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author | Linus Torvalds <torvalds@ppc970.osdl.org> | 2005-04-17 00:20:36 +0200 |
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committer | Linus Torvalds <torvalds@ppc970.osdl.org> | 2005-04-17 00:20:36 +0200 |
commit | 1da177e4c3f41524e886b7f1b8a0c1fc7321cac2 (patch) | |
tree | 0bba044c4ce775e45a88a51686b5d9f90697ea9d /Documentation/DocBook/gadget.tmpl | |
download | linux-1da177e4c3f41524e886b7f1b8a0c1fc7321cac2.tar.xz linux-1da177e4c3f41524e886b7f1b8a0c1fc7321cac2.zip |
Linux-2.6.12-rc2v2.6.12-rc2
Initial git repository build. I'm not bothering with the full history,
even though we have it. We can create a separate "historical" git
archive of that later if we want to, and in the meantime it's about
3.2GB when imported into git - space that would just make the early
git days unnecessarily complicated, when we don't have a lot of good
infrastructure for it.
Let it rip!
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/DocBook/gadget.tmpl')
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/DocBook/gadget.tmpl | 752 |
1 files changed, 752 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/DocBook/gadget.tmpl b/Documentation/DocBook/gadget.tmpl new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..a34442436128 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/DocBook/gadget.tmpl @@ -0,0 +1,752 @@ +<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> +<!DOCTYPE book PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.1.2//EN" + "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.1.2/docbookx.dtd" []> + +<book id="USB-Gadget-API"> + <bookinfo> + <title>USB Gadget API for Linux</title> + <date>20 August 2004</date> + <edition>20 August 2004</edition> + + <legalnotice> + <para> + This documentation is free software; you can redistribute + it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public + License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either + version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later + version. + </para> + + <para> + This program is distributed in the hope that it will be + useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied + warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. + See the GNU General Public License for more details. + </para> + + <para> + You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public + License along with this program; if not, write to the Free + Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, + MA 02111-1307 USA + </para> + + <para> + For more details see the file COPYING in the source + distribution of Linux. + </para> + </legalnotice> + <copyright> + <year>2003-2004</year> + <holder>David Brownell</holder> + </copyright> + + <author> + <firstname>David</firstname> + <surname>Brownell</surname> + <affiliation> + <address><email>dbrownell@users.sourceforge.net</email></address> + </affiliation> + </author> + </bookinfo> + +<toc></toc> + +<chapter><title>Introduction</title> + +<para>This document presents a Linux-USB "Gadget" +kernel mode +API, for use within peripherals and other USB devices +that embed Linux. +It provides an overview of the API structure, +and shows how that fits into a system development project. +This is the first such API released on Linux to address +a number of important problems, including: </para> + +<itemizedlist> + <listitem><para>Supports USB 2.0, for high speed devices which + can stream data at several dozen megabytes per second. + </para></listitem> + <listitem><para>Handles devices with dozens of endpoints just as + well as ones with just two fixed-function ones. Gadget drivers + can be written so they're easy to port to new hardware. + </para></listitem> + <listitem><para>Flexible enough to expose more complex USB device + capabilities such as multiple configurations, multiple interfaces, + composite devices, + and alternate interface settings. + </para></listitem> + <listitem><para>USB "On-The-Go" (OTG) support, in conjunction + with updates to the Linux-USB host side. + </para></listitem> + <listitem><para>Sharing data structures and API models with the + Linux-USB host side API. This helps the OTG support, and + looks forward to more-symmetric frameworks (where the same + I/O model is used by both host and device side drivers). + </para></listitem> + <listitem><para>Minimalist, so it's easier to support new device + controller hardware. I/O