xref: /openbmc/linux/drivers/usb/gadget/legacy/Kconfig (revision 62e7ca52)
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#
15
16config USB_ZERO
17	tristate "Gadget Zero (DEVELOPMENT)"
18	select USB_LIBCOMPOSITE
19	select USB_F_SS_LB
20	help
21	  Gadget Zero is a two-configuration device.  It either sinks and
22	  sources bulk data; or it loops back a configurable number of
23	  transfers.  It also implements control requests, for "chapter 9"
24	  conformance.  The driver needs only two bulk-capable endpoints, so
25	  it can work on top of most device-side usb controllers.  It's
26	  useful for testing, and is also a working example showing how
27	  USB "gadget drivers" can be written.
28
29	  Make this be the first driver you try using on top of any new
30	  USB peripheral controller driver.  Then you can use host-side
31	  test software, like the "usbtest" driver, to put your hardware
32	  and its driver through a basic set of functional tests.
33
34	  Gadget Zero also works with the host-side "usb-skeleton" driver,
35	  and with many kinds of host-side test software.  You may need
36	  to tweak product and vendor IDs before host software knows about
37	  this device, and arrange to select an appropriate configuration.
38
39	  Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a
40	  dynamically linked module called "g_zero".
41
42config USB_ZERO_HNPTEST
43	boolean "HNP Test Device"
44	depends on USB_ZERO && USB_OTG
45	help
46	  You can configure this device to enumerate using the device
47	  identifiers of the USB-OTG test device.  That means that when
48	  this gadget connects to another OTG device, with this one using
49	  the "B-Peripheral" role, that device will use HNP to let this
50	  one serve as the USB host instead (in the "B-Host" role).
51
52config USB_AUDIO
53	tristate "Audio Gadget"
54	depends on SND
55	select USB_LIBCOMPOSITE
56	select SND_PCM
57	help
58	  This Gadget Audio driver is compatible with USB Audio Class
59	  specification 2.0. It implements 1 AudioControl interface,
60	  1 AudioStreaming Interface each for USB-OUT and USB-IN.
61	  Number of channels, sample rate and sample size can be
62	  specified as module parameters.
63	  This driver doesn't expect any real Audio codec to be present
64	  on the device - the audio streams are simply sinked to and
65	  sourced from a virtual ALSA sound card created. The user-space
66	  application may choose to do whatever it wants with the data
67	  received from the USB Host and choose to provide whatever it
68	  wants as audio data to the USB Host.
69
70	  Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a
71	  dynamically linked module called "g_audio".
72
73config GADGET_UAC1
74	bool "UAC 1.0 (Legacy)"
75	depends on USB_AUDIO
76	help
77	  If you instead want older UAC Spec-1.0 driver that also has audio
78	  paths hardwired to the Audio codec chip on-board and doesn't work
79	  without one.
80
81config USB_ETH
82	tristate "Ethernet Gadget (with CDC Ethernet support)"
83	depends on NET
84	select USB_LIBCOMPOSITE
85	select USB_U_ETHER
86	select USB_F_ECM
87	select USB_F_SUBSET
88	select CRC32
89	help
90	  This driver implements Ethernet style communication, in one of
91	  several ways:
92
93	   - The "Communication Device Class" (CDC) Ethernet Control Model.
94	     That protocol is often avoided with pure Ethernet adapters, in
95	     favor of simpler vendor-specific hardware, but is widely
96	     supported by firmware for smart network devices.
97
98	   - On hardware can't implement that protocol, a simple CDC subset
99	     is used, placing fewer demands on USB.
100
101	   - CDC Ethernet Emulation Model (EEM) is a newer standard that has
102	     a simpler interface that can be used by more USB hardware.
103
104	  RNDIS support is an additional option, more demanding than than
105	  subset.
106
107	  Within the USB device, this gadget driver exposes a network device
108	  "usbX", where X depends on what other networking devices you have.
109	  Treat it like a two-node Ethernet link:  host, and gadget.
110
111	  The Linux-USB host-side "usbnet" driver interoperates with this
112	  driver, so that deep I/O queues can be supported.  On 2.4 kernels,
113	  use "CDCEther" instead, if you're using the CDC option. That CDC
114	  mode should also interoperate with standard CDC Ethernet class
115	  drivers on other host operating systems.
116
117	  Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a
118	  dynamically linked module called "g_ether".
