On Wed, 27 Feb 2008, David Newall wrote:Certainly. If hardware-change events can get lost because of the system sleep, the resume method should make every effort to verify that what it remembers of the hardware state matches the current reality. It depends on the bus. If the bus doesn't support hotplugging then scanning isn't necessary. If the bus does support hotplugging then scanning after suspend may or may not be necessary, depending on whether or not the bus controller remained powered during the suspend. For hotpluggable buses, scanning after hibernation is always necessary. Alan Stern --
| Sam Ravnborg | Are Section mismatches out of control? |
| Karl Meyer | PROBLEM: 2.6.23-rc "NETDEV WATCHDOG: eth0: transmit timed out" |
| Bart Van Assche | Re: Is gcc thread-unsafe? |
| Adrian Bunk | Re: [Bug #10493] mips BCM47XX compile error |
git: | |
| Junio C Hamano | Re: [RFC/PATCH] git-branch: default to --track |
| Linus Torvalds | cleaner/better zlib sources? |
| Peter Stahlir | Git as a filesystem |
| Yossi Leybovich | corrupt object on git-gc |
| Manuel Wildauer | Re: Editing C with... |
| Mark Thomas | [i386/Thinkpad T41]USB mouse + Xorg obsd 4.1 |
| Stijn | Re: libiconv problem |
| Daniel Ouellet | Re: Router performance on OpenBSD and OpenBGPD |
| Felix Radensky | RE: e1000e "Detected Tx Unit Hang" |
| Johann Baudy | Packet mmap: TX RING and zero copy |
| David Miller | Re: 2.6.26/tg3 ping roundtrip times > 2000 ms on local network |
| Dushan Tcholich | Re: ksoftirqd high cpu load on kernels 2.6.24 to 2.6.27-rc1-mm1 |
