This is a simple question, but I can't find explicit discussion in literatures that I can find. Real/imaginary Killing spinor equation
\begin{equation} \nabla_\mu \psi = \lambda \gamma_\mu \psi \end{equation} where $\lambda$ is constant is a well known subject. But I wonder why the case where $\lambda$ is non-constant receives no discussion?
One reason I can think of is, one may perform Weyl rescaling to bring $\lambda$ to constant, so the non-constant case is not interesting.