| ======================== |
| USB Gadget API for Linux |
| ======================== |
| |
| :Author: David Brownell |
| :Date: 20 August 2004 |
| |
| Introduction |
| ============ |
| |
| This document presents a Linux-USB "Gadget" kernel mode API, for use |
| within peripherals and other USB devices that embed Linux. It provides |
| an overview of the API structure, and shows how that fits into a system |
| development project. This is the first such API released on Linux to |
| address a number of important problems, including: |
| |
| - Supports USB 2.0, for high speed devices which can stream data at |
| several dozen megabytes per second. |
| |
| - Handles devices with dozens of endpoints just as well as ones with |
| just two fixed-function ones. Gadget drivers can be written so |
| they're easy to port to new hardware. |
| |
| - Flexible enough to expose more complex USB device capabilities such |
| as multiple configurations, multiple interfaces, composite devices, |
| and alternate interface settings. |
| |
| - USB "On-The-Go" (OTG) support, in conjunction with updates to the |
| Linux-USB host side. |
| |
| - Sharing data structures and API models with the Linux-USB host side |
| API. This helps the OTG support, and looks forward to more-symmetric |
| frameworks (where the same I/O model is used by both host and device |
| side drivers). |
| |
| - Minimalist, so it's easier to support new device controller hardware. |
| I/O processing doesn't imply large demands for memory or CPU |
| resources. |
| |
| Most Linux developers will not be able to use this API, since they have |
| USB ``host`` hardware in a PC, workstation, or server. Linux users with |
| embedded systems are more likely to have USB peripheral hardware. To |
| distinguish drivers running inside such hardware from the more familiar |
| Linux "USB device drivers", which are host side proxies for the real USB |
| devices, a different term is used: the drivers inside the peripherals |
| are "USB gadget drivers". In USB protocol interactions, the device |
| driver is the master (or "client driver") and the gadget driver is the |
| slave (or "function driver"). |
| |
| The gadget API resembles the host side Linux-USB API in that both use |
| queues of request objects to package I/O buffers, and those requests may |
| be submitted or canceled. They share common definitions for the standard |
| USB *Chapter 9* messages, structures, and constants. Also, both APIs |
| bind and unbind drivers to devices. The APIs differ in detail, since the |
| host side's current URB framework exposes a number of implementation |
| details and assumptions that are inappropriate for a gadget API. While |
| the model for control transfers and configuration management is |
| necessarily different (one side is a hardware-neutral master, the other |
| is a hardware-aware slave), the endpoint I/0 API used here should also |
| be usable for an overhead-reduced host side API. |
| |
| Structure of Gadget Drivers |
| =========================== |
| |
| A system running inside a USB peripheral normally has at least three |
| layers inside the kernel to handle USB protocol processing, and may have |
| additional layers in user space code. The ``gadget`` API is used by the |
| middle layer to interact with the lowest level (which directly handles |
| hardware). |
| |
| In Linux, from the bottom up, these layers are: |
| |
| *USB Controller Driver* |
| This is the lowest software level. It is the only layer that talks |
| to hardware, through registers, fifos, dma, irqs, and the like. The |
| ``<linux/usb/gadget.h>`` API abstracts the peripheral controller |
| endpoint hardware. That hardware is exposed through endpoint |
| objects, which accept streams of IN/OUT buffers, and through |
| callbacks that interact with gadget drivers. Since normal USB |
| devices only have one upstream port, they only have one of these |
| drivers. The controller driver can support any number of different |
| gadget drivers, but only one of them can be used at a time. |
| |
| Examples of such controller hardware include the PCI-based NetChip |
| 2280 USB 2.0 high speed controller, the SA-11x0 or PXA-25x UDC |
| (found within many PDAs), and a variety of other products. |
| |
| *Gadget Driver* |
| The lower boundary of this driver implements hardware-neutral USB |
| functions, using calls to the controller driver. Because such |
