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diff --git a/Documentation/admin-guide/pm/sleep-states.rst b/Documentation/admin-guide/pm/sleep-states.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..dbf5acd49 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/admin-guide/pm/sleep-states.rst @@ -0,0 +1,245 @@ +=================== +System Sleep States +=================== + +:: + + Copyright (c) 2017 Intel Corp., Rafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com> + +Sleep states are global low-power states of the entire system in which user +space code cannot be executed and the overall system activity is significantly +reduced. + + +Sleep States That Can Be Supported +================================== + +Depending on its configuration and the capabilities of the platform it runs on, +the Linux kernel can support up to four system sleep states, including +hibernation and up to three variants of system suspend. The sleep states that +can be supported by the kernel are listed below. + +.. _s2idle: + +Suspend-to-Idle +--------------- + +This is a generic, pure software, light-weight variant of system suspend (also +referred to as S2I or S2Idle). It allows more energy to be saved relative to +runtime idle by freezing user space, suspending the timekeeping and putting all +I/O devices into low-power states (possibly lower-power than available in the +working state), such that the processors can spend time in their deepest idle +states while the system is suspended. + +The system is woken up from this state by in-band interrupts, so theoretically +any devices that can cause interrupts to be generated in the working state can +also be set up as wakeup devices for S2Idle. + +This state can be used on platforms without support for :ref:`standby <standby>` +or :ref:`suspend-to-RAM <s2ram>`, or it can be used in addition to any of the +deeper system suspend variants to provide reduced resume latency. It is always +supported if the :c:macro:`CONFIG_SUSPEND` kernel configuration option is set. + +.. _standby: + +Standby +------- + +This state, if supported, offers moderate, but real, energy savings, while +providing a relatively straightforward transition back to the working state. No +operating state is lost (the system core logic retains power), so the system can +go back to where it left off easily enough. + +In addition to freezing user space, suspending the timekeeping and putting all +I/O devices into low-power states, which is done for :ref:`suspend-to-idle +<s2idle>` too, nonboot CPUs are taken offline and all low-level system functions +are suspended during transitions into this state. For this reason, it should +allow more energy to be saved relative to :ref:`suspend-to-idle <s2idle>`, but +the resume latency will generally be greater than for that state. + +The set of devices that can wake up the system from this state usually is +reduced relative to :ref:`suspend-to-idle <s2idle>` and it may be necessary to +rely on the platform for setting up the wakeup functionality as appropriate. + +This state is supported if the :c:macro:`CONFIG_SUSPEND` kernel configuration +option is set and the support for it is registered by the platform with the +core system suspend subsystem. On ACPI-based systems this state is mapped to +the S1 system state defined by ACPI. + +.. _s2ram: + +Suspend-to-RAM +-------------- + +This state (also referred to as STR or S2RAM), if supported, offers significant +energy savings as everything in the system is put into a low-power state, except +for memory, which should be placed into the self-refresh mode to retain its +contents. All of the steps carried out when entering :ref:`standby <standby>` +are also carried out during transitions to S2RAM. Additional operations may +take place depending on the platform capabilities. In particular, on ACPI-based +systems the kernel passes control to the platform firmware (BIOS) as the last +step during S2RAM transitions and that usually results in powering down some +more low-level components that are not directly controlled by the kernel. + +The state of devices and CPUs is saved and held in memory. All devices are +suspended and put into low-power states. In many cases, all peripheral buses +lose power when entering S2RAM, so devices must be able to handle the transition +back to the "on" state. + +On ACPI-based systems S2RAM requires some minimal boot-strapping code in the +platform firmware to resume the system from it. This may be the case on other +platforms too. + +The set of devices that can wake up the system from S2RAM usually is reduced +relative to :ref:`suspend-to-idle <s2idle>` and :ref:`standby <standby>` and it +may be necessary to rely on the platform for setting up the wakeup functionality +as appropriate. + +S2RAM is supported if the :c:macro:`CONFIG_SUSPEND` kernel configuration option +is set and the support for it is registered by the platform with the core system +suspend subsystem. On ACPI-based systems it is mapped to the S3 system state +defined by ACPI. + +.. _hibernation: + +Hibernation +----------- + +This state (also referred to as Suspend-to-Disk or STD) offers the greatest +energy savings and can be used even in the absence of low-level platform support +for system suspend. However, it requires some low-level code for resuming the +system to be present for the underlying CPU architecture. + +Hibernation is significantly different from any of the system suspend variants. +It takes three system state changes to put it into hibernation and two system +state changes to resume it. + +First, when hibernation is triggered, the kernel stops all system activity and +creates a snapshot image of memory to be written into persistent storage. Next, +the system goes into a state in which the snapshot image can be saved, the image +is written out and finally the system goes into the target low-power state in +which power is cut from almost all of its hardware components, including memory, +except for a limited set of wakeup devices. + +Once the