cdc_subset.c 10 KB

123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226227228229230231232233234235236237238239240241242243244245246247248249250251252253254255256257258259260261262263264265266267268269270271272273274275276277278279280281282283284285286287288289290291292293294295296297298299300301302303304305306307308309310311312313314315316317318319320321322323324325326327328329330331332333334335
  1. /*
  2. * Simple "CDC Subset" USB Networking Links
  3. * Copyright (C) 2000-2005 by David Brownell
  4. *
  5. * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
  6. * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
  7. * the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
  8. * (at your option) any later version.
  9. *
  10. * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
  11. * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
  12. * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
  13. * GNU General Public License for more details.
  14. *
  15. * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
  16. * along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
  17. * Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA
  18. */
  19. #include <linux/config.h>
  20. #ifdef CONFIG_USB_DEBUG
  21. # define DEBUG
  22. #endif
  23. #include <linux/module.h>
  24. #include <linux/kmod.h>
  25. #include <linux/sched.h>
  26. #include <linux/init.h>
  27. #include <linux/netdevice.h>
  28. #include <linux/etherdevice.h>
  29. #include <linux/ethtool.h>
  30. #include <linux/workqueue.h>
  31. #include <linux/mii.h>
  32. #include <linux/usb.h>
  33. #include "usbnet.h"
  34. /*
  35. * This supports simple USB network links that don't require any special
  36. * framing or hardware control operations. The protocol used here is a
  37. * strict subset of CDC Ethernet, with three basic differences reflecting
  38. * the goal that almost any hardware should run it:
  39. *
  40. * - Minimal runtime control: one interface, no altsettings, and
  41. * no vendor or class specific control requests. If a device is
  42. * configured, it is allowed to exchange packets with the host.
  43. * Fancier models would mean not working on some hardware.
  44. *
  45. * - Minimal manufacturing control: no IEEE "Organizationally
  46. * Unique ID" required, or an EEPROMs to store one. Each host uses
  47. * one random "locally assigned" Ethernet address instead, which can
  48. * of course be overridden using standard tools like "ifconfig".
  49. * (With 2^46 such addresses, same-net collisions are quite rare.)
  50. *
  51. * - There is no additional framing data for USB. Packets are written
  52. * exactly as in CDC Ethernet, starting with an Ethernet header and
  53. * terminated by a short packet. However, the host will never send a
  54. * zero length packet; some systems can't handle those robustly.
  55. *
  56. * Anything that can transmit and receive USB bulk packets can implement
  57. * this protocol. That includes both smart peripherals and quite a lot
  58. * of "host-to-host" USB cables (which embed two devices back-to-back).
  59. *
  60. * Note that although Linux may use many of those host-to-host links
  61. * with this "cdc_subset" framing, that doesn't mean there may not be a
  62. * better approach. Handling the "other end unplugs/replugs" scenario
  63. * well tends to require chip-specific vendor requests. Also, Windows
  64. * peers at the other end of host-to-host cables may expect their own
  65. * framing to be used rather than this "cdc_subset" model.
  66. */
  67. #if defined(CONFIG_USB_EPSON2888) || defined(CONFIG_USB_ARMLINUX)
  68. /* PDA style devices are always connected if present */
  69. static int always_connected (struct usbnet *dev)
  70. {
  71. return 0;
  72. }
  73. #endif
  74. #ifdef CONFIG_USB_ALI_M5632
  75. #define HAVE_HARDWARE
  76. /*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
  77. *
  78. * ALi M5632 driver ... does high speed
  79. *
  80. *-------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
  81. static const struct driver_info ali_m5632_info = {
  82. .description = "ALi M5632",
  83. };
  84. #endif
  85. #ifdef CONFIG_USB_AN2720
  86. #define HAVE_HARDWARE
  87. /*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
  88. *
  89. * AnchorChips 2720 driver ... http://www.cypress.com
  90. *
  91. * This doesn't seem to have a way to detect whether the peer is
  92. * connected, or need any reset handshaking. It's got pretty big
  93. * internal buffers (handles most of a frame's worth of data).
