EVT0 is for emulation, EVT1 is for reset, and EVT4 is the "global int
disable" region. None of these are used by software (or even hardware),
so don't bother saving/restoring them when we hibernate since nothing
ever uses these in Linux (the only thing they would be useful for is
core-memory scratch, but that's just crazy talk).
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
PM_PUSH(ICPLB_DATA13)
PM_PUSH(ICPLB_DATA14)
PM_PUSH(ICPLB_DATA15)
- PM_PUSH(EVT0)
- PM_PUSH(EVT1)
PM_PUSH(EVT2)
PM_PUSH(EVT3)
- PM_PUSH(EVT4)
PM_PUSH(EVT5)
PM_PUSH(EVT6)
PM_PUSH(EVT7)
PM_POP(EVT7)
PM_POP(EVT6)
PM_POP(EVT5)
- PM_POP(EVT4)
PM_POP(EVT3)
PM_POP(EVT2)
- PM_POP(EVT1)
- PM_POP(EVT0)
PM_POP(ICPLB_DATA15)
PM_POP(ICPLB_DATA14)
PM_POP(ICPLB_DATA13)