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-rw-r--r--Documentation/rfkill.txt32
-rw-r--r--net/rfkill/rfkill.c16
2 files changed, 30 insertions, 18 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/rfkill.txt b/Documentation/rfkill.txt
index 6fcb3060dec..b65f0799df4 100644
--- a/Documentation/rfkill.txt
+++ b/Documentation/rfkill.txt
@@ -341,6 +341,8 @@ key that does nothing by itself, as well as any hot key that is type-specific
3.1 Guidelines for wireless device drivers
------------------------------------------
+(in this text, rfkill->foo means the foo field of struct rfkill).
+
1. Each independent transmitter in a wireless device (usually there is only one
transmitter per device) should have a SINGLE rfkill class attached to it.
@@ -363,10 +365,32 @@ This rule exists because users of the rfkill subsystem expect to get (and set,
when possible) the overall transmitter rfkill state, not of a particular rfkill
line.
-5. During suspend, the rfkill class will attempt to soft-block the radio
-through a call to rfkill->toggle_radio, and will try to restore its previous
-state during resume. After a rfkill class is suspended, it will *not* call
-rfkill->toggle_radio until it is resumed.
+5. The wireless device driver MUST NOT leave the transmitter enabled during
+suspend and hibernation unless:
+
+ 5.1. The transmitter has to be enabled for some sort of functionality
+ like wake-on-wireless-packet or autonomous packed forwarding in a mesh
+ network, and that functionality is enabled for this suspend/hibernation
+ cycle.
+
+AND
+
+ 5.2. The device was not on a user-requested BLOCKED state before
+ the suspend (i.e. the driver must NOT unblock a device, not even
+ to support wake-on-wireless-packet or remain in the mesh).
+
+In other words, there is absolutely no allowed scenario where a driver can
+automatically take action to unblock a rfkill controller (obviously, this deals
+with scenarios where soft-blocking or both soft and hard blocking is happening.
+Scenarios where hardware rfkill lines are the only ones blocking the
+transmitter are outside of this rule, since the wireless device driver does not
+control its input hardware rfkill lines in the first place).
+
+6. During resume, rfkill will try to restore its previous state.
+
+7. After a rfkill class is suspended, it will *not* call rfkill->toggle_radio
+until it is resumed.
+
Example of a WLAN wireless driver connected to the rfkill subsystem:
--------------------------------------------------------------------
diff --git a/net/rfkill/rfkill.c b/net/rfkill/rfkill.c
index d5735799ccd..ea0dc04b3c7 100644
--- a/net/rfkill/rfkill.c
+++ b/net/rfkill/rfkill.c
@@ -512,21 +512,9 @@ static void rfkill_release(struct device *dev)
#ifdef CONFIG_PM
static int rfkill_suspend(struct device *dev, pm_message_t state)
{
- struct rfkill *rfkill = to_rfkill(dev);
-
- if (dev->power.power_state.event != state.event) {
- if (state.event & PM_EVENT_SLEEP) {
- /* Stop transmitter, keep state, no notifies */
- update_rfkill_state(rfkill);
-
- mutex_lock(&rfkill->mutex);
- rfkill->toggle_radio(rfkill->data,
- RFKILL_STATE_SOFT_BLOCKED);
- mutex_unlock(&rfkill->mutex);
- }
-
+ /* mark class device as suspended */
+ if (dev->power.power_state.event != state.event)
dev->power.power_state = state;
- }
return 0;
}