[Discussion] how to implement external power down for ARM

Shannon Zhao shannon.zhao at linaro.org
Wed May 6 01:19:59 PDT 2015


On 2015/5/6 15:29, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
> On Wednesday 06 May 2015 14:56:58 Shannon Zhao wrote:
>> > On 2015/5/5 19:13, Shannon Zhao wrote:
>> >         gpio-keys {
>> >                 autorepeat;
>> >                 #address-cells = <0x1>;
>> >                 #size-cells = <0x0>;
>> >                 compatible = "gpio-keys";
>> > 
>> >                 poweroff {
>> >                         gpios = <0x8002 0x3 0x0>;
>> >                         linux,code = <0x74>;
>> >                         label = "GPIO Key Poweroff";
>> >                 };
>> >         };
>> > 
>> > Configure kernel to select GPIO Buttons and Polled GPIO buttons. Use a
>> > Redhat filesystem "Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server for ARM Development
>> > Preview release 1.5" which has systemd and systemd-logind. Start VM and
>> > when it starts well type "system_powerdown" on QEMU monitor, the guest
>> > goes to poweroff. So this way works.
> Ok, very good.
> 
>> > Note: we must check the /lib/udev/rules.d/70-power-switch.rules in the
>> > fs and add one following line in it if it doesn't exist.
>> > 
>> > SUBSYSTEM=="input", KERNEL=="event*", SUBSYSTEMS=="platform",
>> > ATTRS{keys}=="116", TAG+="power-switch"
>> > 
>> > Then when execute journalctl -u systemd-logind in guest, we can see
>> > something like below:
>> > 
>> > Jan 01 00:01:02 localhost systemd[1]: Starting Login Service...
>> > Jan 01 00:01:07 localhost systemd[1]: Started Login Service.
>> > Jan 01 00:01:07 localhost systemd-logind[927]: Watching system buttons
>> > on /dev/input/event0 (gpio-keys)
>> > Jan 01 00:01:07 localhost systemd-logind[927]: New seat seat0.
>> > Jan 01 00:01:25 localhost systemd-logind[927]: New session c1 of user root.
>> > 
>> > Visit https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/systemd/+bug/1347776 for
>> > details.
> How about Ubuntu or Debian releases that do not use systemd?
> 
> I guess we should check with a Debian Wheezy or Ubuntu Trusty release.
> My guess is that it will work fine, but some minor adjustment might
> be needed.

Will check Debian Wheezy and Ubuntu Trusty release later.
BTW, I don't have them on hand, where can I get these filesystem for ARM?

-- 
Shannon



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