Re: [PATCH] nvme-pci: Do not prevent PCI bus-level PM from being used

From: Keith Busch
Date: Wed Aug 07 2019 - 10:40:05 EST


On Wed, Aug 07, 2019 at 02:53:44AM -0700, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote:
> From: Rafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@xxxxxxxxx>
>
> One of the modifications made by commit d916b1be94b6 ("nvme-pci: use
> host managed power state for suspend") was adding a pci_save_state()
> call to nvme_suspend() in order to prevent the PCI bus-level PM from
> being applied to the suspended NVMe devices, but if ASPM is not
> enabled for the target NVMe device, that causes its PCIe link to stay
> up and the platform may not be able to get into its optimum low-power
> state because of that.
>
> For example, if ASPM is disabled for the NVMe drive (PC401 NVMe SK
> hynix 256GB) in my Dell XPS13 9380, leaving it in D0 during
> suspend-to-idle prevents the SoC from reaching package idle states
> deeper than PC3, which is way insufficient for system suspend.
>
> To address this shortcoming, make nvme_suspend() check if ASPM is
> enabled for the target device and fall back to full device shutdown
> and PCI bus-level PM if that is not the case.
>
> Fixes: d916b1be94b6 ("nvme-pci: use host managed power state for suspend")
> Link: 2763495.NmdaWeg79L@kreacher/T/#t">https://lore.kernel.org/linux-pm/2763495.NmdaWeg79L@kreacher/T/#t
> Signed-off-by: Rafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@xxxxxxxxx>

Thanks for tracking down the cause. Sounds like your earlier assumption
on ASPM's involvement was spot on.

> +/*
> + * pcie_aspm_enabled - Return the mask of enabled ASPM link states.
> + * @pci_device: Target device.
> + */
> +u32 pcie_aspm_enabled(struct pci_dev *pci_device)
> +{
> + struct pci_dev *bridge = pci_device->bus->self;

You may want use pci_upstream_bridge() instead, just in case someone
calls this on a virtual function's pci_dev.

> + u32 aspm_enabled;
> +
> + mutex_lock(&aspm_lock);
> + aspm_enabled = bridge->link_state ? bridge->link_state->aspm_enabled : 0;
> + mutex_unlock(&aspm_lock);
> +
> + return aspm_enabled;
> +}