xref: /linux/Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-devices-state_synced (revision 2a6b6c9a226279b4f6668450ddb21ae655558087)
1What:		/sys/devices/.../state_synced
2Date:		May 2020
3Contact:	Saravana Kannan <saravanak@google.com>
4Description:
5		The /sys/devices/.../state_synced attribute is only present for
6		devices whose bus types or driver provides the .sync_state()
7		callback. The number read from it (0 or 1) reflects the value
8		of the device's 'state_synced' field. A value of 0 means the
9		.sync_state() callback hasn't been called yet. A value of 1
10		means the .sync_state() callback has been called.
11
12		Generally, if a device has sync_state() support and has some of
13		the resources it provides enabled at the time the kernel starts
14		(Eg: enabled by hardware reset or bootloader or anything that
15		run before the kernel starts), then it'll keep those resources
16		enabled and in a state that's compatible with the state they
17		were in at the start of the kernel. The device will stop doing
18		this only when the sync_state() callback has been called --
19		which happens only when all its consumer devices are registered
20		and have probed successfully. Resources that were left disabled
21		at the time the kernel starts are not affected or limited in
22		any way by sync_state() callbacks.
23
24		Writing "1" to this file will force a call to the device's
25		sync_state() function if it hasn't been called already. The
26		sync_state() call happens independent of the state of the
27		consumer devices.
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