1# 2# USB Gadget support on a system involves 3# (a) a peripheral controller, and 4# (b) the gadget driver using it. 5# 6# NOTE: Gadget support ** DOES NOT ** depend on host-side CONFIG_USB !! 7# 8# - Host systems (like PCs) need CONFIG_USB (with "A" jacks). 9# - Peripherals (like PDAs) need CONFIG_USB_GADGET (with "B" jacks). 10# - Some systems have both kinds of controllers. 11# 12# With help from a special transceiver and a "Mini-AB" jack, systems with 13# both kinds of controller can also support "USB On-the-Go" (CONFIG_USB_OTG). 14# 15menu "USB Gadget Support" 16 17config USB_GADGET 18 tristate "Support for USB Gadgets" 19 help 20 USB is a master/slave protocol, organized with one master 21 host (such as a PC) controlling up to 127 peripheral devices. 22 The USB hardware is asymmetric, which makes it easier to set up: 23 you can't connect a "to-the-host" connector to a peripheral. 24 25 Linux can run in the host, or in the peripheral. In both cases 26 you need a low level bus controller driver, and some software 27 talking to it. Peripheral controllers are often discrete silicon, 28 or are integrated with the CPU in a microcontroller. The more 29 familiar host side controllers have names like "EHCI", "OHCI", 30 or "UHCI", and are usually integrated into southbridges on PC 31 motherboards. 32 33 Enable this configuration option if you want to run Linux inside 34 a USB peripheral device. Configure one hardware driver for your 35 peripheral/device side bus controller, and a "gadget driver" for 36 your peripheral protocol. (If you use modular gadget drivers, 37 you may configure more than one.) 38 39 If in doubt, say "N" and don't enable these drivers; most people 40 don't have this kind of hardware (except maybe inside Linux PDAs). 41 42 For more information, see <http://www.linux-usb.org/gadget> and 43 the kernel DocBook documentation for this API. 44 45config USB_GADGET_DEBUG 46 boolean "Debugging messages" 47 depends on USB_GADGET && DEBUG_KERNEL && EXPERIMENTAL 48 help 49 Many controller and gadget drivers will print some debugging 50 messages if you use this option to ask for those messages. 51 52 Avoid enabling these messages, even if you're actively 53 debugging such a driver. Many drivers will emit so many 54 messages that the driver timings are affected, which will 55 either create new failure modes or remove the one you're 56 trying to track down. Never enable these messages for a 57 production build. 58 59config USB_GADGET_DEBUG_FILES 60 boolean "Debugging information files" 61 depends on USB_GADGET && PROC_FS 62 help 63 Some of the drivers in the "gadget" framework can expose 64 debugging information in files such as /proc/driver/udc 65 (for a peripheral controller). The information in these 66 files may help when you're troubleshooting or bringing up a 67 driver on a new board. Enable these files by choosing "Y" 68 here. If in doubt, or to conserve kernel memory, say "N". 69 70config USB_GADGET_SELECTED 71 boolean 72 73# 74# USB Peripheral Controller Support 75# 76choice 77 prompt "USB Peripheral Controller" 78 depends on USB_GADGET 79 help 80 A USB device uses a controller to talk to its host. 81 Systems should have only one such upstream link. 82 Many controller drivers are platform-specific; these 83 often need board-specific hooks. 84 85config USB_GADGET_AMD5536UDC 86 boolean "AMD5536 UDC" 87 depends on PCI 88 select USB_GADGET_DUALSPEED 89 help 90 The AMD5536 UDC is part of the AMD Geode CS5536, an x86 southbridge. 91 It is a USB Highspeed DMA capable USB device controller. Beside ep0 92 it provides 4 IN and 4 OUT endpoints (bulk or interrupt type). 93 The UDC port supports OTG operation, and may be used as a host port 94 if it's not being used to implement peripheral or OTG roles. 95 96 Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a 97 dynamically linked module called "amd5536udc" and force all 98 gadget drivers to also be dynamically linked. 