processing doesn't imply large + demands for memory or CPU resources. + </para></listitem> +</itemizedlist> + + +<para>Most Linux developers will not be able to use this API, since they +have USB "host" hardware in a PC, workstation, or server. +Linux users with embedded systems are more likely to +have USB peripheral hardware. +To distinguish drivers running inside such hardware from the +more familiar Linux "USB device drivers", +which are host side proxies for the real USB devices, +a different term is used: +the drivers inside the peripherals are "USB gadget drivers". +In USB protocol interactions, the device driver is the master +(or "client driver") +and the gadget driver is the slave (or "function driver"). +</para> + +<para>The gadget API resembles the host side Linux-USB API in that both +use queues of request objects to package I/O buffers, and those requests +may be submitted or canceled. +They share common definitions for the standard USB +<emphasis>Chapter 9</emphasis> messages, structures, and constants. +Also, both APIs bind and unbind drivers to devices. +The APIs differ in detail, since the host side's current +URB framework exposes a number of implementation details +and assumptions that are inappropriate for a gadget API. +While the model for control transfers and configuration +management is necessarily different (one side is a hardware-neutral master, +the other is a hardware-aware slave), the endpoint I/0 API used here +should also be usable for an overhead-reduced host side API. +</para> + +</chapter> + +<chapter id="structure"><title>Structure of Gadget Drivers</title> + +<para>A system running inside a USB peripheral +normally has at least three layers inside the kernel to handle +USB protocol processing, and may have additional layers in +user space code. +The "gadget" API is used by the middle layer to interact +with the lowest level (which directly handles hardware). +</para> + +<para>In Linux, from the bottom up, these layers are: +</para> + +<variablelist> + + <varlistentry> + <term><emphasis>USB Controller Driver</emphasis></term> + + <listitem> + <para>This is the lowest software level. + It is the only layer that talks to hardware, + through registers, fifos, dma, irqs, and the like. + The <filename><linux/usb_gadget.h></filename> API abstracts + the peripheral controller endpoint hardware. + That hardware is exposed through endpoint objects, which accept + streams of IN/OUT buffers, and through callbacks that interact + with gadget drivers. + Since normal USB devices only have one upstream + port, they only have one of these drivers. + The controller driver can support any number of different + gadget drivers, but only one of them can be used at a time. + </para> + + <para>Examples of such controller hardware include + the PCI-based NetChip 2280 USB 2.0 high speed controller, + the SA-11x0 or PXA-25x UDC (found within many PDAs), + and a variety of other products. + </para> + + </listitem></varlistentry> + + <varlistentry> + <term><emphasis>Gadget Driver</emphasis></term> + + <listitem> + <para>The lower boundary of this driver implements hardware-neutral + USB functions, using calls to the controller driver. + Because such hardware varies widely in capabilities and restrictions, + and is used in embedded environments where space is at a premium, + the gadget driver is often configured at compile time + to work with endpoints supported by one particular controller. + Gadget drivers may be portable to several different controllers, + using conditional compilation. + (Recent kernels substantially simplify the work involved in + supporting new hardware, by <emphasis>autoconfiguring</emphasis> + endpoints automatically for many bulk-oriented drivers.) + Gadget driver responsibilities include: + </para> + <itemizedlist> + <listitem><para>handling setup requests (ep0 protocol responses) + possibly including class-specific functionality + </para></listitem> + <listitem><para>returning configuration and string descriptors + </para></listitem> + <listitem><para>(re)setting configurations and interface + altsettings, including enabling and configuring endpoints + </para></listitem> + <listitem><para>handling life cycle events, such as managing + bindings to hardware, + USB suspend/resume, remote wakeup, + and disconnection from the USB host. + </para></listitem> + <listitem><para>managing IN and OUT transfers on all currently + enabled