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v6.2
  1# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only
  2config SUSPEND
  3	bool "Suspend to RAM and standby"
  4	depends on ARCH_SUSPEND_POSSIBLE
  5	default y
  6	help
  7	  Allow the system to enter sleep states in which main memory is
  8	  powered and thus its contents are preserved, such as the
  9	  suspend-to-RAM state (e.g. the ACPI S3 state).
 10
 11config SUSPEND_FREEZER
 12	bool "Enable freezer for suspend to RAM/standby" \
 13		if ARCH_WANTS_FREEZER_CONTROL || BROKEN
 14	depends on SUSPEND
 15	default y
 16	help
 17	  This allows you to turn off the freezer for suspend. If this is
 18	  done, no tasks are frozen for suspend to RAM/standby.
 19
 20	  Turning OFF this setting is NOT recommended! If in doubt, say Y.
 21
 22config SUSPEND_SKIP_SYNC
 23	bool "Skip kernel's sys_sync() on suspend to RAM/standby"
 24	depends on SUSPEND
 25	depends on EXPERT
 26	help
 27	  Skip the kernel sys_sync() before freezing user processes.
 28	  Some systems prefer not to pay this cost on every invocation
 29	  of suspend, or they are content with invoking sync() from
 30	  user-space before invoking suspend.  There's a run-time switch
 31	  at '/sys/power/sync_on_suspend' to configure this behaviour.
 32	  This setting changes the default for the run-tim switch. Say Y
 33	  to change the default to disable the kernel sys_sync().
 34
 35config HIBERNATE_CALLBACKS
 36	bool
 37
 38config HIBERNATION
 39	bool "Hibernation (aka 'suspend to disk')"
 40	depends on SWAP && ARCH_HIBERNATION_POSSIBLE
 41	select HIBERNATE_CALLBACKS
 42	select LZO_COMPRESS
 43	select LZO_DECOMPRESS
 44	select CRC32
 45	help
 46	  Enable the suspend to disk (STD) functionality, which is usually
 47	  called "hibernation" in user interfaces.  STD checkpoints the
 48	  system and powers it off; and restores that checkpoint on reboot.
 49
 50	  You can suspend your machine with 'echo disk > /sys/power/state'
 51	  after placing resume=/dev/swappartition on the kernel command line
 52	  in your bootloader's configuration file.
 53
 54	  Alternatively, you can use the additional userland tools available
 55	  from <http://suspend.sf.net>.
 56
 57	  In principle it does not require ACPI or APM, although for example
 58	  ACPI will be used for the final steps when it is available.  One
 59	  of the reasons to use software suspend is that the firmware hooks
 60	  for suspend states like suspend-to-RAM (STR) often don't work very
 61	  well with Linux.
 62
 63	  It creates an image which is saved in your active swap. Upon the next
 64	  boot, pass the 'resume=/dev/swappartition' argument to the kernel to
 65	  have it detect the saved image, restore memory state from it, and
 66	  continue to run as before. If you do not want the previous state to
 67	  be reloaded, then use the 'noresume' kernel command line argument.
 68	  Note, however, that fsck will be run on your filesystems and you will
 69	  need to run mkswap against the swap partition used for the suspend.
 70
 71	  It also works with swap files to a limited extent (for details see
 72	  <file:Documentation/power/swsusp-and-swap-files.rst>).
 73
 74	  Right now you may boot without resuming and resume later but in the
 75	  meantime you cannot use the swap partition(s)/file(s) involved in
 76	  suspending.  Also in this case you must not use the filesystems
 77	  that were mounted before the suspend.  In particular, you MUST NOT
 78	  MOUNT any journaled filesystems mounted before the suspend or they
 79	  will get corrupted in a nasty way.
 80
 81	  For more information take a look at <file:Documentation/power/swsusp.rst>.
 82
 83config HIBERNATION_SNAPSHOT_DEV
 84	bool "Userspace snapshot device"
 85	depends on HIBERNATION
 86	default y
 87	help
 88	  Device used by the uswsusp tools.
 89
 90	  Say N if no snapshotting from userspace is needed, this also
 91	  reduces the attack surface of the kernel.