99 100config USB_AMD5536UDC 101 tristate 102 depends on USB_GADGET_AMD5536UDC 103 default USB_GADGET 104 select USB_GADGET_SELECTED 105 106config USB_GADGET_FSL_USB2 107 boolean "Freescale Highspeed USB DR Peripheral Controller" 108 depends on MPC834x || PPC_MPC831x 109 select USB_GADGET_DUALSPEED 110 help 111 Some of Freescale PowerPC processors have a High Speed 112 Dual-Role(DR) USB controller, which supports device mode. 113 114 The number of programmable endpoints is different through 115 SOC revisions. 116 117 Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a 118 dynamically linked module called "fsl_usb2_udc" and force 119 all gadget drivers to also be dynamically linked. 120 121config USB_FSL_USB2 122 tristate 123 depends on USB_GADGET_FSL_USB2 124 default USB_GADGET 125 select USB_GADGET_SELECTED 126 127config USB_GADGET_NET2280 128 boolean "NetChip 228x" 129 depends on PCI 130 select USB_GADGET_DUALSPEED 131 help 132 NetChip 2280 / 2282 is a PCI based USB peripheral controller which 133 supports both full and high speed USB 2.0 data transfers. 134 135 It has six configurable endpoints, as well as endpoint zero 136 (for control transfers) and several endpoints with dedicated 137 functions. 138 139 Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a 140 dynamically linked module called "net2280" and force all 141 gadget drivers to also be dynamically linked. 142 143config USB_NET2280 144 tristate 145 depends on USB_GADGET_NET2280 146 default USB_GADGET 147 select USB_GADGET_SELECTED 148 149config USB_GADGET_PXA2XX 150 boolean "PXA 25x or IXP 4xx" 151 depends on (ARCH_PXA && PXA25x) || ARCH_IXP4XX 152 help 153 Intel's PXA 25x series XScale ARM-5TE processors include 154 an integrated full speed USB 1.1 device controller. The 155 controller in the IXP 4xx series is register-compatible. 156 157 It has fifteen fixed-function endpoints, as well as endpoint 158 zero (for control transfers). 159 160 Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a 161 dynamically linked module called "pxa2xx_udc" and force all 162 gadget drivers to also be dynamically linked. 163 164config USB_PXA2XX 165 tristate 166 depends on USB_GADGET_PXA2XX 167 default USB_GADGET 168 select USB_GADGET_SELECTED 169 170# if there's only one gadget driver, using only two bulk endpoints, 171# don't waste memory for the other endpoints 172config USB_PXA2XX_SMALL 173 depends on USB_GADGET_PXA2XX 174 bool 175 default n if USB_ETH_RNDIS 176 default y if USB_ZERO 177 default y if USB_ETH 178 default y if USB_G_SERIAL 179 180config USB_GADGET_M66592 181 boolean "Renesas M66592 USB Peripheral Controller" 182 select USB_GADGET_DUALSPEED 183 help 184 M66592 is a discrete USB peripheral controller chip that 185 supports both full and high speed USB 2.0 data transfers. 186 It has seven configurable endpoints, and endpoint zero. 187 188 Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a 189 dynamically linked module called "m66592_udc" and force all 190 gadget drivers to also be dynamically linked. 191 192config USB_M66592 193 tristate 194 depends on USB_GADGET_M66592 195 default USB_GADGET 196 select USB_GADGET_SELECTED 197 198config USB_GADGET_GOKU 199 boolean "Toshiba TC86C001 'Goku-S'" 200 depends on PCI 201 help 202 The Toshiba TC86C001 is a PCI device which includes controllers 203 for full speed USB devices, IDE, I2C, SIO, plus a USB host (OHCI). 204 205 The device controller has three configurable (bulk or interrupt) 206 endpoints, plus endpoint zero (for control transfers). 207 208 Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a 209 dynamically linked module called "goku_udc" and to force all 210 gadget drivers to also be dynamically linked. 