Lan connector led states, 1 system states and power states, 2 one-watt standby – chiliGREEN D945GBO User Manual

Page 38

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Intel Desktop Board D945GBO Technical Product Specification

38

1.13.1.1 System

States and Power States

Under ACPI, the operating system directs all system and device power state transitions. The
operating system puts devices in and out of low-power states based on user preferences and
knowledge of how devices are being used by applications. Devices that are not being used can be
turned off. The operating system uses information from applications and user settings to put the
system as a whole into a low-power state.

Table 7 lists the power states supported by the board along with the associated system power
targets. See the ACPI specification for a complete description of the various system and power
states.

Table 7.

Power States and Targeted System Power


Global States


Sleeping States

Processor
States


Device States

Targeted System
Power

(Note 1)

G0 – working
state

S0 – working

C0 – working

D0 – working state.

Full power > 30 W

G1 – sleeping
state

S1 – Processor
stopped

C1 – stop
grant

D1, D2, D3 – device
specification
specific.

5 W < power < 52.5 W

G1 – sleeping
state

S3 – Suspend to
RAM. Context
saved to RAM.

No power

D3 – no power
except for wake-up
logic.

Power < 5 W

(Note 2)

G1 – sleeping
state

S4 – Suspend to
disk. Context
saved to disk.

No power

D3 – no power
except for wake-up
logic.

Power < 5 W

(Note 2)

G2/S5

S5 – Soft off.
Context not saved.
Cold boot is
required.

No power

D3 – no power
except for wake-up
logic.

Power < 5 W

(Note 2)

G3 –
mechanical off
AC power is
disconnected
from the
computer.

No power to the
system.

No power

D3 – no power for
wake-up logic,
except when
provided by battery
or external source.

No power to the system.
Service can be
performed safely.

Notes:

1.

Total system power is dependent on the system configuration, including add-in boards and peripherals powered
by the system chassis’ power supply.

2.

Dependent on the standby power consumption of wake-up devices used in the system.

1.13.1.2 One-Watt

Standby

In 2001, the U.S. government issued an executive order requiring a reduction in power for
appliances and personal computers. This board meets that requirement by operating at 1 W (or
less) in S5 (Standby) mode. One-Watt operation applies only to the S5 state when the computer is
turned off, but still connected to AC power. One-Watt operation does not apply to the S3 (Suspend
to RAM) or S4 (Suspend to disk) states.

Newer energy-efficient power supplies using less than 0.5 W (in Standby mode) may also be
needed to achieve this goal.

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