| hardware varies widely in capabilities and restrictions, and is used |
| in embedded environments where space is at a premium, the gadget |
| driver is often configured at compile time to work with endpoints |
| supported by one particular controller. Gadget drivers may be |
| portable to several different controllers, using conditional |
| compilation. (Recent kernels substantially simplify the work |
| involved in supporting new hardware, by *autoconfiguring* endpoints |
| automatically for many bulk-oriented drivers.) Gadget driver |
| responsibilities include: |
| |
| - handling setup requests (ep0 protocol responses) possibly |
| including class-specific functionality |
| |
| - returning configuration and string descriptors |
| |
| - (re)setting configurations and interface altsettings, including |
| enabling and configuring endpoints |
| |
| - handling life cycle events, such as managing bindings to |
| hardware, USB suspend/resume, remote wakeup, and disconnection |
| from the USB host. |
| |
| - managing IN and OUT transfers on all currently enabled endpoints |
| |
| Such drivers may be modules of proprietary code, although that |
| approach is discouraged in the Linux community. |
| |
| *Upper Level* |
| Most gadget drivers have an upper boundary that connects to some |
| Linux driver or framework in Linux. Through that boundary flows the |
| data which the gadget driver produces and/or consumes through |
| protocol transfers over USB. Examples include: |
| |
| - user mode code, using generic (gadgetfs) or application specific |
| files in ``/dev`` |
| |
| - networking subsystem (for network gadgets, like the CDC Ethernet |
| Model gadget driver) |
| |
| - data capture drivers, perhaps video4Linux or a scanner driver; or |
| test and measurement hardware. |
| |
| - input subsystem (for HID gadgets) |
| |
| - sound subsystem (for audio gadgets) |
| |
| - file system (for PTP gadgets) |
| |
| - block i/o subsystem (for usb-storage gadgets) |
| |
| - ... and more |
| |
| *Additional Layers* |
| Other layers may exist. These could include kernel layers, such as |
| network protocol stacks, as well as user mode applications building |
| on standard POSIX system call APIs such as ``open()``, ``close()``, |
| ``read()`` and ``write()``. On newer systems, POSIX Async I/O calls may |
| be an option. Such user mode code will not necessarily be subject to |
| the GNU General Public License (GPL). |
| |
| OTG-capable systems will also need to include a standard Linux-USB host |
| side stack, with ``usbcore``, one or more *Host Controller Drivers* |
| (HCDs), *USB Device Drivers* to support the OTG "Targeted Peripheral |
| List", and so forth. There will also be an *OTG Controller Driver*, |
| which is visible to gadget and device driver developers only indirectly. |
| That helps the host and device side USB controllers implement the two |
| new OTG protocols (HNP and SRP). Roles switch (host to peripheral, or |
| vice versa) using HNP during USB suspend processing, and SRP can be |
| viewed as a more battery-friendly kind of device wakeup protocol. |
| |
| Over time, reusable utilities are evolving to help make some gadget |
| driver tasks simpler. For example, building configuration descriptors |
| from vectors of descriptors for the configurations interfaces and |
| endpoints is now automated, and many drivers now use autoconfiguration |
| to choose hardware endpoints and initialize their descriptors. A |
| potential example of particular interest is code implementing standard |
| USB-IF protocols for HID, networking, storage, or audio classes. Some |
| developers are interested in KDB or KGDB hooks, to let target hardware |
| be remotely debugged. Most such USB protocol code doesn't need to be |
| hardware-specific, any more than network protocols like X11, HTTP, or |
| NFS are. Such gadget-side interface drivers should eventually be |
| combined, to implement composite devices. |
| |
| Kernel Mode Gadget API |
| ====================== |
| |
| Gadget drivers declare themselves through a struct |
| :c:type:`usb_gadget_driver`, which is responsible for most parts of enumeration |
| for a struct :c:type:`usb_gadget`. The response to a set_configuration usually |
| involves enabling one or more of the struct :c:type:`usb_ep` objects exposed by |
| the gadget, and submitting one or more struct :c:type:`usb_request` buffers to |