 92
 93	  If in doubt, say Y.
 94
 95config PM_STD_PARTITION
 96	string "Default resume partition"
 97	depends on HIBERNATION
 98	default ""
 99	help
100	  The default resume partition is the partition that the suspend-
101	  to-disk implementation will look for a suspended disk image.
102
103	  The partition specified here will be different for almost every user.
104	  It should be a valid swap partition (at least for now) that is turned
105	  on before suspending.
106
107	  The partition specified can be overridden by specifying:
108
109		resume=/dev/<other device>
110
111	  which will set the resume partition to the device specified.
112
113	  Note there is currently not a way to specify which device to save the
114	  suspended image to. It will simply pick the first available swap
115	  device.
116
117config PM_SLEEP
118	def_bool y
119	depends on SUSPEND || HIBERNATE_CALLBACKS
120	select PM
121	select SRCU
122
123config PM_SLEEP_SMP
124	def_bool y
125	depends on SMP
126	depends on ARCH_SUSPEND_POSSIBLE || ARCH_HIBERNATION_POSSIBLE
127	depends on PM_SLEEP
 
128	select HOTPLUG_CPU
129
130config PM_SLEEP_SMP_NONZERO_CPU
131	def_bool y
132	depends on PM_SLEEP_SMP
133	depends on ARCH_SUSPEND_NONZERO_CPU
134	help
135	If an arch can suspend (for suspend, hibernate, kexec, etc) on a
136	non-zero numbered CPU, it may define ARCH_SUSPEND_NONZERO_CPU. This
137	will allow nohz_full mask to include CPU0.
138
139config PM_AUTOSLEEP
140	bool "Opportunistic sleep"
141	depends on PM_SLEEP
142	help
 
143	Allow the kernel to trigger a system transition into a global sleep
144	state automatically whenever there are no active wakeup sources.
145
146config PM_USERSPACE_AUTOSLEEP
147	bool "Userspace opportunistic sleep"
148	depends on PM_SLEEP
149	help
150	Notify kernel of aggressive userspace autosleep power management policy.
151
152	This option changes the behavior of various sleep-sensitive code to deal
153	with frequent userspace-initiated transitions into a global sleep state.
154
155	Saying Y here, disables code paths that most users really should keep
156	enabled. In particular, only enable this if it is very common to be
157	asleep/awake for very short periods of time (<= 2 seconds).
158
159	Only platforms, such as Android, that implement opportunistic sleep from
160	a userspace power manager service should enable this option; and not
161	other machines. Therefore, you should say N here, unless you are
162	extremely certain that this is what you want. The option otherwise has
163	bad, undesirable effects, and should not be enabled just for fun.
164
165
166config PM_WAKELOCKS
167	bool "User space wakeup sources interface"
168	depends on PM_SLEEP
169	help
 
170	Allow user space to create, activate and deactivate wakeup source
171	objects with the help of a sysfs-based interface.
172
173config PM_WAKELOCKS_LIMIT
174	int "Maximum number of user space wakeup sources (0 = no limit)"
175	range 0 100000
176	default 100
177	depends on PM_WAKELOCKS
178
179config PM_WAKELOCKS_GC
180	bool "Garbage collector for user space wakeup sources"
181	depends on PM_WAKELOCKS
182	default y
183
184config PM
185	bool "Device power management core functionality"
186	help
 
187	  Enable functionality allowing I/O devices to be put into energy-saving
188	  (low power) states, for example after a specified period of inactivity
189	  (autosuspended), and woken up in response to a hardware-generated
190	  wake-up event or a driver's request.
191
192	  Hardware support is generally required for this functionality to work
193	  and the bus type drivers of the buses the devices are on are
194	  responsible for the actual handling of device suspend requests and
195	  wake-up events.
196
 
 
 
 
197config PM_DEBUG
198	bool "Power Management Debug Support"
199	depends on PM
200	help
201	This option enables various debugging support in the Power Management
202	code. This is helpful when debugging and reporting PM bugs, like
203	suspend support.
