Hi!
> > Not the same... but they are still related. "freeze" (for atomic
> > snapshot) is actually subset of "suspend"... freeze needs DMAs off and
> > saved state, and you need DMAs off and saved state for "suspend".
>
> THEY HAVE ABSOLUTELY NOTHING IN COMMON!
>
> Nobody in their right mind thinks that "disable DMA" and "suspend" are
> similar operations.
>
> > So it is actually correct to do "suspend" when you want "freeze"; it
> > is just slow. That's why they only differ in parameter these days.
>
> It is *not* correct to "suspend" when you want "freeze".
Example?
> I don't understand how you can even *claim* something like that.
>
> Here's a trivial example:
> - SCSI disk
>
> Tell me, what does "suspend" do, and what does "freeze" (snapshot) do?
Suspend syncs caches/spins down. Freeze does not do anything.
That's okay, I keep claiming "freeze" is subset of "suspend". Can you
name device where that is not true?
Remember we do
suspend(PMSG_FREEZE)
atomic snapshot
resume()
write snapshot.
So if we do spin the scsi disk down, nothing really bad happens, we'll
just spin it up. (So scsi disk is not example I want. Spining down
scsi disk on freeze is slow and stupid, but it is not incorrect).
Yes, If I'd knew what I know now, drivers would have
suspend/freeze/thaw/resume methods. We probably still can do that
change. Unfortunately, it needs driver authors to understand 4 hooks
(not 2) and do the right thing.
Pavel
--
(english) http://www.livejournal.com/~pavelmachek
(cesky, pictures) http://atrey.karlin.mff.cuni.cz/~pavel/picture/horses/blog.html
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