the 'PREVENT/ALLOW MEDIUM REMOVAL' SCSI command. An example of such a
device is the STmicro ST72682. We send the SCSI command for every open and
close, which can result in a significant amount of spam on the console
during boot.
Reviewed by: hps@
that the wrong UART reference clock will be used for a few of the IDs.
It is currently not possible to figure that out because the Linux FTDI
driver detects this run-time and not compile time based on the bcdDevice
field of the USB device descriptor. Some of the ID's in usbdevs are not
sorted according to the product ID value. Please feel free to fix this.
I'm out of my xemacs magic today.
This syncronises us with the linux kernel at kernel.org (HEAD).
MFC after: 2 weeks
list of supported devices with the union of:
NetBSD src/sys/dev/usb/uslsa.c 1.18
OpenBSD src/sys/dev/usb/uslcom.c 1.24
Linux source/drivers/usb/serial/cp210x.c HEAD
Remove duplicate JABLOTRON PC60B entry.
Note that some of the devices added here are multi-port devices. The
uslcom(4) driver currently only supports the first port on such devices.
Update the man page to reflect the full list of supported devices.
Remove two caveats from the CAVEATS section, as both listed caveats no
longer apply. Add a caveat about multi-port devices.
MFC after: 2 weeks
one device (support for Motorola cables), this syncronises us with:
OpenBSD src/sys/dev/usb/uplcom.c 1.56
NetBSD src/sys/dev/usb/uplcom.c 1.73
Linux kernel.org HEAD
MFC after: 1 week
This includes adding support for skipping FTDI interfaces used for JTAG
leaving them for userland and just attaching to the RS232 half, similarly
to how the corresponding Linux drivers handles these kind of adapters.
While at it, sort uftdi_devs and return BUS_PROBE_SPECIFIC (because
uftdi_probe() alters the instance variables for better or worse as do
other probe routines of USB drivers) instead of 0.
- Remove duplicated entries for BeagleBone.
- Use DEVMETHOD_END.
- Use NULL instead of 0 for pointers.
- Remove some stray lines.
MFC after: 3 days
It appears this device fails if sent a SYNCHRONIZE_CACHE command, so add
quirk to avoid sending it.
I will follow up with Micron on this issue, and will adjust the quirk if
necessary based on their feedback.
Reviewed by: hselasky@
supports IPv4/IPv6 checksum offloading and VLAN tag insertion/
stripping as well as WOL. Because uether does not provide a way
to announce driver specific offload capabilities to upper stack,
checksum offloading support needs more work and will be done in
future.
Special thanks to ASIX for donating sample hardware.
H/W donated by: ASIX Electronics
Reviewed by: hselasky
means of allowing vendor specific interface class for audio and MIDI devices.
- Add new quirks for this. The vendor and product list in OpenBSD's
dev/usb/umidi_quirks.c was used as reference.
MFC after: 14 days
Approved by: thompsa (mentor)
all new devices added between our r211022 and their git revision
93ad03d60b5b18897030038234aa2ebae8234748
Also correct a Foxconn entry.
MFC after: 1 week
Shorten the descriptive strings for Huawei devices. The vendor or
operator name should not be included in the device name.
Submitted by: Emile Coetzee
MFC after: 3 days
K3765 datacard. After ejecting this device, it reappears using
the normal K3765 ID. It does not switch automatically
Reviewed by: n_hibma
Obtained from: OpenBSD
MFC after: 2 weeks
based devices (QUALCOMMINC 0x2000). He made it use SCSI eject instead of
ZTE STOR eject. This prevented my ZTE MF626 dongle from switching.
- Apply both eject methods for ZTE STOR based devices. Works on my as
well as mav's device.
- Remove the duplicate.
- Sort the usbdevs entries for Qualcomm so this won't happen again.
- Add bootverbose message displaying the fact that we are ejecting (and
how).
Reviewed by: mav
MFC after: 2 weeks
special eject command to reappear as modem. It also requires DIR_IN flag
in the command message, so we supply some dummy data along with the command.
Feedback from X080S owners appreciated. I have not a pure Alcatel/TCTMobile
device, but another one under "Svyaznoy" (Связной) brand, and I didn't yet
managed to get it working. It is successfully recognized, it responds to
AT commands, but it shuts up right after successfull CONNECT response.
