- 16 Jan, 2004 27 commits
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Luca Risolia authored
This patch contains updates and one bug fix.
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Matthew Dharm authored
This patch adds a sysfs attribute to the usb-storage SCSI devices. This attribute (read-only) is basically a clone of the information available in /proc/scsi/scsi -- since that interface is going away, adding a new sysfs attribute seemed like a good idea.
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Matthew Dharm authored
This patch fixes sddr09 and sddr55 to suppor the MODE_SENSE_10 commands, which are the only variants used by sd.c
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Alan Stern authored
These patch fixes the scatter-gather usage in the sddr55 driver for commands other than READ or WRITE. It also tidies up a few other commands.
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Matthew Dharm authored
This patch (from Alan Stern as157) fixes the non-READ/WRITE paths of the sddr09.c driver to be compliant to the requirements of scatter-gather. It also cleans up MODE_SENSE processing and reports errors a little better. This patch also makes MODE_SENSE_10 commands report an error. The old code claimed to support both 6- and 10-byte versions, but really only supported 6-byte. Bad data was returned for the 10-byte case, so it was removed. A patch to follow in a few minutes fixes this.
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Alan Stern authored
These patch fixes the scatter-gather usage in the jumpshot driver for commands other than READ or WRITE. It also tidies up the MODE-SENSE handler considerably and reports more command failures correctly.
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Alan Stern authored
These patch fixes the scatter-gather usage in the datafab driver for commands other than READ or WRITE. It also tidies up the MODE-SENSE handler considerably and reports more command failures correctly.
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Alan Stern authored
This patch does what you suggested. The read/write routines from the updated subdrivers are changed so they don't bother to differentiate between transfers that do or do not use scatter-gather. The low-level usb_stor_access_xfer_buf routine will Do The Right Thing regardless, and there probably won't ever be more than a few non s-g calls. (What about filesystem I/O requests to access metadata?) It turns out that in addition to removing some comments and a few tests, this change allowed me to remove the buffer and use_sg arguments passed to the read/write routines as well. So the simplification ended up being a bit bigger than I expected. While writing this patch, I noticed spots in several drivers that still need to be changed -- they slipped past me before. These drivers handle things like READ-CAPACITY or REQUEST-SENSE by copying the data directly to srb->request_buffer, which is obviously wrong if s-g is being used. I'll send in changes next week that convert them to use the usb_stor_set_xfer_buf function. Like you said, it's going to be handy in more places than originally intended!
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Thomas Stewart authored
Thomas has a newer variant of this device, which sends more data.
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Marcel Sebek authored
> CC [M] drivers/usb/serial/whiteheat.o > drivers/usb/serial/whiteheat.c: In function `firm_setup_port': > drivers/usb/serial/whiteheat.c:1209: `CMSPAR' undeclared (first use in this function) > drivers/usb/serial/whiteheat.c:1209: (Each undeclared identifier is reported only once > drivers/usb/serial/whiteheat.c:1209: for each function it appears in.)
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David Brownell authored
This is an updated version of a patch submitted to me from Michal Sojka <sojkam1@fel.cvut.cz>, basically providing a much-needed rewrite of the highspeed ISO support. I updated the scheduling and made it a closer match to how OHCI works; and also tested it a bunch. So far it seems most of the requests for highspeed ISO support have been for realtime data collection -- custom apps, nothing a mainstream kernel would ship with. The USB Video class is now defined; highspeed video will also need these updates. Key changes: - Define an "iso_stream" head for iso endpoints. This acts enough like a QH that endpoint_disable() works. It holds the queue of ITDs, and the endpoint's current schedule state. And it's easy to find (spinlocked array access), no search. - Uses a temporary "itd_sched" while submitting each URB, with not-yet-linked ITDs and request-specific metadata. There's a per-stream cache of ITDs, so resubmitting ISO urbs (to achieve a "ring" of transfers) is typically cheap. - Scheduling for most URBs is almost a NOP: just a sanity check to make sure there's no need to reschedule, and then just link into the schedule at the current schedule slot. (The previous code was a gross hack that didn't even work reasonably with more than two URBs queued.) - Is a reasonable model to use with full speed ISO transfers. (They need additional TT scheduling hooks, most of which are already written but not merged.) - Handles several cases the previous code didn't, including high bandwidth transfers (loads up to 24 MByte/sec) - Has had more testing than the old code, including 20+ hour successful IN+OUT runs, more varied transfer intervals and maxpacket sizes. (Using net2280 and a gadgetfs driver.) So it's worth replacing the existing code with this; there aren't too many rough edges, and it's much more fixable than the previous version. p.s. Many thanks, Michal!