| transfer data. Understand those four data types, and their operations, |
| and you will understand how this API works. |
| |
| .. Note:: |
| |
| Other than the "Chapter 9" data types, most of the significant data |
| types and functions are described here. |
| |
| However, some relevant information is likely omitted from what you |
| are reading. One example of such information is endpoint |
| autoconfiguration. You'll have to read the header file, and use |
| example source code (such as that for "Gadget Zero"), to fully |
| understand the API. |
| |
| The part of the API implementing some basic driver capabilities is |
| specific to the version of the Linux kernel that's in use. The 2.6 |
| and upper kernel versions include a *driver model* framework that has |
| no analogue on earlier kernels; so those parts of the gadget API are |
| not fully portable. (They are implemented on 2.4 kernels, but in a |
| different way.) The driver model state is another part of this API that is |
| ignored by the kerneldoc tools. |
| |
| The core API does not expose every possible hardware feature, only the |
| most widely available ones. There are significant hardware features, |
| such as device-to-device DMA (without temporary storage in a memory |
| buffer) that would be added using hardware-specific APIs. |
| |
| This API allows drivers to use conditional compilation to handle |
| endpoint capabilities of different hardware, but doesn't require that. |
| Hardware tends to have arbitrary restrictions, relating to transfer |
| types, addressing, packet sizes, buffering, and availability. As a rule, |
| such differences only matter for "endpoint zero" logic that handles |
| device configuration and management. The API supports limited run-time |
| detection of capabilities, through naming conventions for endpoints. |
| Many drivers will be able to at least partially autoconfigure |
| themselves. In particular, driver init sections will often have endpoint |
| autoconfiguration logic that scans the hardware's list of endpoints to |
| find ones matching the driver requirements (relying on those |
| conventions), to eliminate some of the most common reasons for |
| conditional compilation. |
| |
| Like the Linux-USB host side API, this API exposes the "chunky" nature |
| of USB messages: I/O requests are in terms of one or more "packets", and |
| packet boundaries are visible to drivers. Compared to RS-232 serial |
| protocols, USB resembles synchronous protocols like HDLC (N bytes per |
| frame, multipoint addressing, host as the primary station and devices as |
| secondary stations) more than asynchronous ones (tty style: 8 data bits |
| per frame, no parity, one stop bit). So for example the controller |
| drivers won't buffer two single byte writes into a single two-byte USB |
| IN packet, although gadget drivers may do so when they implement |
| protocols where packet boundaries (and "short packets") are not |
| significant. |
| |
| Driver Life Cycle |
| ----------------- |
| |
| Gadget drivers make endpoint I/O requests to hardware without needing to |
| know many details of the hardware, but driver setup/configuration code |
| needs to handle some differences. Use the API like this: |
| |
| 1. Register a driver for the particular device side usb controller |
| hardware, such as the net2280 on PCI (USB 2.0), sa11x0 or pxa25x as |
| found in Linux PDAs, and so on. At this point the device is logically |
| in the USB ch9 initial state (``attached``), drawing no power and not |
| usable (since it does not yet support enumeration). Any host should |
| not see the device, since it's not activated the data line pullup |
| used by the host to detect a device, even if VBUS power is available. |
| |
| 2. Register a gadget driver that implements some higher level device |
| function. That will then bind() to a :c:type:`usb_gadget`, which activates |
| the data line pullup sometime after detecting VBUS. |
| |
| 3. The hardware driver can now start enumerating. The steps it handles |
| are to accept USB ``power`` and ``set_address`` requests. Other steps are |
| handled by the gadget driver. If the gadget driver module is unloaded |
| before the host starts to enumerate, steps before step 7 are skipped. |
| |
| 4. The gadget driver's ``setup()`` call returns usb descriptors, based both |
| on what the bus interface hardware provides and on the functionality |
| being implemented. That can involve alternate settings or |
