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In some cases, the system will boot to S0 from the point of view of
the EC, but PLTRST# will never deassert. Work around this by waiting
50 ms for PLTRST# to deassert. If it doesn't, force the chipset all
the way down by deasserting RSMRST#, then pulse the power button to
turn it back on.
Also add a powerfail debug command to simulate this failure event, so
that the recovery process can be tested.
Add API to the LPC module to get the state of PLTRST#, and to the
power button state machine to force it released when we shut down the
chipset and and force another power button pulse as we reset the
chipset.
BUG=chrome-os-partner:28422
BRANCH=baytrail
TEST=1. Boot system. Should boot normally. Shut system down.
2. powerfail
3. Boot system. On the EC console, should see the system come up,
go back down through G3S5, then come back up. From the user's
point of view, it just boots.
1. Boot system. Should boot normally. (That is, powerfail is not sticky)
Change-Id: Ia57f196606f79b9f2fce7d9cd109ab932c3571aa
Signed-off-by: Randall Spangler <rspangler@chromium.org>
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/197523
Reviewed-by: Aaron Durbin <adurbin@chromium.org>
445 lines
12 KiB
C
445 lines
12 KiB
C
/* Copyright (c) 2013 The Chromium OS Authors. All rights reserved.
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* Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
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* found in the LICENSE file.
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*/
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/* Power button state machine for x86 platforms */
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#include "charge_state.h"
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#include "chipset.h"
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#include "common.h"
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#include "console.h"
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#include "gpio.h"
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#include "hooks.h"
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#include "host_command.h"
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#include "keyboard_scan.h"
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#include "lid_switch.h"
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#include "power_button.h"
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#include "switch.h"
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#include "system.h"
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#include "task.h"
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#include "timer.h"
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#include "util.h"
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/* Console output macros */
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#define CPUTS(outstr) cputs(CC_SWITCH, outstr)
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#define CPRINTF(format, args...) cprintf(CC_SWITCH, format, ## args)
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/*
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* x86 chipsets have a hardware timer on the power button input which causes
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* them to reset when the button is pressed for more than 4 seconds. This is
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* problematic for Chrome OS, which needs more time than that to transition
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* through the lock and logout screens. So when the system is on, we need to
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* stretch the power button signal so that the chipset will hard-reboot after 8
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* seconds instead of 4.
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*
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* When the button is pressed, we initially send a short pulse (t0); this
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* allows the chipset to process its initial power button interrupt and do
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* things like wake from suspend. We then deassert the power button signal to
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* the chipset for (t1 = 4 sec - t0), which keeps the chipset from starting its
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* hard reset timer. If the power button is still pressed after this period,
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* we again assert the power button signal for the remainder of the press
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* duration. Since (t0+t1) causes a 4-second offset, the hard reset timeout in
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* the chipset triggers after 8 seconds as desired.
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*
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* PWRBTN# --- ----
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* to EC |______________________|
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*
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*
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* PWRBTN# --- --------- ----
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* to PCH |__| |___________|
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* t0 t1 held down
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*
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* scan code | |
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* to host v v
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* @S0 make code break code
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*/
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#define PWRBTN_DELAY_T0 (32 * MSEC) /* 32ms (PCH requires >16ms) */
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#define PWRBTN_DELAY_T1 (4 * SECOND - PWRBTN_DELAY_T0) /* 4 secs - t0 */
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/*
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* Length of time to stretch initial power button press to give chipset a
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* chance to wake up (~100ms) and react to the press (~16ms). Also used as
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* pulse length for simulated power button presses when the system is off.
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*/
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#define PWRBTN_INITIAL_US (200 * MSEC)
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enum power_button_state {
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/* Button up; state machine idle */
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PWRBTN_STATE_IDLE = 0,
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/* Button pressed; debouncing done */
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PWRBTN_STATE_PRESSED,
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/* Button down, chipset on; sending initial short pulse */
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PWRBTN_STATE_T0,
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/* Button down, chipset on; delaying until we should reassert signal */
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PWRBTN_STATE_T1,
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/* Button down, signal asserted to chipset */
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PWRBTN_STATE_HELD,
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/* Force pulse due to lid-open event */
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PWRBTN_STATE_LID_OPEN,
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/* Button released; debouncing done */
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PWRBTN_STATE_RELEASED,
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/* Ignore next button release */
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PWRBTN_STATE_EAT_RELEASE,
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/*
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* Need to power on system after init, but waiting to find out if
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* sufficient battery power.