204
205config PM_ADVANCED_DEBUG
206	bool "Extra PM attributes in sysfs for low-level debugging/testing"
207	depends on PM_DEBUG
208	help
209	Add extra sysfs attributes allowing one to access some Power Management
210	fields of device objects from user space.  If you are not a kernel
211	developer interested in debugging/testing Power Management, say "no".
212
213config PM_TEST_SUSPEND
214	bool "Test suspend/resume and wakealarm during bootup"
215	depends on SUSPEND && PM_DEBUG && RTC_CLASS=y
216	help
217	This option will let you suspend your machine during bootup, and
218	make it wake up a few seconds later using an RTC wakeup alarm.
219	Enable this with a kernel parameter like "test_suspend=mem".
220
221	You probably want to have your system's RTC driver statically
222	linked, ensuring that it's available when this test runs.
223
224config PM_SLEEP_DEBUG
225	def_bool y
226	depends on PM_DEBUG && PM_SLEEP
227
228config DPM_WATCHDOG
229	bool "Device suspend/resume watchdog"
230	depends on PM_DEBUG && PSTORE && EXPERT
231	help
232	  Sets up a watchdog timer to capture drivers that are
233	  locked up attempting to suspend/resume a device.
234	  A detected lockup causes system panic with message
235	  captured in pstore device for inspection in subsequent
236	  boot session.
237
238config DPM_WATCHDOG_TIMEOUT
239	int "Watchdog timeout in seconds"
240	range 1 120
241	default 120
242	depends on DPM_WATCHDOG
243
244config PM_TRACE
245	bool
246	help
247	  This enables code to save the last PM event point across
248	  reboot. The architecture needs to support this, x86 for
249	  example does by saving things in the RTC, see below.
250
251	  The architecture specific code must provide the extern
252	  functions from <linux/resume-trace.h> as well as the
253	  <asm/resume-trace.h> header with a TRACE_RESUME() macro.
254
255	  The way the information is presented is architecture-
256	  dependent, x86 will print the information during a
257	  late_initcall.
258
259config PM_TRACE_RTC
260	bool "Suspend/resume event tracing"
261	depends on PM_SLEEP_DEBUG
262	depends on X86
263	select PM_TRACE
264	help
265	This enables some cheesy code to save the last PM event point in the
266	RTC across reboots, so that you can debug a machine that just hangs
267	during suspend (or more commonly, during resume).
268
269	To use this debugging feature you should attempt to suspend the
270	machine, reboot it and then run
271
272		dmesg -s 1000000 | grep 'hash matches'
273
274	CAUTION: this option will cause your machine's real-time clock to be
275	set to an invalid time after a resume.
276
277config APM_EMULATION
278	tristate "Advanced Power Management Emulation"
279	depends on SYS_SUPPORTS_APM_EMULATION
280	help
281	  APM is a BIOS specification for saving power using several different
282	  techniques. This is mostly useful for battery powered laptops with
283	  APM compliant BIOSes. If you say Y here, the system time will be
284	  reset after a RESUME operation, the /proc/apm device will provide
285	  battery status information, and user-space programs will receive
286	  notification of APM "events" (e.g. battery status change).
287
288	  In order to use APM, you will need supporting software. For location
289	  and more information, read <file:Documentation/power/apm-acpi.rst>
290	  and the Battery Powered Linux mini-HOWTO, available from
291	  <http://www.tldp.org/docs.html#howto>.
292
293	  This driver does not spin down disk drives (see the hdparm(8)
294	  manpage ("man 8 hdparm") for that), and it doesn't turn off
295	  VESA-compliant "green" monitors.
296
297	  Generally, if you don't have a battery in your machine, there isn't
298	  much point in using this driver and you should say N. If you get
299	  random kernel OOPSes or reboots that don't seem to be related to
300	  anything, try disabling/enabling this option (or disabling/enabling
301	  APM in your BIOS).
302
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
303config PM_CLK
304	def_bool y
305	depends on PM && HAVE_CLK
306
307config PM_GENERIC_DOMAINS
308	bool
309	depends on PM
310
311config WQ_POWER_EFFICIENT_DEFAULT
312	bool "Enable workqueue power-efficient mode by default"
313	depends on PM
314	help
315	  Per-cpu workqueues are generally preferred because they show
316	  better performance thanks to cache locality; unfortunately,
317	  per-cpu workqueues tend to be more power hungry than unbound
318	  workqueues.
