1# 2# USB Miscellaneous driver configuration 3# 4comment "USB Miscellaneous drivers" 5 6config USB_EMI62 7 tristate "EMI 6|2m USB Audio interface support" 8 ---help--- 9 This driver loads firmware to Emagic EMI 6|2m low latency USB 10 Audio and Midi interface. 11 12 After firmware load the device is handled with standard linux 13 USB Audio driver. 14 15 This code is also available as a module ( = code which can be 16 inserted in and removed from the running kernel whenever you want). 17 The module will be called audio. If you want to compile it as a 18 module, say M here and read <file:Documentation/kbuild/modules.txt>. 19 20config USB_EMI26 21 tristate "EMI 2|6 USB Audio interface support" 22 ---help--- 23 This driver loads firmware to Emagic EMI 2|6 low latency USB 24 Audio interface. 25 26 After firmware load the device is handled with standard linux 27 USB Audio driver. 28 29 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the 30 module will be called emi26. 31 32config USB_ADUTUX 33 tristate "ADU devices from Ontrak Control Systems" 34 help 35 Say Y if you want to use an ADU device from Ontrak Control 36 Systems. 37 38 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here. The module 39 will be called adutux. 40 41config USB_SEVSEG 42 tristate "USB 7-Segment LED Display" 43 help 44 Say Y here if you have a USB 7-Segment Display by Delcom 45 46 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the 47 module will be called usbsevseg. 48 49config USB_RIO500 50 tristate "USB Diamond Rio500 support" 51 help 52 Say Y here if you want to connect a USB Rio500 mp3 player to your 53 computer's USB port. Please read <file:Documentation/usb/rio.txt> 54 for more information. 55 56 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the 57 module will be called rio500. 58 59config USB_LEGOTOWER 60 tristate "USB Lego Infrared Tower support" 61 help 62 Say Y here if you want to connect a USB Lego Infrared Tower to your 63 computer's USB port. 64 65 This code is also available as a module ( = code which can be 66 inserted in and removed from the running kernel whenever you want). 67 The module will be called legousbtower. If you want to compile it as 68 a module, say M here and read 69 <file:Documentation/kbuild/modules.txt>. 70 71config USB_LCD 72 tristate "USB LCD driver support" 73 help 74 Say Y here if you want to connect an USBLCD to your computer's 75 USB port. The USBLCD is a small USB interface board for 76 alphanumeric LCD modules. See <http://www.usblcd.de/> for more 77 information. 78 79 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the 80 module will be called usblcd. 81 82config USB_CYPRESS_CY7C63 83 tristate "Cypress CY7C63xxx USB driver support" 84 help 85 Say Y here if you want to connect a Cypress CY7C63xxx 86 micro controller to your computer's USB port. Currently this 87 driver supports the pre-programmed devices (incl. firmware) 88 by AK Modul-Bus Computer GmbH. 89 90 Please see: http://www.ak-modul-bus.de/stat/mikrocontroller.html 91 92 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the 93 module will be called cypress_cy7c63. 94 95config USB_CYTHERM 96 tristate "Cypress USB thermometer driver support" 97 help 98 Say Y here if you want to connect a Cypress USB thermometer 99 device to your computer's USB port. This device is also known 100 as the Cypress USB Starter kit or demo board. The Elektor 101 magazine published a modified version of this device in issue 102 #291. 103 104 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the 105 module will be called cytherm. 106 107config USB_IDMOUSE 108 tristate "Siemens ID USB Mouse Fingerprint sensor support" 109 help 110 Say Y here if you want to use the fingerprint sensor on 111 the Siemens ID Mouse. There is also a Siemens ID Mouse 112 _Professional_, which has not been tested with this driver, 113 but uses the same sensor and may therefore work. 114 115 This driver creates an entry "/dev/idmouseX" or "/dev/usb/idmouseX", 116 which can be used by, e.g.,"cat /dev/idmouse0 > fingerprint.pnm". 117 118 See also <http://www.fs.tum.de/~echtler/idmouse/>. 119 120config USB_FTDI_ELAN 121 tristate "Elan PCMCIA CardBus Adapter USB Client" 122 help 123 ELAN's Uxxx series of adapters are USB to PCMCIA CardBus adapters. 124 Currently only the U132 adapter is available. 125 126 The U132 is specifically designed for CardBus PC cards that contain 127 an OHCI host controller. Typical PC cards are the Orange Mobile 3G 128 Option GlobeTrotter Fusion card. The U132 adapter will *NOT* work 129 with PC cards that do not contain an OHCI controller. To use a U132 130 adapter you will need this "ftdi-elan" module as well as the "u132-hcd" 131 module which is a USB host controller driver that talks to the OHCI 132 controller within CardBus card that are inserted in the U132 adapter. 133 134 This driver has been tested with a CardBus OHCI USB adapter, and 135 worked with a USB PEN Drive inserted into the first USB port of 136 the PCCARD. A rather pointless thing to do, but useful for testing. 137 138 See also the USB_U132_HCD entry "Elan U132 Adapter Host Controller" 139 140 It is safe to say M here. 141 142config USB_APPLEDISPLAY 143 tristate "Apple Cinema Display support" 144 select BACKLIGHT_LCD_SUPPORT 145 select BACKLIGHT_CLASS_DEVICE 146 help 147 Say Y here if you want to control the backlight of Apple Cinema 148 Displays over USB. This driver provides a sysfs interface. 