On Wed, Aug 04, 2010 at 11:30:44AM -0700, david@lang.hm wrote:No! And that's precisely the issue. Android's existing behaviour could be entirely implemented in the form of binary that manually triggers suspend when (a) the screen is off and (b) no userspace applications have indicated that the system shouldn't sleep, except for the wakeup event race. Imagine the following: 1) The policy timeout is about to expire. No applications are holding wakelocks. The system will suspend providing nothing takes a wakelock. 2) A network packet arrives indicating an incoming SIP call 3) The VOIP application takes a wakelock and prevents the phone from suspending while the call is in progress What stops the system going to sleep between (2) and (3)? cgroups don't, because the voip app is an otherwise untrusted application that you've just told the scheduler to ignore. -- Matthew Garrett | mjg59@srcf.ucam.org --
