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authorLen Brown <len.brown@intel.com>2010-05-06 17:41:08 -0400
committerLen Brown <len.brown@intel.com>2010-05-12 00:37:59 -0400
commitb430acbd7c4b919886fa7fd92eeb7a695f1940d3 (patch)
tree02706f725130dc50ec618b85bbb703de1dd1e8ce /lib
parentcea0d767c29669bf89f86e4aee46ef462d2ebae8 (diff)
ACPICA: simplify SCI_EN workaround
acpi_hw_set_mode() double checks its effectiveness by calling acpi_hw_get_mode() -- polling up to 3 seconds. It would be more logical for its caller, acpi_enable() acpi_enable() to do the double-checking. (lets assume that acpi_disable() isn't interesting) The ACPI specification is unclear on this point. Some parts say that the BIOS sets SCI_EN and then returns to the OS, but one part says "OSPM polls the SCI_EN bit until it is sampled SET". The systems I have on hand do the former, SCI_EN is observed to be set upon return from the BIOS. So we move the check up out of acpi_hw_set_mode() up into acpi_enable() where it makes logical sense. Then we replace the 3-second polling loop with a single check. If this check fails, we'll see: "Hardware did not enter ACPI mode" and the system will bail out of ACPI initialization and likely fail to boot. If we see that in practice, we can restore the polling, but put it into acpi_enable. This patch is important if acpi_enable() is used in the resume from S3 path. Many systems today are seen coming back from S3 with SCI_EN off, and then failing to set SCI_EN in response to acpi_enable(). Those systems will take 3 seconds longer to resume due to this loop. However, it is possible that we will not use acpi_enable() in the S3 resume path, and bang SCI_EN directly, which would make the loop harmless, as it would be invisible to all systems except those that need it. Signed-off-by: Len Brown <len.brown@intel.com>
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