| configurations, unless the hardware prevents such operation. For OTG |
| devices, each configuration descriptor includes an OTG descriptor. |
| |
| 5. The gadget driver handles the last step of enumeration, when the USB |
| host issues a ``set_configuration`` call. It enables all endpoints used |
| in that configuration, with all interfaces in their default settings. |
| That involves using a list of the hardware's endpoints, enabling each |
| endpoint according to its descriptor. It may also involve using |
| ``usb_gadget_vbus_draw`` to let more power be drawn from VBUS, as |
| allowed by that configuration. For OTG devices, setting a |
| configuration may also involve reporting HNP capabilities through a |
| user interface. |
| |
| 6. Do real work and perform data transfers, possibly involving changes |
| to interface settings or switching to new configurations, until the |
| device is disconnect()ed from the host. Queue any number of transfer |
| requests to each endpoint. It may be suspended and resumed several |
| times before being disconnected. On disconnect, the drivers go back |
| to step 3 (above). |
| |
| 7. When the gadget driver module is being unloaded, the driver unbind() |
| callback is issued. That lets the controller driver be unloaded. |
| |
| Drivers will normally be arranged so that just loading the gadget driver |
| module (or statically linking it into a Linux kernel) allows the |
| peripheral device to be enumerated, but some drivers will defer |
| enumeration until some higher level component (like a user mode daemon) |
| enables it. Note that at this lowest level there are no policies about |
| how ep0 configuration logic is implemented, except that it should obey |
| USB specifications. Such issues are in the domain of gadget drivers, |
| including knowing about implementation constraints imposed by some USB |
| controllers or understanding that composite devices might happen to be |
| built by integrating reusable components. |
| |
| Note that the lifecycle above can be slightly different for OTG devices. |
| Other than providing an additional OTG descriptor in each configuration, |
| only the HNP-related differences are particularly visible to driver |
| code. They involve reporting requirements during the ``SET_CONFIGURATION`` |
| request, and the option to invoke HNP during some suspend callbacks. |
| Also, SRP changes the semantics of ``usb_gadget_wakeup`` slightly. |
| |
| USB 2.0 Chapter 9 Types and Constants |
| ------------------------------------- |
| |
| Gadget drivers rely on common USB structures and constants defined in |
| the :ref:`linux/usb/ch9.h <usb_chapter9>` header file, which is standard in |
| Linux 2.6+ kernels. These are the same types and constants used by host side |
| drivers (and usbcore). |
| |
| Core Objects and Methods |
| ------------------------ |
| |
| These are declared in ``<linux/usb/gadget.h>``, and are used by gadget |
| drivers to interact with USB peripheral controller drivers. |
| |
| .. kernel-doc:: include/linux/usb/gadget.h |
| :internal: |
| |
| Optional Utilities |
| ------------------ |
| |
| The core API is sufficient for writing a USB Gadget Driver, but some |
| optional utilities are provided to simplify common tasks. These |
| utilities include endpoint autoconfiguration. |
| |
| .. kernel-doc:: drivers/usb/gadget/usbstring.c |
| :export: |
| |
| .. kernel-doc:: drivers/usb/gadget/config.c |
| :export: |
| |
| Composite Device Framework |
| -------------------------- |
| |
| The core API is sufficient for writing drivers for composite USB devices |
| (with more than one function in a given configuration), and also |
| multi-configuration devices (also more than one function, but not |
| necessarily sharing a given configuration). There is however an optional |
| framework which makes it easier to reuse and combine functions. |
| |
| Devices using this framework provide a struct :c:type:`usb_composite_driver`, |
| which in turn provides one or more struct :c:type:`usb_configuration` |
| instances. Each such configuration includes at least one struct |
| :c:type:`usb_function`, which packages a user visible role such as "network |
| link" or "mass storage device". Management functions may also exist, |
| such as "Device Firmware Upgrade". |
| |
| .. kernel-doc:: include/linux/usb/composite.h |
| :internal: |
| |
| .. kernel-doc:: drivers/usb/gadget/composite.c |
