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Ulf Hansson authored
For a subsystem/driver that either doesn't support runtime PM or makes use of pm_runtime_set_active() during ->probe(), may try to access its device when probing, even if it may not be fully powered on from the PM domain's point of view. This may be the case when the used PM domain is a genpd provider, that implements genpd's ->start|stop() device callbacks. There are cases where the subsystem/driver managed to avoid the above problem, simply by calling pm_runtime_enable() and pm_runtime_get_sync() during ->probe(). However, this approach comes with a drawback, especially if the subsystem/driver implements a ->runtime_resume() callback. More precisely, the subsystem/driver then needs to use a device flag, which is checked in its ->runtime_resume() callback, as to avoid powering on its resources the first time the callback is invoked. This is needed because the subsystem/driver has already powered on the resources for the device, during ->probe() and before it called pm_runtime_get_sync(). In a way to avoid this boilerplate code and the inefficient check for "if (first_time_suspend)" in the ->runtime_resume() callback for these subsystems/drivers, let's introduce and export a dev_pm_domain_start() function, that may be called during ->probe() instead. Moreover, let the dev_pm_domain_start() invoke an optional ->start() callback, added to the struct dev_pm_domain, as to allow a PM domain specific implementation. Signed-off-by: Ulf Hansson <ulf.hansson@linaro.org> Signed-off-by: Rafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com>
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