend() from
    executing subsystem-level callbacks.  However, this was supposed to
    guard against a specific race condition that cannot happen, because
    the power management workqueue is freezable, so pm_runtime_suspend()
    can only be called synchronously during system suspend and we can
    rely on subsystems and device drivers to avoid doing that
    unnecessarily.
    
    Make dpm_prepare() drop the runtime PM reference to each device
    after making sure that runtime resume is not pending for it.
    
    Signed-off-by: Rafael J. Wysocki <rjw@sisk.pl>
    Acked-by: Kevin Hilman <khilman@ti.com>

[2]
From 8968e3e41d785e7e5ce7584d64f6a55b303e7060 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Kevin Hilman <khilman@ti.com>
Date: Fri, 10 Jun 2011 16:05:51 -0700
Subject: [PATCH] PM / Runtime: update doc: usage count no longer incremented across system PM

commit e8665002477f0278f84f898145b1f141ba26ee26 (PM: Allow
pm_runtime_suspend() to succeed during system suspend) removed usage
count increment across system PM.

Update doc to reflect this.

Signed-off-by: Kevin Hilman <khilman@ti.com>
---
Applies on v3.0-rc2

 Documentation/power/runtime_pm.txt |    5 -----
 1 files changed, 0 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-)

Comments

Alan Stern June 11, 2011, 4:27 p.m. UTC | #1
On Fri, 10 Jun 2011, Kevin Hilman wrote:

> So here's an interesting scenario which I think it triggers the same
> problem as you highlight above.
> 
> Assume you have a driver that's using runtime PM on a per-xfer basis.
> Before each xfer, it does a pm_runtime_get_sync(), after each xfer it
> does a pm_runtime_put_sync() (for this example, it's important that it's
> a _put_sync()).  The _put_sync() might happen in an ISR, or possibly in
> a thread waiting on a completion which is awoken by the ISR, etc. etc.
> (the runtime PM callbacks are IRQ safe, and device is marked as such.)
> 
> The driver is in the middle of an xfer and a system suspend request
> happens.
> 
> The driver's ->suspend() callback happens, and the driver
> 
> - enables/disables wakeups based on device_may_wakeup()
> - prevents future xfers
> - waits for current xfer to finish
> 
> As soon as the xfer finishes, the driver gets notified (completion,
> callback, IRQ, whatever) and calls pm_runtime_put_sync(), which triggers
> subsys->runtime_suspend --> driver->runtime_suspend.
> 
> While the driver's ->suspend() callback doesn't directly call
> pm_runtime_put_sync(), the act of waiting for the xfer to finish
> causes the subsystem/driver->runtime_suspend callbacks to be called
> during the subsytem/driver->suspend callback, which is the same problem
> as you highlight above.  
> 
> Based on your commit that removed incrementing the usage count across
> suspend[1], you mentioned "we can rely on subsystems and device drivers
> to avoid doing that unnecessarily."  The above example shows that this
> type of thing might not be that obvious to detect and thus avoid.

As with so many other things, this depends entirely on how the 
subsystem and driver are designed.  If they are written to allow this 
sort of thing and handle it properly, there's no problem.

Nothing in the PM core itself cares whether the runtime PM routines are
invoked during system sleep.

> I suspect the solution to the above will be to add back the usage count
> increment across system suspend, but I'm hoping not.  IMO, it would be
> more flexible to allow the subsystems to decide.  The subsystems could
> provide locking (or manage dev->power.usage_count) themselves if
> necessary.  For example, leave it to the subsystem->prepare() to
> pm_runtime_get_noresume() if it wants to avoid the "nesting" of
> callbacks.

Exactly.

> A related question: does the pm_wq need to be freezable?  From
> Documentation/power/runtime_pm.txt:
> 
> * The power management workqueue pm_wq in which bus types and device drivers can
>   put their PM-related work items.  It is strongly recommended that pm_wq be
>   used for queuing all work items related to run-time PM, because this allows
>   them to be synchronized with system-wide power transitions (suspend to RAM,
>   hibernation and resume from system sleep states).  pm_wq is declared in
>   include/linux/pm_runtime.h and defined in kernel/power/main.c.
> 
> Is "synchronized with system-wide power transistions" correct here?
> Rather than synchronize, using a freezable workqueue actually _prevents_
> runtime PM events (at least async ones.)

Which prevents races -- the goal of synchronization.  If you use pm_wq 
for your asynchronous runtime PM events, you never have to worry about 
one of them occurring in the middle of a system sleep transition.

> Again, proper locking (or management of dev->power.usage_count) at the
> subsystem level would get you the same effect, but still leave
> flexibility to the subsystem/pwr_domain layer.