snapshot image has been written out, the system may either enter a +special low-power state (like ACPI S4), or it may simply power down itself. +Powering down means minimum power draw and it allows this mechanism to work on +any system. However, entering a special low-power state may allow additional +means of system wakeup to be used (e.g. pressing a key on the keyboard or +opening a laptop lid). + +After wakeup, control goes to the platform firmware that runs a boot loader +which boots a fresh instance of the kernel (control may also go directly to +the boot loader, depending on the system configuration, but anyway it causes +a fresh instance of the kernel to be booted). That new instance of the kernel +(referred to as the ``restore kernel``) looks for a hibernation image in +persistent storage and if one is found, it is loaded into memory. Next, all +activity in the system is stopped and the restore kernel overwrites itself with +the image contents and jumps into a special trampoline area in the original +kernel stored in the image (referred to as the ``image kernel``), which is where +the special architecture-specific low-level code is needed. Finally, the +image kernel restores the system to the pre-hibernation state and allows user +space to run again. + +Hibernation is supported if the :c:macro:`CONFIG_HIBERNATION` kernel +configuration option is set. However, this option can only be set if support +for the given CPU architecture includes the low-level code for system resume. + + +Basic ``sysfs`` Interfaces for System Suspend and Hibernation +============================================================= + +The following files located in the :file:`/sys/power/` directory can be used by +user space for sleep states control. + +``state`` + This file contains a list of strings representing sleep states supported + by the kernel. Writing one of these strings into it causes the kernel + to start a transition of the system into the sleep state represented by + that string. + + In particular, the strings "disk", "freeze" and "standby" represent the + :ref:`hibernation <hibernation>`, :ref:`suspend-to-idle <s2idle>` and + :ref:`standby <standby>` sleep states, respectively. The string "mem" + is interpreted in accordance with the contents of the ``mem_sleep`` file + described below. + + If the kernel does not support any system sleep states, this file is + not present. + +``mem_sleep`` + This file contains a list of strings representing supported system + suspend variants and allows user space to select the variant to be + associated with the "mem" string in the ``state`` file described above. + + The strings that may be present in this file are "s2idle", "shallow" + and "deep". The string "s2idle" always represents :ref:`suspend-to-idle + <s2idle>` and, by convention, "shallow" and "deep" represent + :ref:`standby <standby>` and :ref:`suspend-to-RAM <s2ram>`, + respectively. + + Writing one of the listed strings into this file causes the system + suspend variant represented by it to be associated with the "mem" string + in the ``state`` file. The string representing the suspend variant + currently associated with the "mem" string in the ``state`` file + is listed in square brackets. + + If the kernel does not support system suspend, this file is not present. + +``disk`` + This file contains a list of strings representing different operations + that can be carried out after the hibernation image has been saved. The + possible options are as follows: + + ``platform`` + Put the system into a special low-power state (e.g. ACPI S4) to + make additional wakeup options available and possibly allow the + platform firmware to take a simplified initialization path after + wakeup. + + ``shutdown`` + Power off the system. + + ``reboot`` + Reboot the system (useful for diagnostics mostly). + + ``suspend`` + Hybrid system suspend. Put the system into the suspend sleep + state selected through the ``mem_sleep`` file described above. + If the system is successfully woken up from that state, discard + the hibernation image and continue. Otherwise, use the image + to restore the previous state of the system. + + ``test_resume`` + Diagnostic operation. Load the image as though the system had + just woken up from hibernation and the currently running kernel + instance was a restore kernel and follow up with full system + resume. + + Writing one of the listed strings into this file causes the option + represented by it to be selected. + + The currently selected option is shown in square brackets which means + that the operation represented by it will be carried out after creating + and saving the image next time hibernation is triggered by writing + ``disk`` to :file:`/sys/power/state`. + + If the kernel does not support hibernation, this file is not present. + +According to the above, there are two ways to make the system go into the +:ref:`suspend-to-idle <s2idle>` state. The first one is to write "freeze" +directly to :file:`/sys/power/state`. The second one is to write "s2idle" to +:file:`/sys/power/mem_sleep` and then to write "mem" to +:file:`/sys/power/state`. Likewise, there are two ways to make the system go +into the :ref:`standby <standby>` state (the strings to write to the control +files in that case are "standby" or "shallow" and "mem", respectively) if that +state is supported by the platform. However, there is only one way to make the +system go into the :ref:`suspend-to-RAM <s2ram>` state (write "deep" into +:file:`/sys/power/mem_sleep` and "mem" into :file:`/sys/power/state`). + +The default suspend variant (ie. the one to be used without writing anything +into :file:`/sys/power/mem_sleep`) is either "deep" (on the majority of systems +supporting :ref:`suspend-to-RAM <s2ram>`) or "s2idle", but it can be overridden +by the value of the "mem_sleep_default" parameter in the kernel command line. +On some ACPI-based systems, depending on the information in the ACPI tables, the +default may be "s2idle" even if :ref:`suspend-to-RAM <s2ram>` is supported. |