319
320	  Enabling workqueue.power_efficient kernel parameter makes the
321	  per-cpu workqueues which were observed to contribute
322	  significantly to power consumption unbound, leading to measurably
323	  lower power usage at the cost of small performance overhead.
324
325	  This config option determines whether workqueue.power_efficient
326	  is enabled by default.
327
328	  If in doubt, say N.
329
330config PM_GENERIC_DOMAINS_SLEEP
331	def_bool y
332	depends on PM_SLEEP && PM_GENERIC_DOMAINS
333
334config PM_GENERIC_DOMAINS_OF
335	def_bool y
336	depends on PM_GENERIC_DOMAINS && OF
337
338config CPU_PM
339	bool
340
341config ENERGY_MODEL
342	bool "Energy Model for devices with DVFS (CPUs, GPUs, etc)"
343	depends on SMP
344	depends on CPU_FREQ
345	help
346	  Several subsystems (thermal and/or the task scheduler for example)
347	  can leverage information about the energy consumed by devices to
348	  make smarter decisions. This config option enables the framework
349	  from which subsystems can access the energy models.
350
351	  The exact usage of the energy model is subsystem-dependent.
352
353	  If in doubt, say N.
v3.5.6
 
  1config SUSPEND
  2	bool "Suspend to RAM and standby"
  3	depends on ARCH_SUSPEND_POSSIBLE
  4	default y
  5	---help---
  6	  Allow the system to enter sleep states in which main memory is
  7	  powered and thus its contents are preserved, such as the
  8	  suspend-to-RAM state (e.g. the ACPI S3 state).
  9
 10config SUSPEND_FREEZER
 11	bool "Enable freezer for suspend to RAM/standby" \
 12		if ARCH_WANTS_FREEZER_CONTROL || BROKEN
 13	depends on SUSPEND
 14	default y
 15	help
 16	  This allows you to turn off the freezer for suspend. If this is
 17	  done, no tasks are frozen for suspend to RAM/standby.
 18
 19	  Turning OFF this setting is NOT recommended! If in doubt, say Y.
 20
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 21config HIBERNATE_CALLBACKS
 22	bool
 23
 24config HIBERNATION
 25	bool "Hibernation (aka 'suspend to disk')"
 26	depends on SWAP && ARCH_HIBERNATION_POSSIBLE
 27	select HIBERNATE_CALLBACKS
 28	select LZO_COMPRESS
 29	select LZO_DECOMPRESS
 30	select CRC32
 31	---help---
 32	  Enable the suspend to disk (STD) functionality, which is usually
 33	  called "hibernation" in user interfaces.  STD checkpoints the
 34	  system and powers it off; and restores that checkpoint on reboot.
 35
 36	  You can suspend your machine with 'echo disk > /sys/power/state'
 37	  after placing resume=/dev/swappartition on the kernel command line
 38	  in your bootloader's configuration file.
 39
 40	  Alternatively, you can use the additional userland tools available
 41	  from <http://suspend.sf.net>.
 42
 43	  In principle it does not require ACPI or APM, although for example
 44	  ACPI will be used for the final steps when it is available.  One
 45	  of the reasons to use software suspend is that the firmware hooks
 46	  for suspend states like suspend-to-RAM (STR) often don't work very
 47	  well with Linux.
 48
 49	  It creates an image which is saved in your active swap. Upon the next
 50	  boot, pass the 'resume=/dev/swappartition' argument to the kernel to
 51	  have it detect the saved image, restore memory state from it, and
 52	  continue to run as before. If you do not want the previous state to
 53	  be reloaded, then use the 'noresume' kernel command line argument.
 54	  Note, however, that fsck will be run on your filesystems and you will
 55	  need to run mkswap against the swap partition used for the suspend.