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*/
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PWRBTN_STATE_INIT_ON,
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/* Forced pulse at EC boot due to keyboard controlled reset */
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PWRBTN_STATE_BOOT_KB_RESET,
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/* Power button pressed when chipset was off; stretching pulse */
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PWRBTN_STATE_WAS_OFF,
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};
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static enum power_button_state pwrbtn_state = PWRBTN_STATE_IDLE;
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static const char * const state_names[] = {
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"idle",
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"pressed",
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"t0",
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"t1",
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"held",
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"lid-open",
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"released",
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"eat-release",
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"init-on",
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"recovery",
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"was-off",
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};
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/*
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* Time for next state transition of power button state machine, or 0 if the
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* state doesn't have a timeout.
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*/
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static uint64_t tnext_state;
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static void set_pwrbtn_to_pch(int high)
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{
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/*
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* If the battery is discharging and low enough we'd shut down the
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* system, don't press the power button.
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*/
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if (!high && charge_want_shutdown()) {
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CPRINTF("[%T PB PCH pwrbtn ignored due to battery level\n");
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high = 1;
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}
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CPRINTF("[%T PB PCH pwrbtn=%s]\n", high ? "HIGH" : "LOW");
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gpio_set_level(GPIO_PCH_PWRBTN_L, high);
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}
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void power_button_pch_release(void)
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{
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CPRINTF("[%T PB PCH force release]\n");
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/* Deassert power button signal to PCH */
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set_pwrbtn_to_pch(1);
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/*
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* If power button is actually pressed, eat the next release so we
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* don't send an extra release.
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*/
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if (power_button_is_pressed())
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pwrbtn_state = PWRBTN_STATE_EAT_RELEASE;
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else
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pwrbtn_state = PWRBTN_STATE_IDLE;
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}
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void power_button_pch_pulse(void)
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{
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CPRINTF("[%T PB PCH pulse]\n");
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chipset_exit_hard_off();
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set_pwrbtn_to_pch(0);
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pwrbtn_state = PWRBTN_STATE_LID_OPEN;
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tnext_state = get_time().val + PWRBTN_INITIAL_US;
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task_wake(TASK_ID_POWERBTN);
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}
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/**
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* Handle debounced power button down.
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*/
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static void power_button_pressed(uint64_t tnow)
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{
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CPRINTF("[%T PB pressed]\n");
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pwrbtn_state = PWRBTN_STATE_PRESSED;
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tnext_state = tnow;
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}
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/**
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* Handle debounced power button up.
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*/
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static void power_button_released(uint64_t tnow)
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{
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CPRINTF("[%T PB released]\n");
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pwrbtn_state = PWRBTN_STATE_RELEASED;
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tnext_state = tnow;
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}
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/**
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* Set initial power button state.
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*/
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static void set_initial_pwrbtn_state(void)
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{
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uint32_t reset_flags = system_get_reset_flags();
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if (system_jumped_to_this_image() &&
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chipset_in_state(CHIPSET_STATE_ON)) {
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/*
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* Jumped to this image while the chipset was already on, so
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* simply reflect the actual power button state.
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*/
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if (power_button_is_pressed()) {
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CPRINTF("[%T PB init-jumped-held]\n");
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set_pwrbtn_to_pch(0);
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} else {
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CPRINTF("[%T PB init-jumped]\n");
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}
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} else if ((reset_flags & RESET_FLAG_AP_OFF) ||
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(keyboard_scan_get_boot_key() == BOOT_KEY_DOWN_ARROW)) {
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/*
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* Reset triggered by keyboard-controlled reset, and down-arrow
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* was held down. Or reset flags request AP off.
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*
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* Leave the main processor off. This is a fail-safe
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* combination for debugging failures booting the main
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* processor.