Reviewed by: hps
list of devices supported by uplcom(4) with the following sources:
NetBSD src/sys/dev/usb/uplcom.c 1.70
OpenBSD src/sys/dev/usb/uplcom.c 1.52
Linux drivers/usb/serial/pl2303.h from kernel 2.6.35
BeOS usb_serial/driver.c 1.32
Give several devices better descriptions, and rename
PROLIFIC2 -> NETINDEX while here to match everybody else.
MFC after: 6 weeks (after r211111)
and BeOS. The devices supported by uslcom(4) are now in sync with:
NetBSD src/sys/dev/usb/uslsa.c 1.11
OpenBSD src/sys/dev/usb/uslcom.c 1.20
Linux source/drivers/usb/serial/cp210x.c from kernel 2.6.35
BeOS usb_serial/driver.c 1.32
Two vendor/product IDs from Linux have not been added to uslcom(4):
SILABS SAEL - This device has special code in u3g to support it
SILABS GSM2228 - I suspect this should also be covered by u3g(4).
MFC after: 1 week
vendor ID in the vendor section, and by symbolic name in the product
section. Products are sorted by product ID. While here, get rid of a
duplicate Microsoft Mouse entry, revealed by sorting.
MFC after: 1 week
the official vendor listed for 0x076b, rather than Omnikey, as in the PR.
PR: usb/123351
Submitted by: Marcin Cieslak <saper SYSTEM.PL>
MFC after: 1 week
This patch is different to that provided in the PR, due to the changes in
this driver since 7.x.
PR: usb/129945
Submitted by: Antonio Hilario <avahilario gmail.com>
MFC after: 1 week
- Bring in several other devices from OpenBSD while here. Use the
official manufacturer name over the OpenBSD name in the case of
GEMALTO. Reorder list slightly to aid future syncing.
- Remove duplicate SILABS CP2102 define from usbdevs
PR: usb/131912 [1]
Submitted by: Jack Twilley <mathuin gmail.com> [1]
MFC after: 1 week
plug. Note that the Vendor ID 0x04b4 is officially assigned to Cypress,
so use that instead of adding a second vendor with an identical ID, in the
same way other similar cases are treated in usb/usbdevs.
PR: usb/132785
Submitted by: Dirk-Willem van Gulik <dirkx webweaving.org>
MFC after: 1 week
- Fixed the interface probe routine to only attach to USB interfaces the driver
actually supports. This allows other drivers to attach to things like
MicroSD slots etc.
- Fixed network interface enumeration to be globally sequential instead of
relying on the USB interface numbers. This make sure the first network
interface always is at uhso0 and the second at usho1 and so on.
- Added a radio kill switch; exposed through sysctl.
- Updated the manual page to be verbose about the number of serial ports and
include iCON 452 in the set of tested hardware.
Submitted by: Fredrik Lindberg
The driver is stub. It just creates device entry and feeds
reassembled packets from hardware into it.
If in future we would port wsmouse(4) from NetBSD, or make
sysmouse(4) to support absolute motion events, then the driver
can be extended to act as system mouse. Meanwhile, it just
presents a /dev/uep0, that can be utilized by X driver, that
I am going to commit to ports tree soon.
The name for the driver is chosen to be the same as in NetBSD,
however, due to different USB stacks this driver isn't a port.
from standard 3G wireless units by supplying a raw IP/IPv6 endpoint rather than
using PPP over serial. uhsoctl(1) is used to initiate and close the WAN
connection.
Obtained from: Fredrik Lindberg <fli@shapeshifter.se>
management over the data endpoint causes communication to die.
Take this one step further and model it on the existing NetBSD quirk and import
other device IDs from them.
Obtained from: NetBSD
Note that I also added the usbdev to the list, because the 8813 version
is not yet known there. I might have twisted the sorting there but because
8813 comes before 8818, I added it before that (with _8813 to differentiate)
the item.
PR: 135628
Submitted by: Yoshikazu GOTO <goto at on-link dot jp>
Approved by: imp (mentor, implicit)
part identified as Sunplus Technology Inc. This
happens to sit in a Rosewill RX81U-ES-25A 2.5" SATA
to USB 2.0 external enclosure.
Reviewed by: Hans Petter Selasky