linux/drivers/usb/gadget/gadget_chips.h

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/*
* USB device controllers have lots of quirks. Use these macros in
* gadget drivers or other code that needs to deal with them, and which
* autoconfigures instead of using early binding to the hardware.
*
* This SHOULD eventually work like the ARM mach_is_*() stuff, driven by
* some config file that gets updated as new hardware is supported.
* (And avoiding all runtime comparisons in typical one-choice configs!)
*
* NOTE: some of these controller drivers may not be available yet.
* Some are available on 2.4 kernels; several are available, but not
* yet pushed in the 2.6 mainline tree.
*/
#ifndef __GADGET_CHIPS_H
#define __GADGET_CHIPS_H
/*
* NOTICE: the entries below are alphabetical and should be kept
* that way.
*
* Always be sure to add new entries to the correct position or
* accept the bashing later.
*
* If you have forgotten the alphabetical order let VIM/EMACS
* do that for you.
*/
#define gadget_is_amd5536udc(g) (!strcmp("amd5536udc", (g)->name))
#define gadget_is_at91(g) (!strcmp("at91_udc", (g)->name))
#define gadget_is_atmel_usba(g) (!strcmp("atmel_usba_udc", (g)->name))
#define gadget_is_ci13xxx_msm(g) (!strcmp("ci13xxx_msm", (g)->name))
#define gadget_is_ci13xxx_pci(g) (!strcmp("ci13xxx_pci", (g)->name))
#define gadget_is_dummy(g) (!strcmp("dummy_udc", (g)->name))
#define gadget_is_dwc3(g) (!strcmp("dwc3-gadget", (g)->name))
#define gadget_is_fsl_qe(g) (!strcmp("fsl_qe_udc", (g)->name))
#define gadget_is_fsl_usb2(g) (!strcmp("fsl-usb2-udc", (g)->name))
#define gadget_is_goku(g) (!strcmp("goku_udc", (g)->name))
#define gadget_is_imx(g) (!strcmp("imx_udc", (g)->name))
#define gadget_is_langwell(g) (!strcmp("langwell_udc", (g)->name))
#define gadget_is_m66592(g) (!strcmp("m66592_udc", (g)->name))
#define gadget_is_musbhdrc(g) (!strcmp("musb-hdrc", (g)->name))
#define gadget_is_net2272(g) (!strcmp("net2272", (g)->name))
#define gadget_is_net2280(g) (!strcmp("net2280", (g)->name))
#define gadget_is_omap(g) (!strcmp("omap_udc", (g)->name))
#define gadget_is_pch(g) (!strcmp("pch_udc", (g)->name))
#define gadget_is_pxa(g) (!strcmp("pxa25x_udc", (g)->name))
#define gadget_is_pxa27x(g) (!strcmp("pxa27x_udc", (g)->name))
#define gadget_is_r8a66597(g) (!strcmp("r8a66597_udc", (g)->name))
#define gadget_is_renesas_usbhs(g) (!strcmp("renesas_usbhs_udc", (g)->name))
#define gadget_is_s3c2410(g) (!strcmp("s3c2410_udc", (g)->name))
#define gadget_is_s3c_hsotg(g) (!strcmp("s3c-hsotg", (g)->name))
#define gadget_is_s3c_hsudc(g) (!strcmp("s3c-hsudc", (g)->name))
/**
* usb_gadget_controller_number - support bcdDevice id convention
* @gadget: the controller being driven
*
* Return a 2-digit BCD value associated with the peripheral controller,
* suitable for use as part of a bcdDevice value, or a negative error code.
*
* NOTE: this convention is purely optional, and has no meaning in terms of
* any USB specification. If you want to use a different convention in your
* gadget driver firmware -- maybe a more formal revision ID -- feel free.
*
* Hosts see these bcdDevice numbers, and are allowed (but not encouraged!)
* to change their behavior accordingly. For example it might help avoiding
* some chip bug.
