Hi list,
As the incoming UEFI new design for BIOS, Microsoft has already
provided a model, "connected standby", for power management. There
are 3 modes which are S0, Low Power S0 and S5.
I am wondering if there is already any support for the connected
standby in wifi of Linux ?
--
Thank you.
Hi Johannes,
What is wowlan ? Does it need BIOS suuport ?
2012/6/5 Johannes Berg <[email protected]>:
> On Tue, 2012-06-05 at 10:53 +0800, Matt Chen wrote:
>> Hi list,
>> As the incoming UEFI new design for BIOS, Microsoft has already
>> provided a model, "connected standby", ?for power management. There
>> are 3 modes which are S0, Low Power S0 and S5.
>> I am wondering if there is already any support for the connected
>> standby in wifi of Linux ?
>
> That's what we call wowlan, right? Or can be implemented using it?
>
> johannes
>
>
--
Thank you.
On Mon, 2012-06-11 at 12:02 +0800, Matt Chen wrote:
> Hi Johannes,
>
> What is wowlan ? Does it need BIOS suuport ?
http://wireless.kernel.org/en/users/Documentation/WoWLAN
It needs platform support to leave the card powered on.
johannes
On Tue, 2012-06-05 at 10:53 +0800, Matt Chen wrote:
> Hi list,
> As the incoming UEFI new design for BIOS, Microsoft has already
> provided a model, "connected standby", for power management. There
> are 3 modes which are S0, Low Power S0 and S5.
> I am wondering if there is already any support for the connected
> standby in wifi of Linux ?
That's what we call wowlan, right? Or can be implemented using it?
johannes