211 212config USB_GOKU 213 tristate 214 depends on USB_GADGET_GOKU 215 default USB_GADGET 216 select USB_GADGET_SELECTED 217 218 219config USB_GADGET_LH7A40X 220 boolean "LH7A40X" 221 depends on ARCH_LH7A40X 222 help 223 This driver provides USB Device Controller driver for LH7A40x 224 225config USB_LH7A40X 226 tristate 227 depends on USB_GADGET_LH7A40X 228 default USB_GADGET 229 select USB_GADGET_SELECTED 230 231 232config USB_GADGET_OMAP 233 boolean "OMAP USB Device Controller" 234 depends on ARCH_OMAP 235 select ISP1301_OMAP if MACH_OMAP_H2 || MACH_OMAP_H3 236 help 237 Many Texas Instruments OMAP processors have flexible full 238 speed USB device controllers, with support for up to 30 239 endpoints (plus endpoint zero). This driver supports the 240 controller in the OMAP 1611, and should work with controllers 241 in other OMAP processors too, given minor tweaks. 242 243 Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a 244 dynamically linked module called "omap_udc" and force all 245 gadget drivers to also be dynamically linked. 246 247config USB_OMAP 248 tristate 249 depends on USB_GADGET_OMAP 250 default USB_GADGET 251 select USB_GADGET_SELECTED 252 253config USB_OTG 254 boolean "OTG Support" 255 depends on USB_GADGET_OMAP && ARCH_OMAP_OTG && USB_OHCI_HCD 256 help 257 The most notable feature of USB OTG is support for a 258 "Dual-Role" device, which can act as either a device 259 or a host. The initial role choice can be changed 260 later, when two dual-role devices talk to each other. 261 262 Select this only if your OMAP board has a Mini-AB connector. 263 264config USB_GADGET_S3C2410 265 boolean "S3C2410 USB Device Controller" 266 depends on ARCH_S3C2410 267 help 268 Samsung's S3C2410 is an ARM-4 processor with an integrated 269 full speed USB 1.1 device controller. It has 4 configurable 270 endpoints, as well as endpoint zero (for control transfers). 271 272 This driver has been tested on the S3C2410, S3C2412, and 273 S3C2440 processors. 274 275config USB_S3C2410 276 tristate 277 depends on USB_GADGET_S3C2410 278 default USB_GADGET 279 select USB_GADGET_SELECTED 280 281config USB_S3C2410_DEBUG 282 boolean "S3C2410 udc debug messages" 283 depends on USB_GADGET_S3C2410 284 285config USB_GADGET_AT91 286 boolean "AT91 USB Device Port" 287 depends on ARCH_AT91 && !ARCH_AT91SAM9RL 288 select USB_GADGET_SELECTED 289 help 290 Many Atmel AT91 processors (such as the AT91RM2000) have a 291 full speed USB Device Port with support for five configurable 292 endpoints (plus endpoint zero). 293 294 Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a 295 dynamically linked module called "at91_udc" and force all 296 gadget drivers to also be dynamically linked. 297 298config USB_AT91 299 tristate 300 depends on USB_GADGET_AT91 301 default USB_GADGET 302 303config USB_GADGET_DUMMY_HCD 304 boolean "Dummy HCD (DEVELOPMENT)" 305 depends on (USB=y || (USB=m && USB_GADGET=m)) && EXPERIMENTAL 306 select USB_GADGET_DUALSPEED 307 help 308 This host controller driver emulates USB, looping all data transfer 309 requests back to a USB "gadget driver" in the same host. The host 310 side is the master; the gadget side is the slave. Gadget drivers 311 can be high, full, or low speed; and they have access to endpoints 312 like those from NET2280, PXA2xx, or SA1100 hardware. 313 314 This may help in some stages of creating a driver to embed in a 315 Linux device, since it lets you debug several parts of the gadget 316 driver without its hardware or drivers being involved. 317 318 Since such a gadget side driver needs to interoperate with a host 319 side Linux-USB device driver, this may help to debug both sides 320 of a USB protocol stack. 321 322 Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a 323 dynamically linked module called "dummy_hcd" and force all 324 gadget drivers to also be dynamically linked. 