  94. * Chip data sheets don't describe any vendor control messages.
  95. *
  96. *-------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
  97. static const struct driver_info an2720_info = {
  98. .description = "AnchorChips/Cypress 2720",
  99. // no reset available!
  100. // no check_connect available!
  101. .in = 2, .out = 2, // direction distinguishes these
  102. };
  103. #endif /* CONFIG_USB_AN2720 */
  104. #ifdef CONFIG_USB_BELKIN
  105. #define HAVE_HARDWARE
  106. /*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
  107. *
  108. * Belkin F5U104 ... two NetChip 2280 devices + Atmel AVR microcontroller
  109. *
  110. * ... also two eTEK designs, including one sold as "Advance USBNET"
  111. *
  112. *-------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
  113. static const struct driver_info belkin_info = {
  114. .description = "Belkin, eTEK, or compatible",
  115. };
  116. #endif /* CONFIG_USB_BELKIN */
  117. #ifdef CONFIG_USB_EPSON2888
  118. #define HAVE_HARDWARE
  119. /*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
  120. *
  121. * EPSON USB clients
  122. *
  123. * This is the same idea as Linux PDAs (below) except the firmware in the
  124. * device might not be Tux-powered. Epson provides reference firmware that
  125. * implements this interface. Product developers can reuse or modify that
  126. * code, such as by using their own product and vendor codes.
  127. *
  128. * Support was from Juro Bystricky <bystricky.juro@erd.epson.com>
  129. *
  130. *-------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
  131. static const struct driver_info epson2888_info = {
  132. .description = "Epson USB Device",
  133. .check_connect = always_connected,
  134. .in = 4, .out = 3,
  135. };
  136. #endif /* CONFIG_USB_EPSON2888 */
  137. #ifdef CONFIG_USB_KC2190
  138. #define HAVE_HARDWARE
  139. static const struct driver_info kc2190_info = {
  140. .description = "KC Technology KC-190",
  141. };
  142. #endif /* CONFIG_USB_KC2190 */
  143. #ifdef CONFIG_USB_ARMLINUX
  144. #define HAVE_HARDWARE
  145. /*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
  146. *
  147. * Intel's SA-1100 chip integrates basic USB support, and is used
  148. * in PDAs like some iPaqs, the Yopy, some Zaurus models, and more.
  149. * When they run Linux, arch/arm/mach-sa1100/usb-eth.c may be used to
  150. * network using minimal USB framing data.
  151. *
  152. * This describes the driver currently in standard ARM Linux kernels.
  153. * The Zaurus uses a different driver (see later).
  154. *
  155. * PXA25x and PXA210 use XScale cores (ARM v5TE) with better USB support
  156. * and different USB endpoint numbering than the SA1100 devices. The
  157. * mach-pxa/usb-eth.c driver re-uses the device ids from mach-sa1100
  158. * so we rely on the endpoint descriptors.
  159. *
  160. *-------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
  161. static const struct driver_info linuxdev_info = {
  162. .description = "Linux Device",
  163. .check_connect = always_connected,
  164. };
  165. static const struct driver_info yopy_info = {
  166. .description = "Yopy",
  167. .check_connect = always_connected,
  168. };
  169. static const struct driver_info blob_info = {
  170. .description = "Boot Loader OBject",
  171. .check_connect = always_connected,
  172. };
  173. #endif /* CONFIG_USB_ARMLINUX */
  174. /*-------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
  175. #ifndef HAVE_HARDWARE
  176. #error You need to configure some hardware for this driver
  177. #endif
  178. /*
  179. * chip vendor names won't normally be on the cables, and
  180. * may not be on the device.
