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Direktori : /proc/thread-self/root/proc/self/root/proc/thread-self/root/usr/include/linux/usb/ |
Current File : //proc/thread-self/root/proc/self/root/proc/thread-self/root/usr/include/linux/usb/gadgetfs.h |
/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 WITH Linux-syscall-note */ /* * Filesystem based user-mode API to USB Gadget controller hardware * * Other than ep0 operations, most things are done by read() and write() * on endpoint files found in one directory. They are configured by * writing descriptors, and then may be used for normal stream style * i/o requests. When ep0 is configured, the device can enumerate; * when it's closed, the device disconnects from usb. Operations on * ep0 require ioctl() operations. * * Configuration and device descriptors get written to /dev/gadget/$CHIP, * which may then be used to read usb_gadgetfs_event structs. The driver * may activate endpoints as it handles SET_CONFIGURATION setup events, * or earlier; writing endpoint descriptors to /dev/gadget/$ENDPOINT * then performing data transfers by reading or writing. */ #ifndef __LINUX_USB_GADGETFS_H #define __LINUX_USB_GADGETFS_H #include <linux/types.h> #include <linux/ioctl.h> #include <linux/usb/ch9.h> /* * Events are delivered on the ep0 file descriptor, when the user mode driver * reads from this file descriptor after writing the descriptors. Don't * stop polling this descriptor. */ enum usb_gadgetfs_event_type { GADGETFS_NOP = 0, GADGETFS_CONNECT, GADGETFS_DISCONNECT, GADGETFS_SETUP, GADGETFS_SUSPEND, /* and likely more ! */ }; /* NOTE: this structure must stay the same size and layout on * both 32-bit and 64-bit kernels. */ struct usb_gadgetfs_event { union { /* NOP, DISCONNECT, SUSPEND: nothing * ... some hardware can't report disconnection */ /* CONNECT: just the speed */ enum usb_device_speed speed; /* SETUP: packet; DATA phase i/o precedes next event *(setup.bmRequestType & USB_DIR_IN) flags direction * ... includes SET_CONFIGURATION, SET_INTERFACE */ struct usb_ctrlrequest setup; } u; enum usb_gadgetfs_event_type type; }; /* The 'g' code is also used by printer gadget ioctl requests. * Don't add any colliding codes to either driver, and keep * them in unique ranges (size 0x20 for now). */ /* endpoint ioctls */ /* IN transfers may be reported to the gadget driver as complete * when the fifo is loaded, before the host reads the data; * OUT transfers may be reported to the host's "client" driver as * complete when they're sitting in the FIFO unread. * THIS returns how many bytes are "unclaimed" in the endpoint fifo * (needed for precise fault handling, when the hardware allows it) */ #define GADGETFS_FIFO_STATUS _IO('g', 1) /* discards any unclaimed data in the fifo. */ #define GADGETFS_FIFO_FLUSH _IO('g', 2) /* resets endpoint halt+toggle; used to implement set_interface. * some hardware (like pxa2xx) can't support this. */ #define GADGETFS_CLEAR_HALT _IO('g', 3) #endif /* __LINUX_USB_GADGETFS_H */