119
120config USB_ETH_RNDIS
121	bool "RNDIS support"
122	depends on USB_ETH
123	select USB_LIBCOMPOSITE
124	select USB_F_RNDIS
125	default y
126	help
127	   Microsoft Windows XP bundles the "Remote NDIS" (RNDIS) protocol,
128	   and Microsoft provides redistributable binary RNDIS drivers for
129	   older versions of Windows.
130
131	   If you say "y" here, the Ethernet gadget driver will try to provide
132	   a second device configuration, supporting RNDIS to talk to such
133	   Microsoft USB hosts.
134
135	   To make MS-Windows work with this, use Documentation/usb/linux.inf
136	   as the "driver info file".  For versions of MS-Windows older than
137	   XP, you'll need to download drivers from Microsoft's website; a URL
138	   is given in comments found in that info file.
139
140config USB_ETH_EEM
141       bool "Ethernet Emulation Model (EEM) support"
142       depends on USB_ETH
143	select USB_LIBCOMPOSITE
144	select USB_F_EEM
145       default n
146       help
147         CDC EEM is a newer USB standard that is somewhat simpler than CDC ECM
148         and therefore can be supported by more hardware.  Technically ECM and
149         EEM are designed for different applications.  The ECM model extends
150         the network interface to the target (e.g. a USB cable modem), and the
151         EEM model is for mobile devices to communicate with hosts using
152         ethernet over USB.  For Linux gadgets, however, the interface with
153         the host is the same (a usbX device), so the differences are minimal.
154
155         If you say "y" here, the Ethernet gadget driver will use the EEM
156         protocol rather than ECM.  If unsure, say "n".
157
158config USB_G_NCM
159	tristate "Network Control Model (NCM) support"
160	depends on NET
161	select USB_LIBCOMPOSITE
162	select USB_U_ETHER
163	select USB_F_NCM
164	select CRC32
165	help
166	  This driver implements USB CDC NCM subclass standard. NCM is
167	  an advanced protocol for Ethernet encapsulation, allows grouping
168	  of several ethernet frames into one USB transfer and different
169	  alignment possibilities.
170
171	  Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a
172	  dynamically linked module called "g_ncm".
173
174config USB_GADGETFS
175	tristate "Gadget Filesystem"
176	help
177	  This driver provides a filesystem based API that lets user mode
178	  programs implement a single-configuration USB device, including
179	  endpoint I/O and control requests that don't relate to enumeration.
180	  All endpoints, transfer speeds, and transfer types supported by
181	  the hardware are available, through read() and write() calls.
182
183	  Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a
184	  dynamically linked module called "gadgetfs".
185
186config USB_FUNCTIONFS
187	tristate "Function Filesystem"
188	select USB_LIBCOMPOSITE
189	select USB_F_FS
190	select USB_FUNCTIONFS_GENERIC if !(USB_FUNCTIONFS_ETH || USB_FUNCTIONFS_RNDIS)
191	help
192	  The Function Filesystem (FunctionFS) lets one create USB
193	  composite functions in user space in the same way GadgetFS
194	  lets one create USB gadgets in user space.  This allows creation
195	  of composite gadgets such that some of the functions are
196	  implemented in kernel space (for instance Ethernet, serial or
197	  mass storage) and other are implemented in user space.
198
199	  If you say "y" or "m" here you will be able what kind of
200	  configurations the gadget will provide.
201
202	  Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build
203	  a dynamically linked module called "g_ffs".
204
205config USB_FUNCTIONFS_ETH
206	bool "Include configuration with CDC ECM (Ethernet)"
207	depends on USB_FUNCTIONFS && NET
208	select USB_U_ETHER
209	select USB_F_ECM
210	select USB_F_SUBSET
211	help
212	  Include a configuration with CDC ECM function (Ethernet) and the
213	  Function Filesystem.
214
215config USB_FUNCTIONFS_RNDIS
216	bool "Include configuration with RNDIS (Ethernet)"
217	depends on USB_FUNCTIONFS && NET
218	select USB_U_ETHER
219	select USB_F_RNDIS
220	help
221	  Include a configuration with RNDIS function (Ethernet) and the Filesystem.
222
223config USB_FUNCTIONFS_GENERIC
224	bool "Include 'pure' configuration"
225	depends on USB_FUNCTIONFS
226	help
227	  Include a configuration with the Function Filesystem alone with
228	  no Ethernet interface.