325 326config USB_DUMMY_HCD 327 tristate 328 depends on USB_GADGET_DUMMY_HCD 329 default USB_GADGET 330 select USB_GADGET_SELECTED 331 332# NOTE: Please keep dummy_hcd LAST so that "real hardware" appears 333# first and will be selected by default. 334 335endchoice 336 337config USB_GADGET_DUALSPEED 338 bool 339 depends on USB_GADGET 340 default n 341 help 342 Means that gadget drivers should include extra descriptors 343 and code to handle dual-speed controllers. 344 345# 346# USB Gadget Drivers 347# 348choice 349 tristate "USB Gadget Drivers" 350 depends on USB_GADGET && USB_GADGET_SELECTED 351 default USB_ETH 352 help 353 A Linux "Gadget Driver" talks to the USB Peripheral Controller 354 driver through the abstract "gadget" API. Some other operating 355 systems call these "client" drivers, of which "class drivers" 356 are a subset (implementing a USB device class specification). 357 A gadget driver implements one or more USB functions using 358 the peripheral hardware. 359 360 Gadget drivers are hardware-neutral, or "platform independent", 361 except that they sometimes must understand quirks or limitations 362 of the particular controllers they work with. For example, when 363 a controller doesn't support alternate configurations or provide 364 enough of the right types of endpoints, the gadget driver might 365 not be able work with that controller, or might need to implement 366 a less common variant of a device class protocol. 367 368# this first set of drivers all depend on bulk-capable hardware. 369 370config USB_ZERO 371 tristate "Gadget Zero (DEVELOPMENT)" 372 depends on EXPERIMENTAL 373 help 374 Gadget Zero is a two-configuration device. It either sinks and 375 sources bulk data; or it loops back a configurable number of 376 transfers. It also implements control requests, for "chapter 9" 377 conformance. The driver needs only two bulk-capable endpoints, so 378 it can work on top of most device-side usb controllers. It's 379 useful for testing, and is also a working example showing how 380 USB "gadget drivers" can be written. 381 382 Make this be the first driver you try using on top of any new 383 USB peripheral controller driver. Then you can use host-side 384 test software, like the "usbtest" driver, to put your hardware 385 and its driver through a basic set of functional tests. 386 387 Gadget Zero also works with the host-side "usb-skeleton" driver, 388 and with many kinds of host-side test software. You may need 389 to tweak product and vendor IDs before host software knows about 390 this device, and arrange to select an appropriate configuration. 391 392 Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a 393 dynamically linked module called "g_zero". 394 395config USB_ZERO_HNPTEST 396 boolean "HNP Test Device" 397 depends on USB_ZERO && USB_OTG 398 help 399 You can configure this device to enumerate using the device 400 identifiers of the USB-OTG test device. That means that when 401 this gadget connects to another OTG device, with this one using 402 the "B-Peripheral" role, that device will use HNP to let this 403 one serve as the USB host instead (in the "B-Host" role). 404 405config USB_ETH 406 tristate "Ethernet Gadget (with CDC Ethernet support)" 407 depends on NET 408 help 409 This driver implements Ethernet style communication, in either 410 of two ways: 411 412 - The "Communication Device Class" (CDC) Ethernet Control Model. 413 That protocol is often avoided with pure Ethernet adapters, in 414 favor of simpler vendor-specific hardware, but is widely 415 supported by firmware for smart network devices. 416 417 - On hardware can't implement that protocol, a simple CDC subset 418 is used, placing fewer demands on USB. 419 420 RNDIS support is a third option, more demanding than that subset. 421 422 Within the USB device, this gadget driver exposes a network device 423 "usbX", where X depends on what other networking devices you have. 424 Treat it like a two-node Ethernet link: host, and gadget. 