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David Brownell authored
This patch is needed to make high bandwidth ISO streams behave, but could resolve some other scanning glitches. Current users of periodic transfers (interrupt transfer modes for hubs, mice, and keyboards) shouldn't even notice this change. It makes the periodic schedule scan handle cases where a given frame's schedule slot reports completions in several different microframes. So far that's been uncommon, but it's typical for high bandwidth iso (or even with busier interrupt trees than this driver has supported yet). It also starts to remove the assumption that each ITD only uses one microframe; but most of those changes are in the next patch. And it fixes a bug where some status bits were mis-interpreted as significant bits in the ITD transfer length.
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David Brownell authored
This is minor "obvious" fixes plus two tweaks to help later patches: - Interrupt QH has a link to the device, needed to implement schedule trees (like OHCI does today) that are TT-aware (essential for most keyboards and mice). - Export the macros that do high bandwidth packetsize stuff. They're also needed for high bandwidth ISO transfers. It also morphs some existing "too much debug info" urb tracing so it's kicked in by a manual #define EHCI_URB_TRACE. If some generic version of that gets added to usbcore, this sort of debug code can vanish (from all hcds).
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David Brownell authored
Someone sent this around mixed with an EHCI patch which should not be applied (there's a different patch on the way). I lost their name, sorry. It lets 1024 byte ISO packets be used.
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David Brownell authored
From Darwin Rambo, <drambo@broadcom.com> These get rid of 8 and 16 byte PCI access, which don't work on some MIPS platforms.
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David T. Hollis authored
On Tue, 2003-12-23 at 22:49, David Brownell wrote: > > This patch should take care of it. Additionally, I had to fold one of > > my patches that's in the queue for 2.6.1 (ethtool link check fix) into > > this as the other would not apply due to changes. > > It looks fine, though it didn't apply against Greg's usb-devel-2.6 > tree ... which has a few more methods added. > > I guess I'll just add this one to my tree, and let you merge this > with those additional ax8817x changes. > > - Dave > Re-diffed against the usb-2.6-devel tree.
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Alan Stern authored
There's a couple of old patches floating around still that you might want to apply. I have reproduced them below. as129 handles the situation where a command error causes us to do a device reset, but the SCSI layer times out and aborts the command during the reset delay. It clears a flag that otherwise will prevent us from sending the clear-halt messages following the reset. as141 is the DMA buffer alignment patch. You asked me to remind you about it eventually. There shouldn't be any harm at all in applying it without waiting for the corresponding SCSI part of the patch to be applied. Without that other part, this will essentially do nothing. Alan Stern
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Matthias Bruestle authored
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Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
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Adrian Knoth authored
this patch which applies against Linux-2.6.0 (and also 2.6.1) adds support for the Emagic A6-2 USB-Audio-Interface. Note that the selection of either MIDI or SPDIF is actually done by ifdefs in the driver, this behaviour should clearly be changed to MODULE_PARAM in the future. See <http://adi.thur.de/?show=emi62> for details.
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Rasmus Rohde authored
On Sat, 2004-01-10 at 05:07, Greg KH wrote: > On Thu, Dec 18, 2003 at 10:28:24PM +0100, Rasmus Rohde wrote: > > I wrote to you earlier about a missing patch to ftdi_sio.c that appeared > > in > > > > http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/gregkh/usb/2.5/usb-ftdi_sio-2.5.68.patch > > > > It has to do with the introduction tiocmset and tiocmget. > > This patch was dropped in > > > > http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/gregkh/usb/2.5/usb-ftdi_sio-2.5.75.patch > > > > which unfortunately breaks the driver. > > Hm, sorry about that. Care to send me a patch to fix it up?
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Paulo Marques authored
This patch adds a new product ID to the list of devices using the FTDI232BM chip. It applies cleanly against vanilla 2.6.0.
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Alan Stern authored
On Wed, 14 Jan 2004, Marcin Juszkiewicz wrote: > After running "MS Import" on my Sony Clie SJ30 palmtop I got: > > hub 3-0:1.0: new USB device on port 2, assigned address 6 > usb-storage: This device (054c,006d,0100 S 05 P 00) has unneeded SubClass and Protocol entries in unusual_devs.h > Please send a copy of this message to <linux-usb-devel@lists.sourceforge.net> Thanks for sending this. The updated information will appear in an upcoming kernel.