I'm not so sure about that.  For example, how would you prevent an 
async resume from interfering with a system suspend?

> Kevin
> 
> P.S. the commit below[1] removed the usage count increment/decrement
>      across system suspend/resume, but Documentation/power/runtime_pm.txt 
>      still refers to it.   Patch below[2] removes it, ssuming you're
>      not planning on adding it back.  ;)

...

> diff --git a/Documentation/power/runtime_pm.txt b/Documentation/power/runtime_pm.txt
> index 654097b..22accb3 100644
> --- a/Documentation/power/runtime_pm.txt
> +++ b/Documentation/power/runtime_pm.txt
> @@ -566,11 +566,6 @@ to do this is:
>  	pm_runtime_set_active(dev);
>  	pm_runtime_enable(dev);
>  
> -The PM core always increments the run-time usage counter before calling the
> -->prepare() callback and decrements it after calling the ->complete() callback.
> -Hence disabling run-time PM temporarily like this will not cause any run-time
> -suspend callbacks to be lost.
> -

Thank you for pointing this out.  I had forgotten about this; it
implies that temporarily disabling runtime PM during system resume is
no longer safe!

Maybe we should put the get_noresume and put_sync calls back into the
PM core, but only during the system resume stages.

Alan Stern

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Rafael Wysocki June 11, 2011, 11:13 p.m. UTC | #2
On Saturday, June 11, 2011, Kevin Hilman wrote:
> "Rafael J. Wysocki" <rjw@sisk.pl> writes:
> 
> [...]
> 
> > Whether or not user space has disabled runtime PM _doesn't_ _matter_ for
> > system suspend, because _you_ _can't_ call pm_runtime_suspend(), or
> > pm_runtime_put_sunc(), from a driver's .suspend() callback _anyway_.
> > The reason is that doing that would cause the subsystem's (or power
> > domain's in this case) .runtime_suspend() callback to be invoked and
> > that's incorrect.  Namely, it would require the subsystem (power domain)
> > to expect that its .runtime_suspend() would always be executed indirectly
> > as a result of calling its .suspend() (through the driver's callback)
> > and that expectation may or may not be met (depending on the driver's
> > design).
> 
> So here's an interesting scenario which I think it triggers the same
> problem as you highlight above.
> 
> Assume you have a driver that's using runtime PM on a per-xfer basis.
> Before each xfer, it does a pm_runtime_get_sync(), after each xfer it
> does a pm_runtime_put_sync() (for this example, it's important that it's
> a _put_sync()).  The _put_sync() might happen in an ISR,

It can't happen in an ISR, to be precise.

> or possibly in a thread waiting on a completion which is awoken by the ISR,
> etc. etc. (the runtime PM callbacks are IRQ safe, and device is marked as such.)
> 
> The driver is in the middle of an xfer and a system suspend request
> happens.
> 
> The driver's ->suspend() callback happens, and the driver
> 
> - enables/disables wakeups based on device_may_wakeup()
> - prevents future xfers
> - waits for current xfer to finish
> 
> As soon as the xfer finishes, the driver gets notified (completion,
> callback, IRQ, whatever) and calls pm_runtime_put_sync(), which triggers
> subsys->runtime_suspend --> driver->runtime_suspend.
> 
> While the driver's ->suspend() callback doesn't directly call
> pm_runtime_put_sync(), the act of waiting for the xfer to finish
> causes the subsystem/driver->runtime_suspend callbacks to be called
> during the subsytem/driver->suspend callback, which is the same problem
> as you highlight above.  

It's not exactly the same.  The difference is that you're talking about race
conditions between runtime PM and system suspend (I kind of know why I wanted
system suspend to block runtime PM now :-)) that may be prevented by
subsystem-level code from happening (by using locking and some flags etc.),
while that code cannot do much if its .runtime_suspend() callback, for example,
is executed directly from the system suspend code path.
 
> Based on your commit that removed incrementing the usage count across
> suspend[1], you mentioned "we can rely on subsystems and device drivers
> to avoid doing that unnecessarily."  The above example shows that this
> type of thing might not be that obvious to detect and thus avoid.
> 
> I suspect the solution to the above will be to add back the usage count
> increment across system suspend, but I'm hoping not.  IMO, it would be
> more flexible to allow the subsystems to decide.  The subsystems could
> provide locking (or manage dev->power.usage_count) themselves if
> necessary.  For example, leave it to the subsystem->prepare() to
> pm_runtime_get_noresume() if it wants to avoid the "nesting" of
> callbacks.

I agree.