229
230config USB_MASS_STORAGE
231	tristate "Mass Storage Gadget"
232	depends on BLOCK
233	select USB_LIBCOMPOSITE
234	select USB_F_MASS_STORAGE
235	help
236	  The Mass Storage Gadget acts as a USB Mass Storage disk drive.
237	  As its storage repository it can use a regular file or a block
238	  device (in much the same way as the "loop" device driver),
239	  specified as a module parameter or sysfs option.
240
241	  This driver is a replacement for now removed File-backed
242	  Storage Gadget (g_file_storage).
243
244	  Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build
245	  a dynamically linked module called "g_mass_storage".
246
247config USB_GADGET_TARGET
248	tristate "USB Gadget Target Fabric Module"
249	depends on TARGET_CORE
250	select USB_LIBCOMPOSITE
251	help
252	  This fabric is an USB gadget. Two USB protocols are supported that is
253	  BBB or BOT (Bulk Only Transport) and UAS (USB Attached SCSI). BOT is
254	  advertised on alternative interface 0 (primary) and UAS is on
255	  alternative interface 1. Both protocols can work on USB2.0 and USB3.0.
256	  UAS utilizes the USB 3.0 feature called streams support.
257
258config USB_G_SERIAL
259	tristate "Serial Gadget (with CDC ACM and CDC OBEX support)"
260	depends on TTY
261	select USB_U_SERIAL
262	select USB_F_ACM
263	select USB_F_SERIAL
264	select USB_F_OBEX
265	select USB_LIBCOMPOSITE
266	help
267	  The Serial Gadget talks to the Linux-USB generic serial driver.
268	  This driver supports a CDC-ACM module option, which can be used
269	  to interoperate with MS-Windows hosts or with the Linux-USB
270	  "cdc-acm" driver.
271
272	  This driver also supports a CDC-OBEX option.  You will need a
273	  user space OBEX server talking to /dev/ttyGS*, since the kernel
274	  itself doesn't implement the OBEX protocol.
275
276	  Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a
277	  dynamically linked module called "g_serial".
278
279	  For more information, see Documentation/usb/gadget_serial.txt
280	  which includes instructions and a "driver info file" needed to
281	  make MS-Windows work with CDC ACM.
282
283config USB_MIDI_GADGET
284	tristate "MIDI Gadget"
285	depends on SND
286	select USB_LIBCOMPOSITE
287	select SND_RAWMIDI
288	help
289	  The MIDI Gadget acts as a USB Audio device, with one MIDI
290	  input and one MIDI output. These MIDI jacks appear as
291	  a sound "card" in the ALSA sound system. Other MIDI
292	  connections can then be made on the gadget system, using
293	  ALSA's aconnect utility etc.
294
295	  Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a
296	  dynamically linked module called "g_midi".
297
298config USB_G_PRINTER
299	tristate "Printer Gadget"
300	select USB_LIBCOMPOSITE
301	help
302	  The Printer Gadget channels data between the USB host and a
303	  userspace program driving the print engine. The user space
304	  program reads and writes the device file /dev/g_printer to
305	  receive or send printer data. It can use ioctl calls to
306	  the device file to get or set printer status.
307
308	  Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a
309	  dynamically linked module called "g_printer".
310
311	  For more information, see Documentation/usb/gadget_printer.txt
312	  which includes sample code for accessing the device file.
313
314if TTY
315
316config USB_CDC_COMPOSITE
317	tristate "CDC Composite Device (Ethernet and ACM)"
318	depends on NET
319	select USB_LIBCOMPOSITE
320	select USB_U_SERIAL
321	select USB_U_ETHER
322	select USB_F_ACM
323	select USB_F_ECM
324	help
325	  This driver provides two functions in one configuration:
326	  a CDC Ethernet (ECM) link, and a CDC ACM (serial port) link.
327
328	  This driver requires four bulk and two interrupt endpoints,
329	  plus the ability to handle altsettings.  Not all peripheral
330	  controllers are that capable.
331
332	  Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a
333	  dynamically linked module.
334
335config USB_G_NOKIA
336	tristate "Nokia composite gadget"
337	depends on PHONET
338	select USB_LIBCOMPOSITE
339	select USB_U_SERIAL
340	select USB_U_ETHER
341	select USB_F_ACM
342	select USB_F_OBEX
343	select USB_F_PHONET
344	select USB_F_ECM
345	help
346	  The Nokia composite gadget provides support for acm, obex
347	  and phonet in only one composite gadget driver.