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*
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* Don't let the PCH see that the power button was pressed.
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* Otherwise, it might power on.
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*/
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CPRINTF("[%T PB init-off]\n");
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power_button_pch_release();
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} else {
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/*
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* All other EC reset conditions power on the main processor so
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* it can verify the EC.
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*/
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CPRINTF("[%T PB init-on]\n");
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pwrbtn_state = PWRBTN_STATE_INIT_ON;
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}
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}
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/**
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* Power button state machine.
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*
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* @param tnow Current time from usec counter
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*/
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static void state_machine(uint64_t tnow)
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{
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/* Not the time to move onto next state */
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if (tnow < tnext_state)
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return;
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/* States last forever unless otherwise specified */
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tnext_state = 0;
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switch (pwrbtn_state) {
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case PWRBTN_STATE_PRESSED:
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if (chipset_in_state(CHIPSET_STATE_ANY_OFF)) {
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/*
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* Chipset is off, so wake the chipset and send it a
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* long enough pulse to wake up. After that we'll
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* reflect the true power button state. If we don't
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* stretch the pulse here, the user may release the
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* power button before the chipset finishes waking from
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* hard off state.
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*/
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chipset_exit_hard_off();
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tnext_state = tnow + PWRBTN_INITIAL_US;
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pwrbtn_state = PWRBTN_STATE_WAS_OFF;
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} else {
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/* Chipset is on, so send the chipset a pulse */
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tnext_state = tnow + PWRBTN_DELAY_T0;
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pwrbtn_state = PWRBTN_STATE_T0;
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}
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set_pwrbtn_to_pch(0);
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break;
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case PWRBTN_STATE_T0:
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tnext_state = tnow + PWRBTN_DELAY_T1;
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pwrbtn_state = PWRBTN_STATE_T1;
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set_pwrbtn_to_pch(1);
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break;
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case PWRBTN_STATE_T1:
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/*
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* If the chipset is already off, don't tell it the power
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* button is down; it'll just cause the chipset to turn on
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* again.
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*/
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if (chipset_in_state(CHIPSET_STATE_ANY_OFF))
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CPRINTF("[%T PB chipset already off]\n");
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else
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set_pwrbtn_to_pch(0);
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pwrbtn_state = PWRBTN_STATE_HELD;
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break;
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case PWRBTN_STATE_RELEASED:
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case PWRBTN_STATE_LID_OPEN:
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set_pwrbtn_to_pch(1);
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pwrbtn_state = PWRBTN_STATE_IDLE;
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break;
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case PWRBTN_STATE_INIT_ON:
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/*
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* Don't do anything until the charger knows the battery level.
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* Otherwise we could power on the AP only to shut it right
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* back down due to insufficient battery.
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*/
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#ifdef HAS_TASK_CHARGER
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if (charge_get_state() == PWR_STATE_INIT)
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break;
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#endif
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/*
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* Power the system on if possible. Gating due to insufficient
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* battery is handled inside set_pwrbtn_to_pch().
