* Linux (2.6) currently has NO mechanisms to initiate that: no khubd
* timer, no SRP, no requests through sysfs.
*
- * If CONFIG_USB_SUSPEND isn't enabled, devices only really suspend when
- * the root hub for their bus goes into global suspend ... so we don't
- * (falsely) update the device power state to say it suspended.
+ * If CONFIG_USB_SUSPEND isn't enabled, non-SuperSpeed devices really get
+ * suspended only when their bus goes into global suspend (i.e., the root
+ * hub is suspended). Nevertheless, we change @udev->state to
+ * USB_STATE_SUSPENDED as this is the device's "logical" state. The actual
+ * upstream port setting is stored in @udev->port_is_suspended.
*
* Returns 0 on success, else negative errno.
*/
enum pm_qos_flags_status pm_qos_stat;
int port1 = udev->portnum;
int status;
+ bool really_suspend = true;
/* enable remote wakeup when appropriate; this lets the device
* wake up the upstream hub (including maybe the root hub).
/* see 7.1.7.6 */
if (hub_is_superspeed(hub->hdev))
status = hub_set_port_link_state(hub, port1, USB_SS_PORT_LS_U3);
- else
+ else if (PMSG_IS_AUTO(msg))
status = set_port_feature(hub->hdev, port1,
USB_PORT_FEAT_SUSPEND);
+ /*
+ * For system suspend, we do not need to enable the suspend feature
+ * on individual USB-2 ports. The devices will automatically go
+ * into suspend a few ms after the root hub stops sending packets.
+ * The USB 2.0 spec calls this "global suspend".
+ */
+ else {
+ really_suspend = false;
+ status = 0;
+ }
if (status) {
dev_dbg(hub->intfdev, "can't suspend port %d, status %d\n",
port1, status);
(PMSG_IS_AUTO(msg) ? "auto-" : ""),
udev->do_remote_wakeup);
usb_set_device_state(udev, USB_STATE_SUSPENDED);
- udev->port_is_suspended = 1;
- msleep(10);
+ if (really_suspend) {
+ udev->port_is_suspended = 1;
+ msleep(10);
+ }
}
/*