> A related question: does the pm_wq need to be freezable?  From
> Documentation/power/runtime_pm.txt:
> 
> * The power management workqueue pm_wq in which bus types and device drivers can
>   put their PM-related work items.  It is strongly recommended that pm_wq be
>   used for queuing all work items related to run-time PM, because this allows
>   them to be synchronized with system-wide power transitions (suspend to RAM,
>   hibernation and resume from system sleep states).  pm_wq is declared in
>   include/linux/pm_runtime.h and defined in kernel/power/main.c.
> 
> Is "synchronized with system-wide power transistions" correct here?
> Rather than synchronize, using a freezable workqueue actually _prevents_
> runtime PM events (at least async ones.)
> 
> Again, proper locking (or management of dev->power.usage_count) at the
> subsystem level would get you the same effect, but still leave
> flexibility to the subsystem/pwr_domain layer.

No, please.

The problem here is that I don't want runtime PM stuff to be called during
the "noirq" stages of system suspend and resume which the freezing of the
workqueue takes care of nicely.


> P.S. the commit below[1] removed the usage count increment/decrement
>      across system suspend/resume, but Documentation/power/runtime_pm.txt 
>      still refers to it.   Patch below[2] removes it, ssuming you're
>      not planning on adding it back.  ;)

No, I'm not.  In fact, I'm going to apply your patch. :-)

Thanks,
Rafael


> [1]
> commit e8665002477f0278f84f898145b1f141ba26ee26
> Author: Rafael J. Wysocki <rjw@sisk.pl>
> Date:   Sat Feb 12 01:42:41 2011 +0100
> 
>     PM: Allow pm_runtime_suspend() to succeed during system suspend
>     
>     The dpm_prepare() function increments the runtime PM reference
>     counters of all devices to prevent pm_runtime_suspend() from
>     executing subsystem-level callbacks.  However, this was supposed to
>     guard against a specific race condition that cannot happen, because
>     the power management workqueue is freezable, so pm_runtime_suspend()
>     can only be called synchronously during system suspend and we can
>     rely on subsystems and device drivers to avoid doing that
>     unnecessarily.
>     
>     Make dpm_prepare() drop the runtime PM reference to each device
>     after making sure that runtime resume is not pending for it.
>     
>     Signed-off-by: Rafael J. Wysocki <rjw@sisk.pl>
>     Acked-by: Kevin Hilman <khilman@ti.com>
> 
> [2]
> From 8968e3e41d785e7e5ce7584d64f6a55b303e7060 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
> From: Kevin Hilman <khilman@ti.com>
> Date: Fri, 10 Jun 2011 16:05:51 -0700
> Subject: [PATCH] PM / Runtime: update doc: usage count no longer incremented across system PM
> 
> commit e8665002477f0278f84f898145b1f141ba26ee26 (PM: Allow
> pm_runtime_suspend() to succeed during system suspend) removed usage
> count increment across system PM.
> 
> Update doc to reflect this.
> 
> Signed-off-by: Kevin Hilman <khilman@ti.com>
> ---
> Applies on v3.0-rc2
> 
>  Documentation/power/runtime_pm.txt |    5 -----
>  1 files changed, 0 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-)
> 
> diff --git a/Documentation/power/runtime_pm.txt b/Documentation/power/runtime_pm.txt
> index 654097b..22accb3 100644
> --- a/Documentation/power/runtime_pm.txt
> +++ b/Documentation/power/runtime_pm.txt
> @@ -566,11 +566,6 @@ to do this is:
>  	pm_runtime_set_active(dev);
>  	pm_runtime_enable(dev);
>  
> -The PM core always increments the run-time usage counter before calling the
> -->prepare() callback and decrements it after calling the ->complete() callback.
> -Hence disabling run-time PM temporarily like this will not cause any run-time
> -suspend callbacks to be lost.
> -
>  7. Generic subsystem callbacks
>  
>  Subsystems may wish to conserve code space by using the set of generic power
> 

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diff mbox

Patch

diff --git a/Documentation/power/runtime_pm.txt b/Documentation/power/runtime_pm.txt
index 654097b..22accb3 100644
--- a/Documentation/power/runtime_pm.txt
+++ b/Documentation/power/runtime_pm.txt
@@ -566,11 +566,6 @@  to do this is:
 	pm_runtime_set_active(dev);
 	pm_runtime_enable(dev);
 
-The PM core always increments the run-time usage counter before calling the
-->prepare() callback and decrements it after calling the ->complete() callback.
-Hence disabling run-time PM temporarily like this will not cause any run-time
-suspend callbacks to be lost.
-
 7. Generic subsystem callbacks
 
 Subsystems may wish to conserve code space by using the set of generic power