Thanks for the assistance... What kernel-version and model of the wifi-card are you using? Does it behave the same on both 2.4 and 5 Ghz?
For suspend/resume the pm-script seems to make it more stable atleast... When/if getting the "no traffic bug" it's enough to unload/load the module. It *may* take a few tries but the link comes back at least.. But i think that since you suspend (and unload the driver) it should perform better than before at least....
During a full day of normal usage i have lost my link once, so it's an improvement... unload / wait a few sec / load worked for me straight off today.. Yesterday i had to reload it a few times, but then i did not wait at all between unload/load, but it succeeded to come back anyway.
Main part of the patch is for 4.x support, but there is a couple of things to prevent complete system-crashes. (Think it was in 3.18 or 3.19 that behavior started.)
I'm currently just trying to figure out a way to trigger the issue here, in a reproducible way, to allow for some easier debugging.
Hi Andreas,
Thanks for the assistance... What kernel-version and model of the wifi-card are you using? Does it behave the same on both 2.4 and 5 Ghz?
For suspend/resume the pm-script seems to make it more stable atleast... When/if getting the "no traffic bug" it's enough to unload/load the module. It *may* take a few tries but the link comes back at least.. But i think that since you suspend (and unload the driver) it should perform better than before at least....
During a full day of normal usage i have lost my link once, so it's an improvement... unload / wait a few sec / load worked for me straight off today.. Yesterday i had to reload it a few times, but then i did not wait at all between unload/load, but it succeeded to come back anyway.
Main part of the patch is for 4.x support, but there is a couple of things to prevent complete system-crashes. (Think it was in 3.18 or 3.19 that behavior started.)
I'm currently just trying to figure out a way to trigger the issue here, in a reproducible way, to allow for some easier debugging.