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*/
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chipset_exit_hard_off();
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set_pwrbtn_to_pch(0);
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tnext_state = get_time().val + PWRBTN_INITIAL_US;
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if (power_button_is_pressed()) {
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if (system_get_reset_flags() & RESET_FLAG_RESET_PIN)
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pwrbtn_state = PWRBTN_STATE_BOOT_KB_RESET;
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else
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pwrbtn_state = PWRBTN_STATE_WAS_OFF;
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} else {
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pwrbtn_state = PWRBTN_STATE_RELEASED;
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}
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break;
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case PWRBTN_STATE_BOOT_KB_RESET:
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/* Initial forced pulse is done. Ignore the actual power
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* button until it's released, so that holding down the
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* recovery combination doesn't cause the chipset to shut back
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* down. */
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set_pwrbtn_to_pch(1);
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if (power_button_is_pressed())
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pwrbtn_state = PWRBTN_STATE_EAT_RELEASE;
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else
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pwrbtn_state = PWRBTN_STATE_IDLE;
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break;
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case PWRBTN_STATE_WAS_OFF:
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/* Done stretching initial power button signal, so show the
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* true power button state to the PCH. */
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if (power_button_is_pressed()) {
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/* User is still holding the power button */
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pwrbtn_state = PWRBTN_STATE_HELD;
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} else {
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/* Stop stretching the power button press */
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power_button_released(tnow);
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}
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break;
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case PWRBTN_STATE_IDLE:
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case PWRBTN_STATE_HELD:
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case PWRBTN_STATE_EAT_RELEASE:
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/* Do nothing */
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break;
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}
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}
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void power_button_task(void)
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{
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uint64_t t;
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uint64_t tsleep;
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while (1) {
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t = get_time().val;
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/* Update state machine */
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CPRINTF("[%T PB task %d = %s]\n", pwrbtn_state,
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state_names[pwrbtn_state]);
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state_machine(t);
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/* Sleep until our next timeout */
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tsleep = -1;
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if (tnext_state && tnext_state < tsleep)
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tsleep = tnext_state;
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t = get_time().val;
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if (tsleep > t) {
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unsigned d = tsleep == -1 ? -1 : (unsigned)(tsleep - t);
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/*
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* (Yes, the conversion from uint64_t to unsigned could
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* theoretically overflow if we wanted to sleep for
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* more than 2^32 us, but our timeouts are small enough
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* that can't happen - and even if it did, we'd just go
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* back to sleep after deciding that we woke up too
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* early.)
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*/
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CPRINTF("[%T PB task %d = %s, wait %d]\n", pwrbtn_state,
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state_names[pwrbtn_state], d);
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task_wait_event(d);
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}
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}
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}
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/*****************************************************************************/
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/* Hooks */
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static void powerbtn_x86_init(void)
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{
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set_initial_pwrbtn_state();
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}
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DECLARE_HOOK(HOOK_INIT, powerbtn_x86_init, HOOK_PRIO_DEFAULT);
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/**
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* Handle switch changes based on lid event.
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*/
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static void powerbtn_x86_lid_change(void)
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{
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/* If chipset is off, pulse the power button on lid open to wake it. */
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if (lid_is_open() && chipset_in_state(CHIPSET_STATE_ANY_OFF))
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power_button_pch_pulse();
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}
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DECLARE_HOOK(HOOK_LID_CHANGE, powerbtn_x86_lid_change, HOOK_PRIO_DEFAULT);
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/**
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* Handle debounced power button changing state.
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*/
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static void powerbtn_x86_changed(void)
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{
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if (pwrbtn_state == PWRBTN_STATE_BOOT_KB_RESET ||
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pwrbtn_state == PWRBTN_STATE_INIT_ON ||
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pwrbtn_state == PWRBTN_STATE_LID_OPEN ||
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pwrbtn_state == PWRBTN_STATE_WAS_OFF) {
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/* Ignore all power button changes during an initial pulse */
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CPRINTF("[%T PB ignoring change]\n");
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return;
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}
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if (power_button_is_pressed()) {
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/* Power button pressed */
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power_button_pressed(get_time().val);
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} else {
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/* Power button released */
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if (pwrbtn_state == PWRBTN_STATE_EAT_RELEASE) {
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/*
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* Ignore the first power button release if we already
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* told the PCH the power button was released.
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*/
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CPRINTF("[%T PB ignoring release]\n");
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pwrbtn_state = PWRBTN_STATE_IDLE;
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return;
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}
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power_button_released(get_time().val);
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}
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/* Wake the power button task */
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task_wake(TASK_ID_POWERBTN);
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}
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DECLARE_HOOK(HOOK_POWER_BUTTON_CHANGE, powerbtn_x86_changed, HOOK_PRIO_DEFAULT);
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/**
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* Handle charge state changes
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*/
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static void powerbtn_x86_charge(void)
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{
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/*
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* If we were waiting for the charge state machine to init before we
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* powered on the chipset, we can stop waiting.
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*/
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if (pwrbtn_state == PWRBTN_STATE_INIT_ON)
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task_wake(TASK_ID_POWERBTN);
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}
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DECLARE_HOOK(HOOK_CHARGE_STATE_CHANGE, powerbtn_x86_charge, HOOK_PRIO_DEFAULT);
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