149 150source "drivers/usb/misc/sisusbvga/Kconfig" 151 152config USB_LD 153 tristate "USB LD driver" 154 help 155 This driver is for generic USB devices that use interrupt transfers, 156 like LD Didactic's USB devices. 157 158 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the 159 module will be called ldusb. 160 161config USB_TRANCEVIBRATOR 162 tristate "PlayStation 2 Trance Vibrator driver support" 163 help 164 Say Y here if you want to connect a PlayStation 2 Trance Vibrator 165 device to your computer's USB port. 166 167 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the 168 module will be called trancevibrator. 169 170config USB_IOWARRIOR 171 tristate "IO Warrior driver support" 172 help 173 Say Y here if you want to support the IO Warrior devices from Code 174 Mercenaries. This includes support for the following devices: 175 IO Warrior 40 176 IO Warrior 24 177 IO Warrior 56 178 IO Warrior 24 Power Vampire 179 180 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the 181 module will be called iowarrior. 182 183config USB_TEST 184 tristate "USB testing driver" 185 help 186 This driver is for testing host controller software. It is used 187 with specialized device firmware for regression and stress testing, 188 to help prevent problems from cropping up with "real" drivers. 189 190 See <http://www.linux-usb.org/usbtest/> for more information, 191 including sample test device firmware and "how to use it". 192 193config USB_EHSET_TEST_FIXTURE 194 tristate "USB EHSET Test Fixture driver" 195 help 196 Say Y here if you want to support the special test fixture device 197 used for the USB-IF Embedded Host High-Speed Electrical Test procedure. 198 199 When the test fixture is connected, it can enumerate as one of several 200 VID/PID pairs. This driver then initiates a corresponding test mode on 201 the downstream port to which the test fixture is attached. 202 203 See <http://www.usb.org/developers/onthego/EHSET_v1.01.pdf> for more 204 information. 205 206config USB_ISIGHTFW 207 tristate "iSight firmware loading support" 208 select FW_LOADER 209 help 210 This driver loads firmware for USB Apple iSight cameras, allowing 211 them to be driven by the USB video class driver available at 212 http://linux-uvc.berlios.de 213 214 The firmware for this driver must be extracted from the MacOS 215 driver beforehand. Tools for doing so are available at 216 http://bersace03.free.fr 217 218config USB_YUREX 219 tristate "USB YUREX driver support" 220 help 221 Say Y here if you want to connect a YUREX to your computer's 222 USB port. The YUREX is a leg-shakes sensor. See 223 <http://bbu.kayac.com/en/> for further information. 224 This driver supports read/write of leg-shakes counter and 225 fasync for the counter update via a device file /dev/yurex*. 226 227 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the 228 module will be called yurex. 229 230config USB_EZUSB_FX2 231 tristate "Functions for loading firmware on EZUSB chips" 232 help 233 Say Y here if you need EZUSB device support. 234 (Cypress FX/FX2/FX2LP microcontrollers) 235 236config USB_HSIC_USB3503 237 tristate "USB3503 HSIC to USB20 Driver" 238 depends on I2C 239 select REGMAP_I2C 240 help 241 This option enables support for SMSC USB3503 HSIC to USB 2.0 Driver. 242 243config USB_HSIC_USB4604 244 tristate "USB4604 HSIC to USB20 Driver" 245 depends on I2C 246 help 247 This option enables support for SMSC USB4604 HSIC to USB 2.0 Driver. 248 249config USB_LINK_LAYER_TEST 250 tristate "USB Link Layer Test driver" 251 help 252 This driver is for generating specific traffic for Super Speed Link 253 Layer Test Device. Say Y only when you want to conduct USB Super Speed 254 Link Layer Test for host controllers. 255 256config USB_CHAOSKEY 257 tristate "ChaosKey random number generator driver support" 258 depends on HW_RANDOM 259 help 260 Say Y here if you want to connect an AltusMetrum ChaosKey or 261 Araneus Alea I to your computer's USB port. These devices 262 are hardware random number generators which hook into the 263 kernel entropy pool to ensure a large supply of entropy for 264 /dev/random and /dev/urandom and also provides direct access 265 via /dev/chaoskeyX 266 267 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the 268 module will be called chaoskey. 269 270config UCSI 271 tristate "USB Type-C Connector System Software Interface driver" 272 depends on ACPI 273 help 274 UCSI driver is meant to be used as a convenience tool for desktop and 275 server systems that are not equipped to handle USB in device mode. It 276 will always select USB host role for the USB Type-C ports on systems 277 that provide UCSI interface. 278 279 USB Type-C Connector System Software Interface (UCSI) is a 280 specification for an interface that allows the Operating System to 281 control the USB Type-C ports on a system. Things the need controlling 282 include the USB Data Role (host or device), and when USB Power 283 Delivery is supported, the Power Role (source or sink). With USB 284 Type-C connectors, when two dual role capable devices are attached 285 together, the data role is selected randomly. Therefore it is 286 important to give the OS a way to select the role. Otherwise the user 287 would have to unplug and replug in order in order to attempt to swap 288 the data and power roles. 289 290 The UCSI specification can be downloaded from: 291 http://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/io/universal-serial-bus/usb-type-c-ucsi-spec.html 292 293 To compile the driver as a module, choose M here: the module will be 294 called ucsi. 295