[ Upstream commit 47ea0ddb1f ]
Both cros host command and irq disable were moved to suspend
prepare stage from late suspend recently. This is causing EC
to report MKBP event timeouts during suspend stress testing.
When the MKBP event timeouts happen during suspend, subsequent
wakeup of AP by EC using MKBP doesn't happen properly. Move the
irq disabling part back to late suspend stage which is a general
suggestion from the suspend kernel documentaiton to do irq
disable as late as possible.
Fixes: 4b9abbc132 ("platform/chrome: cros_ec_lpc: Move host command to prepare/complete")
Signed-off-by: Lalith Rajendran <lalithkraj@chromium.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20231027160221.v4.1.I1725c3ed27eb7cd9836904e49e8bfa9fb0200a97@changeid
Signed-off-by: Tzung-Bi Shih <tzungbi@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <sashal@kernel.org>
The 'cros_ec' core driver is the common interface for the cros_ec
transport drivers to do the shared operations to register, unregister,
suspend, resume and handle_event. The interface is provided by including
the header 'include/linux/platform_data/cros_ec_proto.h', however, instead
of have the implementation of these functions in cros_ec_proto.c, it is in
'cros_ec.c', which is a different kernel module. Apart from being a bad
practice, this can induce confusions allowing the users of the cros_ec
protocol to call these functions.
The register, unregister, suspend, resume and handle_event functions
*should* only be called by the different transport drivers (i2c, spi, lpc,
etc.), so make this a bit less confusing by moving these functions from
the public in-kernel space to a private include in platform/chrome, and
then, the interface for cros_ec module and for the cros_ec_proto module is
clean.
Signed-off-by: Enric Balletbo i Serra <enric.balletbo@collabora.com>
Signed-off-by: Benson Leung <bleung@chromium.org>