348
349	  It's only really useful for N900 hardware. If you're building
350	  a kernel for N900, say Y or M here. If unsure, say N.
351
352config USB_G_ACM_MS
353	tristate "CDC Composite Device (ACM and mass storage)"
354	depends on BLOCK
355	select USB_LIBCOMPOSITE
356	select USB_U_SERIAL
357	select USB_F_ACM
358	select USB_F_MASS_STORAGE
359	help
360	  This driver provides two functions in one configuration:
361	  a mass storage, and a CDC ACM (serial port) link.
362
363	  Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a
364	  dynamically linked module called "g_acm_ms".
365
366config USB_G_MULTI
367	tristate "Multifunction Composite Gadget"
368	depends on BLOCK && NET
369	select USB_G_MULTI_CDC if !USB_G_MULTI_RNDIS
370	select USB_LIBCOMPOSITE
371	select USB_U_SERIAL
372	select USB_U_ETHER
373	select USB_F_ACM
374	select USB_F_MASS_STORAGE
375	help
376	  The Multifunction Composite Gadget provides Ethernet (RNDIS
377	  and/or CDC Ethernet), mass storage and ACM serial link
378	  interfaces.
379
380	  You will be asked to choose which of the two configurations is
381	  to be available in the gadget.  At least one configuration must
382	  be chosen to make the gadget usable.  Selecting more than one
383	  configuration will prevent Windows from automatically detecting
384	  the gadget as a composite gadget, so an INF file will be needed to
385	  use the gadget.
386
387	  Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a
388	  dynamically linked module called "g_multi".
389
390config USB_G_MULTI_RNDIS
391	bool "RNDIS + CDC Serial + Storage configuration"
392	depends on USB_G_MULTI
393	select USB_F_RNDIS
394	default y
395	help
396	  This option enables a configuration with RNDIS, CDC Serial and
397	  Mass Storage functions available in the Multifunction Composite
398	  Gadget.  This is the configuration dedicated for Windows since RNDIS
399	  is Microsoft's protocol.
400
401	  If unsure, say "y".
402
403config USB_G_MULTI_CDC
404	bool "CDC Ethernet + CDC Serial + Storage configuration"
405	depends on USB_G_MULTI
406	default n
407	select USB_F_ECM
408	help
409	  This option enables a configuration with CDC Ethernet (ECM), CDC
410	  Serial and Mass Storage functions available in the Multifunction
411	  Composite Gadget.
412
413	  If unsure, say "y".
414
415endif # TTY
416
417config USB_G_HID
418	tristate "HID Gadget"
419	select USB_LIBCOMPOSITE
420	help
421	  The HID gadget driver provides generic emulation of USB
422	  Human Interface Devices (HID).
423
424	  For more information, see Documentation/usb/gadget_hid.txt which
425	  includes sample code for accessing the device files.
426
427	  Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a
428	  dynamically linked module called "g_hid".
429
430# Standalone / single function gadgets
431config USB_G_DBGP
432	tristate "EHCI Debug Device Gadget"
433	depends on TTY
434	select USB_LIBCOMPOSITE
435	help
436	  This gadget emulates an EHCI Debug device. This is useful when you want
437	  to interact with an EHCI Debug Port.
438
439	  Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a
440	  dynamically linked module called "g_dbgp".
441
442if USB_G_DBGP
443choice
444	prompt "EHCI Debug Device mode"
445	default USB_G_DBGP_SERIAL
446
447config USB_G_DBGP_PRINTK
448	depends on USB_G_DBGP
449	bool "printk"
450	help
451	  Directly printk() received data. No interaction.
452
453config USB_G_DBGP_SERIAL
454	depends on USB_G_DBGP
455	select USB_U_SERIAL
456	bool "serial"
457	help
458	  Userland can interact using /dev/ttyGSxxx.
459endchoice
460endif
461
462# put drivers that need isochronous transfer support (for audio
463# or video class gadget drivers), or specific hardware, here.
464config USB_G_WEBCAM
465	tristate "USB Webcam Gadget"
466	depends on VIDEO_DEV
467	select USB_LIBCOMPOSITE
468	select VIDEOBUF2_VMALLOC
469	help
470	  The Webcam Gadget acts as a composite USB Audio and Video Class
471	  device. It provides a userspace API to process UVC control requests
472	  and stream video data to the host.
473
474	  Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a
475	  dynamically linked module called "g_webcam".
476