425 426 The Linux-USB host-side "usbnet" driver interoperates with this 427 driver, so that deep I/O queues can be supported. On 2.4 kernels, 428 use "CDCEther" instead, if you're using the CDC option. That CDC 429 mode should also interoperate with standard CDC Ethernet class 430 drivers on other host operating systems. 431 432 Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a 433 dynamically linked module called "g_ether". 434 435config USB_ETH_RNDIS 436 bool "RNDIS support (EXPERIMENTAL)" 437 depends on USB_ETH && EXPERIMENTAL 438 default y 439 help 440 Microsoft Windows XP bundles the "Remote NDIS" (RNDIS) protocol, 441 and Microsoft provides redistributable binary RNDIS drivers for 442 older versions of Windows. 443 444 If you say "y" here, the Ethernet gadget driver will try to provide 445 a second device configuration, supporting RNDIS to talk to such 446 Microsoft USB hosts. 447 448 To make MS-Windows work with this, use Documentation/usb/linux.inf 449 as the "driver info file". For versions of MS-Windows older than 450 XP, you'll need to download drivers from Microsoft's website; a URL 451 is given in comments found in that info file. 452 453config USB_GADGETFS 454 tristate "Gadget Filesystem (EXPERIMENTAL)" 455 depends on EXPERIMENTAL 456 help 457 This driver provides a filesystem based API that lets user mode 458 programs implement a single-configuration USB device, including 459 endpoint I/O and control requests that don't relate to enumeration. 460 All endpoints, transfer speeds, and transfer types supported by 461 the hardware are available, through read() and write() calls. 462 463 Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a 464 dynamically linked module called "gadgetfs". 465 466config USB_FILE_STORAGE 467 tristate "File-backed Storage Gadget" 468 depends on BLOCK 469 help 470 The File-backed Storage Gadget acts as a USB Mass Storage 471 disk drive. As its storage repository it can use a regular 472 file or a block device (in much the same way as the "loop" 473 device driver), specified as a module parameter. 474 475 Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a 476 dynamically linked module called "g_file_storage". 477 478config USB_FILE_STORAGE_TEST 479 bool "File-backed Storage Gadget testing version" 480 depends on USB_FILE_STORAGE 481 default n 482 help 483 Say "y" to generate the larger testing version of the 484 File-backed Storage Gadget, useful for probing the 485 behavior of USB Mass Storage hosts. Not needed for 486 normal operation. 487 488config USB_G_SERIAL 489 tristate "Serial Gadget (with CDC ACM support)" 490 help 491 The Serial Gadget talks to the Linux-USB generic serial driver. 492 This driver supports a CDC-ACM module option, which can be used 493 to interoperate with MS-Windows hosts or with the Linux-USB 494 "cdc-acm" driver. 495 496 Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a 497 dynamically linked module called "g_serial". 498 499 For more information, see Documentation/usb/gadget_serial.txt 500 which includes instructions and a "driver info file" needed to 501 make MS-Windows work with this driver. 502 503config USB_MIDI_GADGET 504 tristate "MIDI Gadget (EXPERIMENTAL)" 505 depends on SND && EXPERIMENTAL 506 select SND_RAWMIDI 507 help 508 The MIDI Gadget acts as a USB Audio device, with one MIDI 509 input and one MIDI output. These MIDI jacks appear as 510 a sound "card" in the ALSA sound system. Other MIDI 511 connections can then be made on the gadget system, using 512 ALSA's aconnect utility etc. 513 514 Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a 515 dynamically linked module called "g_midi". 516 517 518# put drivers that need isochronous transfer support (for audio 519# or video class gadget drivers), or specific hardware, here. 520 521# - none yet 522 523endchoice 524 525endmenu 526