linux/drivers/usb
David Brownell ab983f2a1b musb: support disconnect after HNP roleswitch
Adjust HNP state machines in MUSB driver so that they handle the
case where the cable is disconnected.  The A-side machine was
very wrong (unrecoverable); the B-Side was much less so.

 - A_PERIPHERAL ... as usual, the non-observability of the ID
   pin through Mentor's registers makes trouble.  We can't go
   directly to A_WAIT_VFALL to end the session and start the
   disconnect processing.  We can however sense link suspending,
   go to A_WAIT_BCON, and from there use OTG timeouts to finally
   trigger that A_WAIT_VFALL transition.  (Hoping that nobody
   reconnects quickly to that port and notices the wrong state.)

 - B_HOST ... actually clear the Host Request (HR) bit as the
   messages say, disconnect the peripheral from the root hub,
   and don't detour through a suspend state.  (In some cases
   this would eventually have cleaned up.)

Also adjust the A_SUSPEND transition to respect the A_AIDL_BDIS
timeout, so if HNP doesn't trigger quickly enough the A_WAIT_VFALL
transition happens as it should.

Signed-off-by: David Brownell <dbrownell@users.sourceforge.net>
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2009-06-15 21:44:41 -07:00
..
atm
c67x00
class
core Push BKL down into ->remount_fs() 2009-06-11 21:36:11 -04:00
gadget Merge branch 'master' of master.kernel.org:/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux-2.6 2009-06-15 03:02:23 -07:00
host USB: move orion-ehci's probe function to .devinit.text 2009-06-15 21:44:40 -07:00
image
misc usb: misc: SiS usbvga dangle: accept MUSB_HDRC as a fast enough host controller 2009-06-15 21:44:39 -07:00
mon
musb musb: support disconnect after HNP roleswitch 2009-06-15 21:44:41 -07:00
otg USB: nop-usb-xceiv: behave when linked as a module 2009-06-15 21:44:40 -07:00
serial USB: option.c: add Toshiba 3G HSDPA SM-Bus Minicard device id 2009-06-15 21:44:39 -07:00
storage
wusbcore
Kconfig
Makefile
README
usb-skeleton.c

To understand all the Linux-USB framework, you'll use these resources:

    * This source code.  This is necessarily an evolving work, and
      includes kerneldoc that should help you get a current overview.
      ("make pdfdocs", and then look at "usb.pdf" for host side and
      "gadget.pdf" for peripheral side.)  Also, Documentation/usb has
      more information.

    * The USB 2.0 specification (from www.usb.org), with supplements
      such as those for USB OTG and the various device classes.
      The USB specification has a good overview chapter, and USB
      peripherals conform to the widely known "Chapter 9".

    * Chip specifications for USB controllers.  Examples include
      host controllers (on PCs, servers, and more); peripheral
      controllers (in devices with Linux firmware, like printers or
      cell phones); and hard-wired peripherals like Ethernet adapters.

    * Specifications for other protocols implemented by USB peripheral
      functions.  Some are vendor-specific; others are vendor-neutral
      but just standardized outside of the www.usb.org team.

Here is a list of what each subdirectory here is, and what is contained in
them.

core/		- This is for the core USB host code, including the
		  usbfs files and the hub class driver ("khubd").

host/		- This is for USB host controller drivers.  This
		  includes UHCI, OHCI, EHCI, and others that might
		  be used with more specialized "embedded" systems.

gadget/		- This is for USB peripheral controller drivers and
		  the various gadget drivers which talk to them.


Individual USB driver directories.  A new driver should be added to the
first subdirectory in the list below that it fits into.

image/		- This is for still image drivers, like scanners or
		  digital cameras.
../input/	- This is for any driver that uses the input subsystem,
		  like keyboard, mice, touchscreens, tablets, etc.
../media/	- This is for multimedia drivers, like video cameras,
		  radios, and any other drivers that talk to the v4l
		  subsystem.
../net/		- This is for network drivers.
serial/		- This is for USB to serial drivers.
storage/	- This is for USB mass-storage drivers.
class/		- This is for all USB device drivers that do not fit
		  into any of the above categories, and work for a range
		  of USB Class specified devices. 
misc/		- This is for all USB device drivers that do not fit
		  into any of the above categories.