endpoints + </para></listitem> + </itemizedlist> + + <para> + Such drivers may be modules of proprietary code, although + that approach is discouraged in the Linux community. + </para> + </listitem></varlistentry> + + <varlistentry> + <term><emphasis>Upper Level</emphasis></term> + + <listitem> + <para>Most gadget drivers have an upper boundary that connects + to some Linux driver or framework in Linux. + Through that boundary flows the data which the gadget driver + produces and/or consumes through protocol transfers over USB. + Examples include: + </para> + <itemizedlist> + <listitem><para>user mode code, using generic (gadgetfs) + or application specific files in + <filename>/dev</filename> + </para></listitem> + <listitem><para>networking subsystem (for network gadgets, + like the CDC Ethernet Model gadget driver) + </para></listitem> + <listitem><para>data capture drivers, perhaps video4Linux or + a scanner driver; or test and measurement hardware. + </para></listitem> + <listitem><para>input subsystem (for HID gadgets) + </para></listitem> + <listitem><para>sound subsystem (for audio gadgets) + </para></listitem> + <listitem><para>file system (for PTP gadgets) + </para></listitem> + <listitem><para>block i/o subsystem (for usb-storage gadgets) + </para></listitem> + <listitem><para>... and more </para></listitem> + </itemizedlist> + </listitem></varlistentry> + + <varlistentry> + <term><emphasis>Additional Layers</emphasis></term> + + <listitem> + <para>Other layers may exist. + These could include kernel layers, such as network protocol stacks, + as well as user mode applications building on standard POSIX + system call APIs such as + <emphasis>open()</emphasis>, <emphasis>close()</emphasis>, + <emphasis>read()</emphasis> and <emphasis>write()</emphasis>. + On newer systems, POSIX Async I/O calls may be an option. + Such user mode code will not necessarily be subject to + the GNU General Public License (GPL). + </para> + </listitem></varlistentry> + + +</variablelist> + +<para>OTG-capable systems will also need to include a standard Linux-USB +host side stack, +with <emphasis>usbcore</emphasis>, +one or more <emphasis>Host Controller Drivers</emphasis> (HCDs), +<emphasis>USB Device Drivers</emphasis> to support +the OTG "Targeted Peripheral List", +and so forth. +There will also be an <emphasis>OTG Controller Driver</emphasis>, +which is visible to gadget and device driver developers only indirectly. +That helps the host and device side USB controllers implement the +two new OTG protocols (HNP and SRP). +Roles switch (host to peripheral, or vice versa) using HNP +during USB suspend processing, and SRP can be viewed as a +more battery-friendly kind of device wakeup protocol. +</para> + +<para>Over time, reusable utilities are evolving to help make some +gadget driver tasks simpler. +For example, building configuration descriptors from vectors of +descriptors for the configurations interfaces and endpoints is +now automated, and many drivers now use autoconfiguration to +choose hardware endpoints and initialize their descriptors. + +A potential example of particular interest +is code implementing standard USB-IF protocols for +HID, networking, storage, or audio classes. +Some developers are interested in KDB or KGDB hooks, to let +target hardware be remotely debugged. +Most such USB protocol code doesn't need to be hardware-specific, +any more than network protocols like X11, HTTP, or NFS are. +Such gadget-side interface drivers should eventually be combined, +to implement composite devices. +</para> + +</chapter> + + +<chapter id="api"><title>Kernel Mode Gadget API</title> + +<para>Gadget drivers declare themselves through a +<emphasis>struct usb_gadget_driver</emphasis>, which is responsible for +most parts of enumeration for a <emphasis>struct usb_gadget</emphasis>. +The response to a set_configuration usually involves +enabling one or more of the <emphasis>struct usb_ep</emphasis> objects +exposed by the gadget, and submitting one or more +<emphasis>struct usb_request</emphasis> buffers to transfer data. +Understand those four data types, and their operations, and +you will understand how this API works. +</para> + +<note><title>Incomplete Data Type Descriptions</title> + +<para>This documentation was prepared using the standard Linux +kernel <filename>docproc</filename> tool, which turns text +and in-code comments into SGML DocBook and then into usable +formats such as HTML or PDF. +Other than the "Chapter 9" data types, most of the significant +data types and functions are described here. +</para> + +<para>However, docproc does not understand all the C constructs +that are used, so some relevant information is likely omitted from +what you are reading. +One example of such information is endpoint autoconfiguration. +You'll have to read the header file, and use example source +code (such as that for "Gadget Zero"), to fully understand the API. +</para> + +<para>The part of the API implementing some basic +driver capabilities is specific to the version of the +Linux kernel that's in use. +The 2.6 kernel includes a <emphasis>driver model</emphasis> +framework that has no analogue on earlier kernels; +so those parts of the gadget API are not fully portable. +(They are implemented on 2.4 kernels, but in a different way.) +The driver model state is another part of this API that is +ignored by the kerneldoc tools. +</para> +</note> + +<para>The core API does not expose +every possible hardware feature, only the most widely available ones. +There are significant hardware features, such as device-to-device DMA +(without temporary storage in a memory buffer) +that would be added using hardware-specific APIs. +</para> + +<para>This API allows drivers to use conditional compilation to handle +endpoint capabilities of different hardware, but doesn't require that. +Hardware tends to have arbitrary restrictions, relating to +transfer types, addressing, packet sizes, buffering, and availability. +As a rule, such differences only matter for "endpoint zero" logic +that handles device configuration and management. +The API supports limited run-time +detection of capabilities, through naming conventions for endpoints. +Many drivers will be able to at least partially autoconfigure +themselves. +In particular, driver init sections will often have endpoint +autoconfiguration logic that scans the hardware's list of endpoints +to find ones matching the driver requirements +(relying on those conventions), to eliminate some of the most +common reasons for conditional compilation. +</para> + +<para>Like the Linux-USB host side API, this API exposes +the "chunky" nature of USB messages: I/O requests are in terms +of one or more "packets", and packet boundaries are visible to drivers. +Compared to RS-232 serial protocols, USB resembles +synchronous protocols like HDLC +(N bytes per frame, multipoint addressing, host as the primary +station and devices as secondary stations) +more than asynchronous ones +(tty style: 8 data bits per frame, no parity, one stop bit). +So for example the controller drivers won't buffer +two single byte writes into a single two-byte USB IN packet, +although gadget drivers may do so when they implement +protocols where packet boundaries (and "short packets") +are not significant. +</para> + +<sect1 id="lifecycle"><title>Driver Life Cycle</title> + +<para>Gadget drivers make endpoint I/O requests to hardware without +needing to know many details of the hardware, but driver +setup/configuration code needs to handle some differences. +Use the API like this: +</para> + +<orderedlist numeration='arabic'> + +<listitem><para>Register a driver for the particular device side +usb controller hardware, +such as the net2280 on PCI (USB 2.0), +sa11x0 or pxa25x as found in Linux PDAs, +and so on. +At this point the device is logically in the USB ch9 initial state +("attached"), drawing no power and not usable +(since it does not yet support enumeration). +Any host should not see the device, since it's not +activated the data line pullup used by the host to +detect a device, even if VBUS power is available. +</para></listitem> + +<listitem><para>Register a gadget driver that implements some higher level +device function. That will then bind() to a usb_gadget, which +activates the data line pullup sometime after detecting VBUS. +</para></listitem> + +<listitem><para>The hardware driver can now start enumerating. +The steps it handles are to accept USB power and set_address requests. +Other steps are handled by the gadget driver. +If the gadget driver module is unloaded before the host starts to +enumerate, steps before step 7 are skipped. +</para></listitem> + +<listitem><para>The gadget driver's setup() call returns usb descriptors, +based both on what the bus interface hardware provides and on the +functionality being implemented. +That