| :export: |
| |
| Composite Device Functions |
| -------------------------- |
| |
| At this writing, a few of the current gadget drivers have been converted |
| to this framework. Near-term plans include converting all of them, |
| except for ``gadgetfs``. |
| |
| Peripheral Controller Drivers |
| ============================= |
| |
| The first hardware supporting this API was the NetChip 2280 controller, |
| which supports USB 2.0 high speed and is based on PCI. This is the |
| ``net2280`` driver module. The driver supports Linux kernel versions 2.4 |
| and 2.6; contact NetChip Technologies for development boards and product |
| information. |
| |
| Other hardware working in the ``gadget`` framework includes: Intel's PXA |
| 25x and IXP42x series processors (``pxa2xx_udc``), Toshiba TC86c001 |
| "Goku-S" (``goku_udc``), Renesas SH7705/7727 (``sh_udc``), MediaQ 11xx |
| (``mq11xx_udc``), Hynix HMS30C7202 (``h7202_udc``), National 9303/4 |
| (``n9604_udc``), Texas Instruments OMAP (``omap_udc``), Sharp LH7A40x |
| (``lh7a40x_udc``), and more. Most of those are full speed controllers. |
| |
| At this writing, there are people at work on drivers in this framework |
| for several other USB device controllers, with plans to make many of |
| them be widely available. |
| |
| A partial USB simulator, the ``dummy_hcd`` driver, is available. It can |
| act like a net2280, a pxa25x, or an sa11x0 in terms of available |
| endpoints and device speeds; and it simulates control, bulk, and to some |
| extent interrupt transfers. That lets you develop some parts of a gadget |
| driver on a normal PC, without any special hardware, and perhaps with |
| the assistance of tools such as GDB running with User Mode Linux. At |
| least one person has expressed interest in adapting that approach, |
| hooking it up to a simulator for a microcontroller. Such simulators can |
| help debug subsystems where the runtime hardware is unfriendly to |
| software development, or is not yet available. |
| |
| Support for other controllers is expected to be developed and |
| contributed over time, as this driver framework evolves. |
| |
| Gadget Drivers |
| ============== |
| |
| In addition to *Gadget Zero* (used primarily for testing and development |
| with drivers for usb controller hardware), other gadget drivers exist. |
| |
| There's an ``ethernet`` gadget driver, which implements one of the most |
| useful *Communications Device Class* (CDC) models. One of the standards |
| for cable modem interoperability even specifies the use of this ethernet |
| model as one of two mandatory options. Gadgets using this code look to a |
| USB host as if they're an Ethernet adapter. It provides access to a |
| network where the gadget's CPU is one host, which could easily be |
| bridging, routing, or firewalling access to other networks. Since some |
| hardware can't fully implement the CDC Ethernet requirements, this |
| driver also implements a "good parts only" subset of CDC Ethernet. (That |
| subset doesn't advertise itself as CDC Ethernet, to avoid creating |
| problems.) |
| |
| Support for Microsoft's ``RNDIS`` protocol has been contributed by |
| Pengutronix and Auerswald GmbH. This is like CDC Ethernet, but it runs |
| on more slightly USB hardware (but less than the CDC subset). However, |
| its main claim to fame is being able to connect directly to recent |
| versions of Windows, using drivers that Microsoft bundles and supports, |
| making it much simpler to network with Windows. |
| |
| There is also support for user mode gadget drivers, using ``gadgetfs``. |
| This provides a *User Mode API* that presents each endpoint as a single |
| file descriptor. I/O is done using normal ``read()`` and ``read()`` calls. |
| Familiar tools like GDB and pthreads can be used to develop and debug |
| user mode drivers, so that once a robust controller driver is available |
| many applications for it won't require new kernel mode software. Linux |
| 2.6 *Async I/O (AIO)* support is available, so that user mode software |
| can stream data with only slightly more overhead than a kernel driver. |
| |
| There's a USB Mass Storage class driver, which provides a different |
| solution for interoperability with systems such as MS-Windows and MacOS. |
| That *Mass Storage* driver uses a file or block device as backing store |
| for a drive, like the ``loop`` driver. The USB host uses the BBB, CB, or |