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Alan Stern authored
On Fri, 2 Jan 2004, Eric Lussard wrote: > <5>usb-storage: This device (05e3,0701,0002 S 02 P 50) has an unneeded > Protocol entry > in unusual_devs.h > <4> Please send a copy of this message to > <linux-usb-devel@lists.sourceforge.net> Yet another unusual_devs change! I really should stick to a policy of reading through all the new email before sending any replies...
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Alan Stern authored
On Fri, 2 Jan 2004, Oliver Neukum wrote: > Hi Alan, > > you seem to like them. Here it is: > > usb-storage 3-1:1.0: usb_probe_interface > usb-storage 3-1:1.0: usb_probe_interface - got id > usb-storage: This device (0686,4014,0001 S 06 P 50) has unneeded SubClass and Protocol entries in unusual_devs.h > Please send a copy of this message to <linux-usb-devel@lists.sourceforge.net> > scsi1 : SCSI emulation for USB Mass Storage devices > Vendor: MINOLTA Model: DIMAGE CAMERA Rev: 1.00 > Type: Direct-Access ANSI SCSI revision: 02 Thanks Oliver. Interestingly, it looks as though the unneeded SubClass and Protocol values were the only reason for keeping this entry, so now it can be deleted in both 2.4 and 2.6.
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Alan Stern authored
On Tue, 23 Dec 2003, sledgedog wrote: > USB Mass Storage support registered. > hub 3-0:1.0: new USB device on port 2, assigned address 2 > usb-storage: This device (090c,1132,0100 S 06 P 50) has unneeded SubClass and Protocol entries in unusual_devs.h > Please send a copy of this message to <linux-usb-devel@lists.sourceforge.net> Thank you for sending this in. Greg, here is the patch for unusual_devs.h, both 2.4 and 2.6.
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Ross Boswell authored
I was unable to get my Pentax Optio 330GSrecognised by the 2.6.0 kernel until I applied the patch below that I found posted some months ago on the German Debian mailing list. I have attributred it to the original poster.
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- 14 Jan, 2004 1 commit
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Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
Thanks to BOUCNIAUX Benjamin <borax@neron.info> for the information.
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- 09 Jan, 2004 1 commit
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Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
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- 06 Jan, 2004 7 commits
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Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
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Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
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Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
Also cleaned up the string files. Thanks to Mark Smith for pointing this out.
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David Brownell authored
>> if (dev->bulk_in_buffer != NULL) >> kfree (dev->bulk_in_buffer); > > > Yes that one check can go away. Care to send me a patch? Actually all those checks should go away ...
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David Brownell authored
This patch implements the "USB Gadget" API using the "Goku-S" (TC86C001) full speed usb device controller. It's passed testing with Gadget Zero, g_ether (full CDC Ethernet support), gadgetfs, and most interestingly Alan Stern's "File Storage Gadget" (FSG, talking to Linux or Windows as a usb-storage device) to give the halt processing a good workout. Control-OUT works. Tested mostly on x86, with reported success on MIPS. As well as being directly useful with that hardware, I think this is small and simple enough to be useful as an example of how to write a USB controller driver. (There will be many more controller drivers than gadget drivers, I suspect ...) Please merge this to the next 2.6 release that takes new drivers. Corresponding updates for kbuild and the various gadget drivers will be coming (not in a flood).
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Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
Thanks to Stefan Verkoyen <stefan.verkoyen@quesd.com> for the information.
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Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
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- 05 Jan, 2004 4 commits
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Bartlomiej Zolnierkiewicz authored
Fix for oops on rmmod caused by *_remove() function marked as __devinit (and thus discarded after module initialization - if CONFIG_MODULES=y and CONFIG_HOTPLUG is not set). This patch changes __devinit to __devexit and adds __devexit_p() where pointer to such function is used. The only exception is au1000, where au1000_remove() is called from cleanup_au1000() function - __devinit is jest removed there.
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Bartlomiej Zolnierkiewicz authored
It was also removed in 2.4.23.
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Bartlomiej Zolnierkiewicz authored
Use rq->cmd[0] instead of rq->flags for storing special request flags. Per Jens' suggestion. Tested by Stef van der Made <svdmade@planet.nl>.
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Bartlomiej Zolnierkiewicz authored
Revert wrong changes introduced in 2.4.21. From: Stefan Talpalaru <stefantalpalaru@yahoo.com>, Ingo Kilian <ikilian@web.de>.
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