  181. */
  182. static const struct usb_device_id products [] = {
  183. #ifdef CONFIG_USB_ALI_M5632
  184. {
  185. USB_DEVICE (0x0402, 0x5632), // ALi defaults
  186. .driver_info = (unsigned long) &ali_m5632_info,
  187. },
  188. #endif
  189. #ifdef CONFIG_USB_AN2720
  190. {
  191. USB_DEVICE (0x0547, 0x2720), // AnchorChips defaults
  192. .driver_info = (unsigned long) &an2720_info,
  193. }, {
  194. USB_DEVICE (0x0547, 0x2727), // Xircom PGUNET
  195. .driver_info = (unsigned long) &an2720_info,
  196. },
  197. #endif
  198. #ifdef CONFIG_USB_BELKIN
  199. {
  200. USB_DEVICE (0x050d, 0x0004), // Belkin
  201. .driver_info = (unsigned long) &belkin_info,
  202. }, {
  203. USB_DEVICE (0x056c, 0x8100), // eTEK
  204. .driver_info = (unsigned long) &belkin_info,
  205. }, {
  206. USB_DEVICE (0x0525, 0x9901), // Advance USBNET (eTEK)
  207. .driver_info = (unsigned long) &belkin_info,
  208. },
  209. #endif
  210. #ifdef CONFIG_USB_EPSON2888
  211. {
  212. USB_DEVICE (0x0525, 0x2888), // EPSON USB client
  213. .driver_info = (unsigned long) &epson2888_info,
  214. },
  215. #endif
  216. #ifdef CONFIG_USB_KC2190
  217. {
  218. USB_DEVICE (0x050f, 0x0190), // KC-190
  219. .driver_info = (unsigned long) &kc2190_info,
  220. },
  221. #endif
  222. #ifdef CONFIG_USB_ARMLINUX
  223. /*
  224. * SA-1100 using standard ARM Linux kernels, or compatible.
  225. * Often used when talking to Linux PDAs (iPaq, Yopy, etc).
  226. * The sa-1100 "usb-eth" driver handles the basic framing.
  227. *
  228. * PXA25x or PXA210 ... these use a "usb-eth" driver much like
  229. * the sa1100 one, but hardware uses different endpoint numbers.
  230. *
  231. * Or the Linux "Ethernet" gadget on hardware that can't talk
  232. * CDC Ethernet (e.g., no altsettings), in either of two modes:
  233. * - acting just like the old "usb-eth" firmware, though
  234. * the implementation is different
  235. * - supporting RNDIS as the first/default configuration for
  236. * MS-Windows interop; Linux needs to use the other config
  237. */
  238. {
  239. // 1183 = 0x049F, both used as hex values?
  240. // Compaq "Itsy" vendor/product id
  241. USB_DEVICE (0x049F, 0x505A), // usb-eth, or compatible
  242. .driver_info = (unsigned long) &linuxdev_info,
  243. }, {
  244. USB_DEVICE (0x0E7E, 0x1001), // G.Mate "Yopy"
  245. .driver_info = (unsigned long) &yopy_info,
  246. }, {
  247. USB_DEVICE (0x8086, 0x07d3), // "blob" bootloader
  248. .driver_info = (unsigned long) &blob_info,
  249. }, {
  250. // Linux Ethernet/RNDIS gadget on pxa210/25x/26x, second config
  251. // e.g. Gumstix, current OpenZaurus, ...
  252. USB_DEVICE_VER (0x0525, 0xa4a2, 0x0203, 0x0203),
  253. .driver_info = (unsigned long) &linuxdev_info,
  254. },
  255. #endif
  256. { }, // END
  257. };
  258. MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE(usb, products);
  259. /*-------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
  260. static struct usb_driver cdc_subset_driver = {
  261. .owner = THIS_MODULE,
  262. .name = "cdc_subset",
  263. .probe = usbnet_probe,
  264. .suspend = usbnet_suspend,
  265. .resume = usbnet_resume,
  266. .disconnect = usbnet_disconnect,
  267. .id_table = products,
  268. };
  269. static int __init cdc_subset_init(void)
  270. {
  271. return usb_register(&cdc_subset_driver);
  272. }
  273. module_init(cdc_subset_init);
  274. static void __exit cdc_subset_exit(void)
  275. {
  276. usb_deregister(&cdc_subset_driver);
  277. }
  278. module_exit(cdc_subset_exit);
  279. MODULE_AUTHOR("David Brownell");
  280. MODULE_DESCRIPTION("Simple 'CDC Subset' USB networking links");
  281. MODULE_LICENSE("GPL");