| Rafael J. Wysocki | 971cb7f | 2010-01-23 22:03:22 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | What:		/sys/devices/.../power/ | 
 | 2 | Date:		January 2009 | 
 | 3 | Contact:	Rafael J. Wysocki <rjw@sisk.pl> | 
 | 4 | Description: | 
 | 5 | 		The /sys/devices/.../power directory contains attributes | 
 | 6 | 		allowing the user space to check and modify some power | 
 | 7 | 		management related properties of given device. | 
 | 8 |  | 
 | 9 | What:		/sys/devices/.../power/wakeup | 
 | 10 | Date:		January 2009 | 
 | 11 | Contact:	Rafael J. Wysocki <rjw@sisk.pl> | 
 | 12 | Description: | 
 | 13 | 		The /sys/devices/.../power/wakeup attribute allows the user | 
 | 14 | 		space to check if the device is enabled to wake up the system | 
 | 15 | 		from sleep states, such as the memory sleep state (suspend to | 
 | 16 | 		RAM) and hibernation (suspend to disk), and to enable or disable | 
 | 17 | 		it to do that as desired. | 
 | 18 |  | 
 | 19 | 		Some devices support "wakeup" events, which are hardware signals | 
 | 20 | 		used to activate the system from a sleep state.  Such devices | 
 | 21 | 		have one of the following two values for the sysfs power/wakeup | 
 | 22 | 		file: | 
 | 23 |  | 
 | 24 | 		+ "enabled\n" to issue the events; | 
 | 25 | 		+ "disabled\n" not to do so; | 
 | 26 |  | 
 | 27 | 		In that cases the user space can change the setting represented | 
 | 28 | 		by the contents of this file by writing either "enabled", or | 
 | 29 | 		"disabled" to it. | 
 | 30 |  | 
 | 31 | 		For the devices that are not capable of generating system wakeup | 
 | 32 | 		events this file contains "\n".  In that cases the user space | 
 | 33 | 		cannot modify the contents of this file and the device cannot be | 
 | 34 | 		enabled to wake up the system. | 
 | 35 |  | 
 | 36 | What:		/sys/devices/.../power/control | 
 | 37 | Date:		January 2009 | 
 | 38 | Contact:	Rafael J. Wysocki <rjw@sisk.pl> | 
 | 39 | Description: | 
 | 40 | 		The /sys/devices/.../power/control attribute allows the user | 
 | 41 | 		space to control the run-time power management of the device. | 
 | 42 |  | 
 | 43 | 		All devices have one of the following two values for the | 
 | 44 | 		power/control file: | 
 | 45 |  | 
 | 46 | 		+ "auto\n" to allow the device to be power managed at run time; | 
 | 47 | 		+ "on\n" to prevent the device from being power managed; | 
 | 48 |  | 
 | 49 | 		The default for all devices is "auto", which means that they may | 
 | 50 | 		be subject to automatic power management, depending on their | 
 | 51 | 		drivers.  Changing this attribute to "on" prevents the driver | 
 | 52 | 		from power managing the device at run time.  Doing that while | 
 | 53 | 		the device is suspended causes it to be woken up. | 
| Rafael J. Wysocki | 5a2eb85 | 2010-01-23 22:25:23 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 54 |  | 
 | 55 | What:		/sys/devices/.../power/async | 
 | 56 | Date:		January 2009 | 
 | 57 | Contact:	Rafael J. Wysocki <rjw@sisk.pl> | 
 | 58 | Description: | 
 | 59 | 		The /sys/devices/.../async attribute allows the user space to | 
 | 60 | 		enable or diasble the device's suspend and resume callbacks to | 
 | 61 | 		be executed asynchronously (ie. in separate threads, in parallel | 
 | 62 | 		with the main suspend/resume thread) during system-wide power | 
 | 63 | 		transitions (eg. suspend to RAM, hibernation). | 
 | 64 |  | 
 | 65 | 		All devices have one of the following two values for the | 
 | 66 | 		power/async file: | 
 | 67 |  | 
 | 68 | 		+ "enabled\n" to permit the asynchronous suspend/resume; | 
 | 69 | 		+ "disabled\n" to forbid it; | 
 | 70 |  | 
 | 71 | 		The value of this attribute may be changed by writing either | 
 | 72 | 		"enabled", or "disabled" to it. | 
 | 73 |  | 
 | 74 | 		It generally is unsafe to permit the asynchronous suspend/resume | 
 | 75 | 		of a device unless it is certain that all of the PM dependencies | 
 | 76 | 		of the device are known to the PM core.  However, for some | 
 | 77 | 		devices this attribute is set to "enabled" by bus type code or | 
 | 78 | 		device drivers and in that cases it should be safe to leave the | 
 | 79 | 		default value. |