 56
 57	  It also works with swap files to a limited extent (for details see
 58	  <file:Documentation/power/swsusp-and-swap-files.txt>).
 59
 60	  Right now you may boot without resuming and resume later but in the
 61	  meantime you cannot use the swap partition(s)/file(s) involved in
 62	  suspending.  Also in this case you must not use the filesystems
 63	  that were mounted before the suspend.  In particular, you MUST NOT
 64	  MOUNT any journaled filesystems mounted before the suspend or they
 65	  will get corrupted in a nasty way.
 66
 67	  For more information take a look at <file:Documentation/power/swsusp.txt>.
 68
 69config ARCH_SAVE_PAGE_KEYS
 70	bool
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 71
 72config PM_STD_PARTITION
 73	string "Default resume partition"
 74	depends on HIBERNATION
 75	default ""
 76	---help---
 77	  The default resume partition is the partition that the suspend-
 78	  to-disk implementation will look for a suspended disk image. 
 79
 80	  The partition specified here will be different for almost every user. 
 81	  It should be a valid swap partition (at least for now) that is turned
 82	  on before suspending. 
 83
 84	  The partition specified can be overridden by specifying:
 85
 86		resume=/dev/<other device> 
 87
 88	  which will set the resume partition to the device specified. 
 89
 90	  Note there is currently not a way to specify which device to save the
 91	  suspended image to. It will simply pick the first available swap 
 92	  device.
 93
 94config PM_SLEEP
 95	def_bool y
 96	depends on SUSPEND || HIBERNATE_CALLBACKS
 
 
 97
 98config PM_SLEEP_SMP
 99	def_bool y
100	depends on SMP
101	depends on ARCH_SUSPEND_POSSIBLE || ARCH_HIBERNATION_POSSIBLE
102	depends on PM_SLEEP
103	select HOTPLUG
104	select HOTPLUG_CPU
105
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
106config PM_AUTOSLEEP
107	bool "Opportunistic sleep"
108	depends on PM_SLEEP
109	default n
110	---help---
111	Allow the kernel to trigger a system transition into a global sleep
112	state automatically whenever there are no active wakeup sources.
113
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
114config PM_WAKELOCKS
115	bool "User space wakeup sources interface"
116	depends on PM_SLEEP
117	default n
118	---help---
119	Allow user space to create, activate and deactivate wakeup source
120	objects with the help of a sysfs-based interface.
121
122config PM_WAKELOCKS_LIMIT
123	int "Maximum number of user space wakeup sources (0 = no limit)"
124	range 0 100000
125	default 100
126	depends on PM_WAKELOCKS
127
128config PM_WAKELOCKS_GC
129	bool "Garbage collector for user space wakeup sources"
130	depends on PM_WAKELOCKS
131	default y
132
133config PM_RUNTIME
134	bool "Run-time PM core functionality"
135	depends on !IA64_HP_SIM
136	---help---
137	  Enable functionality allowing I/O devices to be put into energy-saving
138	  (low power) states at run time (or autosuspended) after a specified
139	  period of inactivity and woken up in response to a hardware-generated
140	  wake-up event or a driver's request.
141
142	  Hardware support is generally required for this functionality to work
143	  and the bus type drivers of the buses the devices are on are
144	  responsible for the actual handling of the autosuspend requests and
145	  wake-up events.
146
147config PM
148	def_bool y
149	depends on PM_SLEEP || PM_RUNTIME
150
151config PM_DEBUG
152	bool "Power Management Debug Support"
153	depends on PM
154	---help---
155	This option enables various debugging support in the Power Management
156	code. This is helpful when debugging and reporting PM bugs, like
157	suspend support.
158
159config PM_ADVANCED_DEBUG
160	bool "Extra PM attributes in sysfs for low-level debugging/testing"
161	depends on PM_DEBUG
162	---help---
163	Add extra sysfs attributes allowing one to access some Power Management
164	fields of device objects from user space.  If you are not a kernel
165	developer interested in debugging/testing Power Management, say "no".
