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System Power Management Sleep States

(C) 2014 Intel Corp., Rafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com>

The kernel supports up to four system sleep states generically, although three
of them depend on the platform support code to implement the low-level details
for each state.

The states are represented by strings that can be read or written to the
/sys/power/state file.  Those strings may be "mem", "standby", "freeze" and
"disk", where the last three always represent Power-On Suspend (if supported),
Suspend-To-Idle and hibernation (Suspend-To-Disk), respectively.

The meaning of the "mem" string is controlled by the /sys/power/mem_sleep file.
It contains strings representing the available modes of system suspend that may
be triggered by writing "mem" to /sys/power/state.  These modes are "s2idle"
(Suspend-To-Idle), "shallow" (Power-On Suspend) and "deep" (Suspend-To-RAM).
The "s2idle" mode is always available, while the other ones are only available
if supported by the platform (if not supported, the strings representing them
are not present in /sys/power/mem_sleep).  The string representing the suspend
mode to be used subsequently is enclosed in square brackets.  Writing one of
the other strings present in /sys/power/mem_sleep to it causes the suspend mode
to be used subsequently to change to the one represented by that string.

Consequently, there are two ways to cause the system to go into the
Suspend-To-Idle sleep state.  The first one is to write "freeze" directly to
/sys/power/state.  The second one is to write "s2idle" to /sys/power/mem_sleep
and then to wrtie "mem" to /sys/power/state.  Similarly, there are two ways
to cause the system to go into the Power-On Suspend sleep state (the strings to
write to the control files in that case are "standby" or "shallow" and "mem",
respectively) if that state is supported by the platform.  In turn, there is
only one way to cause the system to go into the Suspend-To-RAM state (write
"deep" into /sys/power/mem_sleep and "mem" into /sys/power/state).

The default suspend mode (ie. the one to be used without writing anything into
/sys/power/mem_sleep) is either "deep" (if Suspend-To-RAM is supported) or
"s2idle", but it can be overridden by the value of the "mem_sleep_default"
parameter in the kernel command line.  On some ACPI-based systems, depending on
the information in the FADT, the default may be "s2idle" even if Suspend-To-RAM
is supported.

The properties of all of the sleep states are described below.


State:		Suspend-To-Idle
ACPI state:	S0
Label:		"s2idle" ("freeze")

This state is a generic, pure software, light-weight, system sleep state.
It allows more energy to be saved relative to runtime idle by freezing user
space and putting all I/O devices into low-power states (possibly
lower-power than available at run time), such that the processors can
spend more time in their idle states.

This state can be used for platforms without Power-On Suspend/Suspend-to-RAM
support, or it can be used in addition to Suspend-to-RAM to provide reduced
resume latency.  It is always supported.


State:		Standby / Power-On Suspend
ACPI State:	S1
Label:		"shallow" ("standby")

This state, if supported, offers moderate, though real, power savings, while
providing a relatively low-latency transition back to a working system.  No
operating state is lost (the CPU retains power), so the system easily starts up
again where it left off. 

In addition to freezing user space and putting all I/O devices into low-power
states, which is done for Suspend-To-Idle too, nonboot CPUs are taken offline
and all low-level system functions are suspended during transitions into this
state.  For this reason, it should allow more energy to be saved relative to
Suspend-To-Idle, but the resume latency will generally be greater than for that
state.


State:		Suspend-to-RAM
ACPI State:	S3
Label:		"deep"

This state, if supported, offers significant power savings as everything in the
system is put into a low-power state, except for memory, which should be placed
into the self-refresh mode to retain its contents.  All of the steps carried out
when entering Power-On Suspend are also carried out during transitions to STR.
Additional operations may take place depending on the platform capabilities.  In
particular, on ACPI systems the kernel passes control to the BIOS (platform
firmware) as the last step during STR transitions and that usually results in
powering down some more low-level components that aren't directly controlled by
the kernel.

System and device state is saved and kept in memory.  All devices are suspended
and put into low-power states.  In many cases, all peripheral buses lose power
when entering STR, so devices must be able to handle the transition back to the
"on" state.

For at least ACPI, STR requires some minimal boot-strapping code to resume the
system from it.  This may be the case on other platforms too.


State:		Suspend-to-disk
ACPI State:	S4
Label:		"disk"

This state offers the greatest power savings, and can be used even in
the absence of low-level platform support for power management. This
state operates similarly to Suspend-to-RAM, but includes a final step
of writing memory contents to disk. On resume, this is read and memory
is restored to its pre-suspend state. 

STD can be handled by the firmware or the kernel. If it is handled by
the firmware, it usually requires a dedicated partition that must be
setup via another operating system for it to use. Despite the
inconvenience, this method requires minimal work by the kernel, since
the firmware will also handle restoring memory contents on resume. 

For suspend-to-disk, a mechanism called 'swsusp' (Swap Suspend) is used
to write memory contents to free swap space. swsusp has some restrictive
requirements, but should work in most cases. Some, albeit outdated,
documentation can be found in Documentation/power/swsusp.txt.
Alternatively, userspace can do most of the actual suspend to disk work,
see userland-swsusp.txt.

Once memory state is written to disk, the system may either enter a
low-power state (like ACPI S4), or it may simply power down. Powering
down offers greater savings, and allows this mechanism to work on any
system. However, entering a real low-power state allows the user to
trigger wake up events (e.g. pressing a key or opening a laptop lid).