can involve alternate settings or configurations, +unless the hardware prevents such operation. +For OTG devices, each configuration descriptor includes +an OTG descriptor. +</para></listitem> + +<listitem><para>The gadget driver handles the last step of enumeration, +when the USB host issues a set_configuration call. +It enables all endpoints used in that configuration, +with all interfaces in their default settings. +That involves using a list of the hardware's endpoints, enabling each +endpoint according to its descriptor. +It may also involve using <function>usb_gadget_vbus_draw</function> +to let more power be drawn from VBUS, as allowed by that configuration. +For OTG devices, setting a configuration may also involve reporting +HNP capabilities through a user interface. +</para></listitem> + +<listitem><para>Do real work and perform data transfers, possibly involving +changes to interface settings or switching to new configurations, until the +device is disconnect()ed from the host. +Queue any number of transfer requests to each endpoint. +It may be suspended and resumed several times before being disconnected. +On disconnect, the drivers go back to step 3 (above). +</para></listitem> + +<listitem><para>When the gadget driver module is being unloaded, +the driver unbind() callback is issued. That lets the controller +driver be unloaded. +</para></listitem> + +</orderedlist> + +<para>Drivers will normally be arranged so that just loading the +gadget driver module (or statically linking it into a Linux kernel) +allows the peripheral device to be enumerated, but some drivers +will defer enumeration until some higher level component (like +a user mode daemon) enables it. +Note that at this lowest level there are no policies about how +ep0 configuration logic is implemented, +except that it should obey USB specifications. +Such issues are in the domain of gadget drivers, +including knowing about implementation constraints +imposed by some USB controllers +or understanding that composite devices might happen to +be built by integrating reusable components. +</para> + +<para>Note that the lifecycle above can be slightly different +for OTG devices. +Other than providing an additional OTG descriptor in each +configuration, only the HNP-related differences are particularly +visible to driver code. +They involve reporting requirements during the SET_CONFIGURATION +request, and the option to invoke HNP during some suspend callbacks. +Also, SRP changes the semantics of +<function>usb_gadget_wakeup</function> +slightly. +</para> + +</sect1> + +<sect1 id="ch9"><title>USB 2.0 Chapter 9 Types and Constants</title> + +<para>Gadget drivers +rely on common USB structures and constants +defined in the +<filename><linux/usb_ch9.h></filename> +header file, which is standard in Linux 2.6 kernels. +These are the same types and constants used by host +side drivers (and usbcore). +</para> + +!Iinclude/linux/usb_ch9.h +</sect1> + +<sect1 id="core"><title>Core Objects and Methods</title> + +<para>These are declared in +<filename><linux/usb_gadget.h></filename>, +and are used by gadget drivers to interact with +USB peripheral controller drivers. +</para> + + <!-- yeech, this is ugly in nsgmls PDF output. + + the PDF bookmark and refentry output nesting is wrong, + and the member/argument documentation indents ugly. + + plus something (docproc?) adds whitespace before the + descriptive paragraph text, so it can't line up right + unless the explanations are trivial. + --> + +!Iinclude/linux/usb_gadget.h +</sect1> + +<sect1 id="utils"><title>Optional Utilities</title> + +<para>The core API is sufficient for writing a USB Gadget Driver, +but some optional utilities are provided to simplify common tasks. +These utilities include endpoint autoconfiguration. +</para> + +!Edrivers/usb/gadget/usbstring.c +!Edrivers/usb/gadget/config.c +<!