| System Power Management Sleep States |
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| (C) 2014 Intel Corp., Rafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com> |
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| The kernel supports up to four system sleep states generically, although three |
| of them depend on the platform support code to implement the low-level details |
| for each state. |
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| The states are represented by strings that can be read or written to the |
| /sys/power/state file. Those strings may be "mem", "standby", "freeze" and |
| "disk", where the last three always represent Power-On Suspend (if supported), |
| Suspend-To-Idle and hibernation (Suspend-To-Disk), respectively. |
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| The meaning of the "mem" string is controlled by the /sys/power/mem_sleep file. |
| It contains strings representing the available modes of system suspend that may |
| be triggered by writing "mem" to /sys/power/state. These modes are "s2idle" |
| (Suspend-To-Idle), "shallow" (Power-On Suspend) and "deep" (Suspend-To-RAM). |
| The "s2idle" mode is always available, while the other ones are only available |
| if supported by the platform (if not supported, the strings representing them |
| are not present in /sys/power/mem_sleep). The string representing the suspend |
| mode to be used subsequently is enclosed in square brackets. Writing one of |
| the other strings present in /sys/power/mem_sleep to it causes the suspend mode |
| to be used subsequently to change to the one represented by that string. |
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| Consequently, there are two ways to cause the system to go into the |
| Suspend-To-Idle sleep state. The first one is to write "freeze" directly to |
| /sys/power/state. The second one is to write "s2idle" to /sys/power/mem_sleep |
| and then to write "mem" to /sys/power/state. Similarly, there are two ways |
| to cause the system to go into the Power-On Suspend sleep state (the strings to |
| write to the control files in that case are "standby" or "shallow" and "mem", |
| respectively) if that state is supported by the platform. In turn, there is |
| only one way to cause the system to go into the Suspend-To-RAM state (write |
| "deep" into /sys/power/mem_sleep and "mem" into /sys/power/state). |
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| The default suspend mode (ie. the one to be used without writing anything into |
| /sys/power/mem_sleep) is either "deep" (if Suspend-To-RAM is supported) or |
| "s2idle", but it can be overridden by the value of the "mem_sleep_default" |
| parameter in the kernel command line. |
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| The properties of all of the sleep states are described below. |
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| State: Suspend-To-Idle |
| ACPI state: S0 |
| Label: "s2idle" ("freeze") |
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| This state is a generic, pure software, light-weight, system sleep state. |
| It allows more energy to be saved relative to runtime idle by freezing user |
| space and putting all I/O devices into low-power states (possibly |
| lower-power than available at run time), such that the processors can |
| spend more time in their idle states. |
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| This state can be used for platforms without Power-On Suspend/Suspend-to-RAM |
| support, or it can be used in addition to Suspend-to-RAM to provide reduced |
| resume latency. It is always supported. |
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| State: Standby / Power-On Suspend |
| ACPI State: S1 |
| Label: "shallow" ("standby") |
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| This state, if supported, offers moderate, though real, power savings, while |
| providing a relatively low-latency transition back to a working system. No |
| operating state is lost (the CPU retains power), so the system easily starts up |
| again where it left off. |
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| In addition to freezing user space and putting all I/O devices into low-power |
| states, which is done for Suspend-To-Idle too, nonboot CPUs are taken offline |
| and all low-level system functions are suspended during transitions into this |
| state. For this reason, it should allow more energy to be saved relative to |
| Suspend-To-Idle, but the resume latency will generally be greater than for that |
| state. |
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| State: Suspend-to-RAM |
| ACPI State: S3 |
| Label: "deep" |
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| This state, if supported, offers significant power savings as everything in the |
| system is put into a low-power state, except for memory, which should be placed |
| into the self-refresh mode to retain its contents. All of the steps carried out |
| when entering Power-On Suspend are also carried out during transitions to STR. |
| Additional operations may take place depending on the platform capabilities. In |
| particular, on ACPI systems the kernel passes control to the BIOS (platform |
| firmware) as the last step during STR transitions and that usually results in |
| powering down some more low-level components that aren't directly controlled by |
| the kernel. |
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| System and device state is saved and kept in memory. All devices are suspended |
| and put into low-power states. In many cases, all peripheral buses lose power |
| when entering STR, so devices must be able to handle the transition back to the |
| "on" state. |
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| For at least ACPI, STR requires some minimal boot-strapping code to resume the |
| system from it. This may be the case on other platforms too. |
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| State: Suspend-to-disk |
| ACPI State: S4 |
| Label: "disk" |
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| This state offers the greatest power savings, and can be used even in |
| the absence of low-level platform support for power management. This |
| state operates similarly to Suspend-to-RAM, but includes a final step |
| of writing memory contents to disk. On resume, this is read and memory |
| is restored to its pre-suspend state. |
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| STD can be handled by the firmware or the kernel. If it is handled by |
| the firmware, it usually requires a dedicated partition that must be |
| setup via another operating system for it to use. Despite the |
| inconvenience, this method requires minimal work by the kernel, since |
| the firmware will also handle restoring memory contents on resume. |
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| For suspend-to-disk, a mechanism called 'swsusp' (Swap Suspend) is used |
| to write memory contents to free swap space. swsusp has some restrictive |
| requirements, but should work in most cases. Some, albeit outdated, |
| documentation can be found in Documentation/power/swsusp.txt. |
| Alternatively, userspace can do most of the actual suspend to disk work, |
| see userland-swsusp.txt. |
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| Once memory state is written to disk, the system may either enter a |
| low-power state (like ACPI S4), or it may simply power down. Powering |
| down offers greater savings, and allows this mechanism to work on any |
| system. However, entering a real low-power state allows the user to |
| trigger wake up events (e.g. pressing a key or opening a laptop lid). |