| CBI versions of the mass storage class specification, using transparent |
| SCSI commands to access the data from the backing store. |
| |
| There's a "serial line" driver, useful for TTY style operation over USB. |
| The latest version of that driver supports CDC ACM style operation, like |
| a USB modem, and so on most hardware it can interoperate easily with |
| MS-Windows. One interesting use of that driver is in boot firmware (like |
| a BIOS), which can sometimes use that model with very small systems |
| without real serial lines. |
| |
| Support for other kinds of gadget is expected to be developed and |
| contributed over time, as this driver framework evolves. |
| |
| USB On-The-GO (OTG) |
| =================== |
| |
| USB OTG support on Linux 2.6 was initially developed by Texas |
| Instruments for `OMAP <http://www.omap.com>`__ 16xx and 17xx series |
| processors. Other OTG systems should work in similar ways, but the |
| hardware level details could be very different. |
| |
| Systems need specialized hardware support to implement OTG, notably |
| including a special *Mini-AB* jack and associated transceiver to support |
| *Dual-Role* operation: they can act either as a host, using the standard |
| Linux-USB host side driver stack, or as a peripheral, using this |
| ``gadget`` framework. To do that, the system software relies on small |
| additions to those programming interfaces, and on a new internal |
| component (here called an "OTG Controller") affecting which driver stack |
| connects to the OTG port. In each role, the system can re-use the |
| existing pool of hardware-neutral drivers, layered on top of the |
| controller driver interfaces (:c:type:`usb_bus` or :c:type:`usb_gadget`). |
| Such drivers need at most minor changes, and most of the calls added to |
| support OTG can also benefit non-OTG products. |
| |
| - Gadget drivers test the ``is_otg`` flag, and use it to determine |
| whether or not to include an OTG descriptor in each of their |
| configurations. |
| |
| - Gadget drivers may need changes to support the two new OTG protocols, |
| exposed in new gadget attributes such as ``b_hnp_enable`` flag. HNP |
| support should be reported through a user interface (two LEDs could |
| suffice), and is triggered in some cases when the host suspends the |
| peripheral. SRP support can be user-initiated just like remote |
| wakeup, probably by pressing the same button. |
| |
| - On the host side, USB device drivers need to be taught to trigger HNP |
| at appropriate moments, using ``usb_suspend_device()``. That also |
| conserves battery power, which is useful even for non-OTG |
| configurations. |
| |
| - Also on the host side, a driver must support the OTG "Targeted |
| Peripheral List". That's just a whitelist, used to reject peripherals |
| not supported with a given Linux OTG host. *This whitelist is |
| product-specific; each product must modify* ``otg_whitelist.h`` *to |
| match its interoperability specification.* |
| |
| Non-OTG Linux hosts, like PCs and workstations, normally have some |
| solution for adding drivers, so that peripherals that aren't |
| recognized can eventually be supported. That approach is unreasonable |
| for consumer products that may never have their firmware upgraded, |
| and where it's usually unrealistic to expect traditional |
| PC/workstation/server kinds of support model to work. For example, |
| it's often impractical to change device firmware once the product has |
| been distributed, so driver bugs can't normally be fixed if they're |
| found after shipment. |
| |
| Additional changes are needed below those hardware-neutral :c:type:`usb_bus` |
| and :c:type:`usb_gadget` driver interfaces; those aren't discussed here in any |
| detail. Those affect the hardware-specific code for each USB Host or |
| Peripheral controller, and how the HCD initializes (since OTG can be |
| active only on a single port). They also involve what may be called an |
| *OTG Controller Driver*, managing the OTG transceiver and the OTG state |
| machine logic as well as much of the root hub behavior for the OTG port. |
| The OTG controller driver needs to activate and deactivate USB |
| controllers depending on the relevant device role. Some related changes |
| were needed inside usbcore, so that it can identify OTG-capable devices |
| and respond appropriately to HNP or SRP protocols. |