> On Tue, Aug 03, 2010 at 04:19:25PM -0700,
david@lang.hm wrote:
>> On Tue, 3 Aug 2010, Arve Hj?nnev?g wrote:
>>
>>> 2010/8/2 <david@lang.hm>:
>>>>
>>>> so what is the fundamental difference between deciding to go into low-power
>>>> idle modes to wake up back up on a given point in the future and deciding
>>>> that you are going to be idle for so long that you may as well suspend until
>>>> there is user input?
>>>>
>>>
>>> Low power idle modes are supposed to be transparent. Suspend stops the
>>> monotonic clock, ignores ready threads and switches over to a separate
>>> set of wakeup events/interrupts. We don't suspend until there is user
>>> input, we suspend until there is a wakeup event (user-input, incoming
>>> network data/phone-calls, alarms etc..).
>>
>> s/user input/wakeup event/ and my question still stands.
>>
>> low power modes are not transparent to the user in all cases (if the
>> screen backlight dimms/shuts off a user reading something will
>> notice, if the system switches to a lower clock speed it can impact
>> user response time, etc) The system is making it's best guess as to
>> how to best srve the user by sacraficing some capibilities to save
>> power now so that the power can be available later.
>>
>> as I see it, suspending until a wakeup event (button press, incoming
>> call, alarm, etc) is just another datapoint along the same path.
>>
>> If the system could not wake itself up to respond to user input,
>> phone call, alarm, etc and needed the power button pressed to wake
>> up (or shut down to the point where the battery could be removed and
>> reinstalled a long time later), I would see things moving into a
>> different category, but as long as the system has the ability to
>> wake itself up later (and is still consuming power) I see the
>> suspend as being in the same category as the other low-power modes
>> (it's just more expensive to go in and out of)
>>
>>
>> why should the suspend be put into a different category from the
>> other low-power states?
>
> OK, I'll bite...