-- !Edrivers/usb/gadget/epautoconf.c --> +</sect1> + +</chapter> + +<chapter id="controllers"><title>Peripheral Controller Drivers</title> + +<para>The first hardware supporting this API was the NetChip 2280 +controller, which supports USB 2.0 high speed and is based on PCI. +This is the <filename>net2280</filename> driver module. +The driver supports Linux kernel versions 2.4 and 2.6; +contact NetChip Technologies for development boards and product +information. +</para> + +<para>Other hardware working in the "gadget" framework includes: +Intel's PXA 25x and IXP42x series processors +(<filename>pxa2xx_udc</filename>), +Toshiba TC86c001 "Goku-S" (<filename>goku_udc</filename>), +Renesas SH7705/7727 (<filename>sh_udc</filename>), +MediaQ 11xx (<filename>mq11xx_udc</filename>), +Hynix HMS30C7202 (<filename>h7202_udc</filename>), +National 9303/4 (<filename>n9604_udc</filename>), +Texas Instruments OMAP (<filename>omap_udc</filename>), +Sharp LH7A40x (<filename>lh7a40x_udc</filename>), +and more. +Most of those are full speed controllers. +</para> + +<para>At this writing, there are people at work on drivers in +this framework for several other USB device controllers, +with plans to make many of them be widely available. +</para> + +<!-- !Edrivers/usb/gadget/net2280.c --> + +<para>A partial USB simulator, +the <filename>dummy_hcd</filename> driver, is available. +It can act like a net2280, a pxa25x, or an sa11x0 in terms +of available endpoints and device speeds; and it simulates +control, bulk, and to some extent interrupt transfers. +That lets you develop some parts of a gadget driver on a normal PC, +without any special hardware, and perhaps with the assistance +of tools such as GDB running with User Mode Linux. +At least one person has expressed interest in adapting that +approach, hooking it up to a simulator for a microcontroller. +Such simulators can help debug subsystems where the runtime hardware +is unfriendly to software development, or is not yet available. +</para> + +<para>Support for other controllers is expected to be developed +and contributed +over time, as this driver framework evolves. +</para> + +</chapter> + +<chapter id="gadget"><title>Gadget Drivers</title> + +<para>In addition to <emphasis>Gadget Zero</emphasis> +(used primarily for testing and development with drivers +for usb controller hardware), other gadget drivers exist. +</para> + +<para>There's an <emphasis>ethernet</emphasis> gadget +driver, which implements one of the most useful +<emphasis>Communications Device Class</emphasis> (CDC) models. +One of the standards for cable modem interoperability even +specifies the use of this ethernet model as one of two +mandatory options. +Gadgets using this code look to a USB host as if they're +an Ethernet adapter. +It provides access to a network where the gadget's CPU is one host, +which could easily be bridging, routing, or firewalling +access to other networks. +Since some hardware can't fully implement the CDC Ethernet +requirements, this driver also implements a "good parts only" +subset of CDC Ethernet. +(That subset doesn't advertise itself as CDC Ethernet, +to avoid creating problems.) +</para> + +<para>Support for Microsoft's <emphasis>RNDIS</emphasis> +protocol has been contributed by Pengutronix and Auerswald GmbH. +This is like CDC Ethernet, but it runs on more slightly USB hardware +(but less than the CDC subset). +However, its main claim to fame is being able to connect directly to +recent versions of Windows, using drivers that Microsoft bundles +and supports, making it much simpler to network with Windows. +</para> + +<para>There is also support for user mode gadget drivers, +using <emphasis>gadgetfs</emphasis>. +This provides a <emphasis>User Mode API</emphasis> that presents +each endpoint as a single file descriptor. I/O is done using +normal <emphasis>read()</emphasis> and <emphasis>read()</emphasis> calls. +Familiar tools like GDB and pthreads can be used to +develop and debug user mode drivers, so that once a robust +controller driver is available many applications for it +won't require new kernel mode software. +Linux 2.6 <emphasis>Async I/O (AIO)</emphasis> +support is available, so that user mode software +can stream data with only slightly more overhead +than a kernel driver. +</para> + +<para>There's a USB Mass Storage class driver, which provides +a different solution for interoperability with systems such +as MS-Windows and MacOS. +That <emphasis>File-backed Storage</emphasis> driver uses a +file or block device as backing store for a drive, +like the <filename>loop</filename> driver. +The USB host uses the BBB, CB, or CBI versions of the mass +storage class specification, using transparent SCSI commands +to access the data from the backing store. +</para> + +<para>There's a "serial line" driver, useful for TTY style +operation over USB. +The latest version of that driver supports CDC ACM style +operation, like a USB modem, and so on most hardware it can +interoperate easily with MS-Windows. +One interesting use of that driver is in boot firmware (like a BIOS), +which can sometimes use that model with very small systems without +real serial lines. +</para> + +<para>Support for other kinds of gadget is expected to +be developed and contributed +over time, as this driver framework evolves. +</para> + +</chapter> + +<chapter id="otg"><title>USB On-The-GO (OTG)</title> + +<para>USB OTG support on Linux 2.6 was initially developed +by Texas Instruments for +<ulink url="http://www.omap.com">OMAP</ulink> 16xx and 17xx +series processors. +Other OTG systems should work in similar ways, but the +hardware level details could be very different. +</para> + +<para>Systems need specialized hardware support to implement OTG, +notably including a special <emphasis>Mini-AB</emphasis> jack +and associated transciever to support <emphasis>Dual-Role</emphasis> +operation: +they can act either as a host, using the standard +Linux-USB host side driver stack, +or as a peripheral, using this "gadget" framework. +To do that, the system software relies on small additions +to those programming interfaces, +and on a new internal component (here called an "OTG Controller") +affecting which driver stack connects to the OTG port. +In each role, the system can re-use the existing pool of +hardware-neutral drivers, layered on top of the controller +driver interfaces (<emphasis>usb_bus</emphasis> or +<emphasis>usb_gadget</emphasis>). +Such drivers need at most minor changes, and most of the calls +added to support OTG can also benefit non-OTG products. +</para> + +<itemizedlist> + <listitem><para>Gadget drivers test the <emphasis>is_otg</emphasis> + flag, and use it to determine whether or not to include + an OTG descriptor in each of their configurations. + </para></listitem> + <listitem><para>Gadget drivers may need changes to support the + two new OTG protocols, exposed in new gadget attributes + such as <emphasis>b_hnp_enable</emphasis> flag. + HNP support should be reported through a user interface + (two LEDs could suffice), and is triggered in some cases + when the host suspends the peripheral. + SRP support can be user-initiated just like remote wakeup, + probably by pressing the same button. + </para></listitem> + <listitem><para>On the host side, USB device drivers need + to be taught to trigger HNP at appropriate moments, using + <function>usb_suspend_device()</function>. + That also conserves battery power, which is useful even + for non-OTG configurations. + </para></listitem> + <listitem><para>Also on the host side, a driver must support the + OTG "Targeted Peripheral List". That's just a whitelist, + used to reject peripherals not supported with a given + Linux OTG host. + <emphasis>This whitelist is product-specific; + each product must modify <filename>otg_whitelist.h</filename> + to match its interoperability specification. + </emphasis> + </para> + <para>Non-OTG Linux hosts, like PCs and workstations, + normally have some solution for adding drivers, so that + peripherals that aren't recognized can eventually be supported. + That approach is unreasonable for consumer products that may + never have their firmware upgraded, and where it's usually + unrealistic to expect traditional PC/workstation/server kinds + of support model to work. + For example, it's often impractical to change device firmware + once the product has been distributed, so driver bugs can't + normally be fixed if they're found after shipment. + </para></listitem> +</itemizedlist> + +<para> +Additional changes are needed below those hardware-neutral +<emphasis>usb_bus</emphasis> and <emphasis>usb_gadget</emphasis> +driver interfaces; those aren't discussed here in any detail. +Those affect the hardware-specific code for each USB Host or Peripheral +controller, and how the HCD initializes (since OTG can be active only +on a single port). +They also involve what may be called an <emphasis>OTG Controller +Driver</emphasis>, managing the OTG transceiver and the OTG state +machine logic as well as much of the root hub behavior for the +OTG port. +The OTG controller driver needs to activate and deactivate USB +controllers depending on the relevant device role. +Some related changes were needed inside usbcore, so that it +can identify OTG-capable devices and respond appropriately +to HNP or SRP protocols. +</para> + +</chapter> + +</book> +<!-- + vim:syntax=sgml:sw=4 +--> |