ACPI / PM: Ignore wakeup setting if the ACPI companion can't wake up
authorRafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com>
Wed, 19 Nov 2014 00:44:11 +0000 (01:44 +0100)
committerRafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com>
Thu, 20 Nov 2014 00:24:16 +0000 (01:24 +0100)
commit78579b7c7eb45f0e7ec5e9437087ed21749f9a9c
tree079b23f3867daa6d02c5f5d3e5081b869fd3ca39
parentfc14f9c1272f62c3e8d01300f52467c0d9af50f9
ACPI / PM: Ignore wakeup setting if the ACPI companion can't wake up

As reported by Dmitry, on some Chromebooks there are devices with
corresponding ACPI objects and with unusual system wakeup
configuration.  Namely, they technically are wakeup-capable, but the
wakeup is handled via a platform-specific out-of-band mechanism and
the ACPI PM layer has no information on the wakeup capability.  As
a result, device_may_wakeup(dev) called from acpi_dev_suspend_late()
returns 'true' for those devices, but the wakeup.flags.valid flag is
unset for the corresponding ACPI device objects, so acpi_device_wakeup()
reproducibly fails for them causing acpi_dev_suspend_late() to return
an error code.  The entire system suspend is then aborted and the
machines in question cannot suspend at all.

Address the problem by ignoring the device_may_wakeup(dev) return
value in acpi_dev_suspend_late() if the ACPI companion of the device
being handled has wakeup.flags.valid unset (in which case it is clear
that the wakeup is supposed to be handled by other means).

This fixes a regression introduced by commit a76e9bd89ae7 (i2c:
attach/detach I2C client device to the ACPI power domain) as the
affected systems could suspend and resume successfully before that
commit.

Fixes: a76e9bd89ae7 (i2c: attach/detach I2C client device to the ACPI power domain)
Reported-by: Dmitry Torokhov <dtor@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Dmitry Torokhov <dtor@chromium.org>
Cc: 3.13+ <stable@vger.kernel.org> # 3.13+
Signed-off-by: Rafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com>
drivers/acpi/device_pm.c