166
167config PM_TEST_SUSPEND
168	bool "Test suspend/resume and wakealarm during bootup"
169	depends on SUSPEND && PM_DEBUG && RTC_CLASS=y
170	---help---
171	This option will let you suspend your machine during bootup, and
172	make it wake up a few seconds later using an RTC wakeup alarm.
173	Enable this with a kernel parameter like "test_suspend=mem".
174
175	You probably want to have your system's RTC driver statically
176	linked, ensuring that it's available when this test runs.
177
178config CAN_PM_TRACE
179	def_bool y
180	depends on PM_DEBUG && PM_SLEEP
181
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
182config PM_TRACE
183	bool
184	help
185	  This enables code to save the last PM event point across
186	  reboot. The architecture needs to support this, x86 for
187	  example does by saving things in the RTC, see below.
188
189	  The architecture specific code must provide the extern
190	  functions from <linux/resume-trace.h> as well as the
191	  <asm/resume-trace.h> header with a TRACE_RESUME() macro.
192
193	  The way the information is presented is architecture-
194	  dependent, x86 will print the information during a
195	  late_initcall.
196
197config PM_TRACE_RTC
198	bool "Suspend/resume event tracing"
199	depends on CAN_PM_TRACE
200	depends on X86
201	select PM_TRACE
202	---help---
203	This enables some cheesy code to save the last PM event point in the
204	RTC across reboots, so that you can debug a machine that just hangs
205	during suspend (or more commonly, during resume).
206
207	To use this debugging feature you should attempt to suspend the
208	machine, reboot it and then run
209
210		dmesg -s 1000000 | grep 'hash matches'
211
212	CAUTION: this option will cause your machine's real-time clock to be
213	set to an invalid time after a resume.
214
215config APM_EMULATION
216	tristate "Advanced Power Management Emulation"
217	depends on PM && SYS_SUPPORTS_APM_EMULATION
218	help
219	  APM is a BIOS specification for saving power using several different
220	  techniques. This is mostly useful for battery powered laptops with
221	  APM compliant BIOSes. If you say Y here, the system time will be
222	  reset after a RESUME operation, the /proc/apm device will provide
223	  battery status information, and user-space programs will receive
224	  notification of APM "events" (e.g. battery status change).
225
226	  In order to use APM, you will need supporting software. For location
227	  and more information, read <file:Documentation/power/apm-acpi.txt>
228	  and the Battery Powered Linux mini-HOWTO, available from
229	  <http://www.tldp.org/docs.html#howto>.
230
231	  This driver does not spin down disk drives (see the hdparm(8)
232	  manpage ("man 8 hdparm") for that), and it doesn't turn off
233	  VESA-compliant "green" monitors.
234
235	  Generally, if you don't have a battery in your machine, there isn't
236	  much point in using this driver and you should say N. If you get
237	  random kernel OOPSes or reboots that don't seem to be related to
238	  anything, try disabling/enabling this option (or disabling/enabling
239	  APM in your BIOS).
240
241config ARCH_HAS_OPP
242	bool
243
244config PM_OPP
245	bool "Operating Performance Point (OPP) Layer library"
246	depends on ARCH_HAS_OPP
247	---help---
248	  SOCs have a standard set of tuples consisting of frequency and
249	  voltage pairs that the device will support per voltage domain. This
250	  is called Operating Performance Point or OPP. The actual definitions
251	  of OPP varies over silicon within the same family of devices.
252
253	  OPP layer organizes the data internally using device pointers
254	  representing individual voltage domains and provides SOC
255	  implementations a ready to use framework to manage OPPs.
256	  For more information, read <file:Documentation/power/opp.txt>
257
258config PM_CLK
259	def_bool y
260	depends on PM && HAVE_CLK
261
262config PM_GENERIC_DOMAINS
263	bool
264	depends on PM
265
266config PM_GENERIC_DOMAINS_RUNTIME
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
267	def_bool y
268	depends on PM_RUNTIME && PM_GENERIC_DOMAINS
269
270config CPU_PM
271	bool
272	depends on SUSPEND || CPU_IDLE