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be9c94dd77
In commit 0fba3a1f39f8b0a50b56c8b068fa52131cbc84c2 (a very long time ago, May 2006), I fixed a bug that caused powermacs to crash when you tried entering standby/mem suspend states. As I'm now getting more familiar with the suspend code I notice a few more things: 1. we previously misunderstood what pm_ops is for, it isn't supposed to be for doing platform dependent suspend/resume stuff that needs to be done for suspend to disk (as we currently try to use it!), it is instead for entering platform dependent suspend states ("standby", "mem"). 2. due to the first point, we never properly save FPU and altivec states when suspending to disk. It probably hasn't hurt yet because the process that writes the "disk" to /sys/power/state uses neither and its context is used. This patch addresses these points as follows: 1. remove all pm_ops from powermac, powermac suspend to ram isn't currently usable via /sys/power/state but is done via the PMU instead. 2. move the code responsible for storing FPU/altivec state into save_processor_state and the set_context() call to restore_processor_state. 3. add a call to kernel_enable_spe() It may look like there is some code removal missing but that is actually because the new suspend.h file overrides the ppc/suspend.h one which was previously used. Signed-off-by: Johannes Berg <johannes@sipsolutions.net> Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
10 lines
232 B
C
10 lines
232 B
C
#ifndef __ASM_POWERPC_SUSPEND_H
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#define __ASM_POWERPC_SUSPEND_H
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static inline int arch_prepare_suspend(void) { return 0; }
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void save_processor_state(void);
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void restore_processor_state(void);
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#endif /* __ASM_POWERPC_SUSPEND_H */
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