Hellmuth with some refinements by myself and flz@. It works for me
with my non-MS mice, so nothing should be broken by it.
Submitted by: Hellmuth Michaelis
PR: 90162
Approved by: re (blanket)
o Consistently use device_foo_t and bus_foo_t for functions implementing
device_foo and bus_foo respectively. Adjust those routines that were wrong
(we should do this throughout the tree).
o make all the modules depend on usb. Otherwise these modules won't
load.
o ucycom doesn't need usb_port.h
o Minor unifdefing
o uhub, umass, ums, urio, uscanner conversion complete.
o ukbd: Remove the NO_SET_PROTO quirk (fixes a PR 77940). NetBSD removed
their check and setting the proto a long time ago.
o umodem panic fixed. UQ_ASSUME_CM_OVER_DATA quirk removed because I've never
seen a umodem that needed this rejection for proection (this gets rid of
~20% of the quirks).
Approved by: re@ (kensmith)
PR: 77940
USB ethernet chip. Adapters that use this chip include the LinkSys
USB100TX. There are a few others, but I'm not certain of their
availability in the U.S. I used an ADMtek eval board for development.
Note that while the ADMtek chip is a 100Mbps device, you can't really
get 100Mbps speeds over USB. Regardless, this driver uses miibus to
allow speed and duplex mode selection as well as autonegotiation.
Building and kldloading the driver as a module is also supported.
Note that in order to make this driver work, I had to make what some
may consider an ugly hack to sys/dev/usb/usbdi.c. The usbd_transfer()
function will use tsleep() for synchronous transfers that don't complete
right away. This is a problem since there are times when we need to
do sync transfers from an interrupt context (i.e. when reading registers
from the MAC via the control endpoint), where tsleep() us a no-no.
My hack allows the driver to have the code poll for transfer completion
subject to the xfer->timeout timeout rather that calling tsleep().
This hack is controlled by a quirk entry and is only enabled for the
ADMtek device.
Now, I'm sure there are a few of you out there ready to jump on me
and suggest some other approach that doesn't involve a busy wait. The
only solution that might work is to handle the interrupts in a kernel
thread, where you may have something resembling a process context that
makes it okay to tsleep(). This is lovely, except we don't have any
mechanism like that now, and I'm not about to implement such a thing
myself since it's beyond the scope of driver development. (Translation:
I'll be damned if I know how to do it.) If FreeBSD ever aquires such
a mechanism, I'll be glad to revisit the driver to take advantage of
it. In the meantime, I settled for what I perceived to be the solution
that involved the least amount of code changes. In general, the hit
is pretty light.
Also note that my only USB test box has a UHCI controller: I haven't
I don't have a machine with an OHCI controller available.
Highlights:
- Updated usb_quirks.* to add UQ_NO_TSLEEP quirk for ADMtek part.
- Updated usbdevs and regenerated generated files
- Updated HARDWARE.TXT and RELNOTES.TXT files
- Updated sysinstall/device.c and userconfig.c
- Updated kernel configs -- device aue0 is commented out by default
- Updated /sys/conf/files
- Added new kld module directory
Rename a few (I wish companies would stop buying each other)
Add a quirk entry for hubs that say they are self powered but are
in fact bus powered (usage in uhub follows shortly).
It however posts a bogus button up event once in a while. Whenever
we receive dx=dy=dz=buttons=0 we postpone adding it to the queue for
50msecs with a timeout. If in the meantime something else is posted
the event is ignored.
This avoids the problem Nik Sayer reported. He noticed that X windows
would drop and pick up a window once in a while.
Thanks, Nik, for supplying me with the keyboard to fix the problem!
- Some cleanup and improvements in the uhci and ohci drivers
- Support for plugging and unplugging devices improved
- Now available is bulk transport over OHCI controllers
- Resume and suspend have been temporarily been disabled again. Proper
support for it is available in the uhci.c and ohci.c files but I have
not yet spent the brain cycles to use it.
- OpenBSD now uses the USB stack as well
- Add FreeBSD tags