*/
static inline int usb_gadget_controller_number(struct usb_gadget *gadget)
{
if (gadget_is_net2280(gadget))
return 0x01;
else if (gadget_is_dummy(gadget))
return 0x02;
else if (gadget_is_pxa(gadget))
return 0x03;
else if (gadget_is_goku(gadget))
return 0x06;
else if (gadget_is_omap(gadget))
return 0x08;
else if (gadget_is_pxa27x(gadget))
return 0x11;
else if (gadget_is_s3c2410(gadget))
return 0x12;
else if (gadget_is_at91(gadget))
return 0x13;
else if (gadget_is_imx(gadget))
return 0x14;
else if (gadget_is_musbhdrc(gadget))
return 0x16;
else if (gadget_is_atmel_usba(gadget))
return 0x18;
else if (gadget_is_fsl_usb2(gadget))
return 0x19;
else if (gadget_is_amd5536udc(gadget))
return 0x20;
else if (gadget_is_m66592(gadget))
return 0x21;
else if (gadget_is_fsl_qe(gadget))
return 0x22;
else if (gadget_is_ci13xxx_pci(gadget))
return 0x23;
USB: Add Intel Langwell USB Device Controller driver Intel Langwell USB Device Controller is a High-Speed USB OTG device controller in Intel Moorestown platform. It can work in OTG device mode with Intel Langwell USB OTG transceiver driver as well as device-only mode. The number of programmable endpoints is different through controller revision. NOTE: This patch is the first version Intel Langwell USB OTG device controller driver. The bug fixing is on going for some hardware and software issues. Intel Langwell USB OTG transceiver driver and EHCI driver patches will be submitted later. Supported features: - USB OTG protocol support with Intel Langwell USB OTG transceiver driver (turn on CONFIG_USB_LANGWELL_OTG) - Support control, bulk, interrupt and isochronous endpoints (isochronous not tested) - PCI D0/D3 power management support - Link Power Management (LPM) support Tested gadget drivers: - g_file_storage - g_ether - g_zero The passed tests: - g_file_storage: USBCV Chapter 9 tests - g_file_storage: USBCV MSC tests - g_file_storage: from/to host files copying - g_ether: ping, ftp and scp files from/to host - Hotplug, with and without hubs Known issues: - g_ether: failed part of USBCV chap9 tests - LPM support not fully tested TODO: - g_ether: pass all USBCV chap9 tests - g_zero: pass usbtest tests - Stress tests on different gadget drivers - On-chip private SRAM caching support Signed-off-by: Xiaochen Shen <xiaochen.shen@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2009-06-04 07:34:49 +00:00
else if (gadget_is_langwell(gadget))
return 0x24;
else if (gadget_is_r8a66597(gadget))
return 0x25;
else if (gadget_is_s3c_hsotg(gadget))
return 0x26;
else if (gadget_is_pch(gadget))
return 0x27;
else if (gadget_is_ci13xxx_msm(gadget))
return 0x28;
else if (gadget_is_renesas_usbhs(gadget))
return 0x29;
else if (gadget_is_s3c_hsudc(gadget))
return 0x30;
USB: net2272: driver for PLX NET2272 USB device controller This is based on the last release from PLX: http://www.plxtech.com/files/products/net2000/software/selectiontool/RE061204-net2272-linux2.6.18.tgz I've managed to contact them and they've confirmed that this driver was wholly written by PLX (Seth Levy). While they have no problem with it being merged (and they've already licensed it as GPL), they don't have any interest in doing so themselves as this is an old part for them. ADI has long had an add-on card which has this part on it, so we've been keeping it up-to-date out of tree. But now that PLX has confirmed the source of the driver, we can can take the next step of cleaning it up and getting it merged. So here we are! I've done quite a large clean up of the driver and attempted to address all the common issues. Hopefully in the process, I haven't broken anything. While it seems to still work with the board that I have access to, it is not a PCI variant. So I have not tested any of the PCI logic myself (beyond clean compile). Perhaps someone who actually has a card and cares can do so. I'll try to address further feedback, but don't expect miracles. I'm not really familiar with the part itself, just the platform glue. Signed-off-by: Seth Levy <seth.levy@plxtech.com> Signed-off-by: Ash Aziz <ash.aziz@plxtech.com> Signed-off-by: Roy Huang <roy.huang@analog.com> Signed-off-by: Michael Hennerich <michael.hennerich@analog.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
2011-06-06 23:42:44 +00:00
else if (gadget_is_net2272(gadget))
return 0x31;
else if (gadget_is_dwc3(gadget))
return 0x32;
return -ENOENT;
}
/**
* gadget_supports_altsettings - return true if altsettings work
* @gadget: the gadget in question
*/
static inline bool gadget_supports_altsettings(struct usb_gadget *gadget)
{
/* PXA 21x/25x/26x has no altsettings at all */
if (gadget_is_pxa(gadget))
return false;
/* PXA 27x and 3xx have *broken* altsetting support */
if (gadget_is_pxa27x(gadget))
return false;
/* Everything else is *presumably* fine ... */
return true;
}
#endif /* __GADGET_CHIPS_H */