/* * drivers/base/power/sysfs.c - sysfs entries for device PM */ #include #include "power.h" /** * state - Control current power state of device * * show() returns the current power state of the device. '0' indicates * the device is on. Other values (1-3) indicate the device is in a low * power state. * * store() sets the current power state, which is an integer value * between 0-3. If the device is on ('0'), and the value written is * greater than 0, then the device is placed directly into the low-power * state (via its driver's ->suspend() method). * If the device is currently in a low-power state, and the value is 0, * the device is powered back on (via the ->resume() method). * If the device is in a low-power state, and a different low-power state * is requested, the device is first resumed, then suspended into the new * low-power state. */ static ssize_t state_show(struct device * dev, struct device_attribute *attr, char * buf) { return sprintf(buf, "%u\n", dev->power.power_state); } static ssize_t state_store(struct device * dev, struct device_attribute *attr, const char * buf, size_t n) { u32 state; char * rest; int error = 0; state = simple_strtoul(buf, &rest, 10); if (*rest) return -EINVAL; if (state) error = dpm_runtime_suspend(dev, state); else dpm_runtime_resume(dev); return error ? error : n; } static DEVICE_ATTR(state, 0644, state_show, state_store); static struct attribute * power_attrs[] = { &dev_attr_state.attr, NULL, }; static struct attribute_group pm_attr_group = { .name = "power", .attrs = power_attrs, }; int dpm_sysfs_add(struct device * dev) { return sysfs_create_group(&dev->kobj, &pm_attr_group); } void dpm_sysfs_remove(struct device * dev) { sysfs_remove_group(&dev->kobj, &pm_attr_group); }