diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'kernel/Documentation/hid')
-rw-r--r-- | kernel/Documentation/hid/hid-sensor.txt | 224 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | kernel/Documentation/hid/hid-transport.txt | 317 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | kernel/Documentation/hid/hiddev.txt | 205 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | kernel/Documentation/hid/hidraw.txt | 119 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | kernel/Documentation/hid/uhid.txt | 187 |
5 files changed, 1052 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/kernel/Documentation/hid/hid-sensor.txt b/kernel/Documentation/hid/hid-sensor.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..b287752a3 --- /dev/null +++ b/kernel/Documentation/hid/hid-sensor.txt @@ -0,0 +1,224 @@ + +HID Sensors Framework +====================== +HID sensor framework provides necessary interfaces to implement sensor drivers, +which are connected to a sensor hub. The sensor hub is a HID device and it provides +a report descriptor conforming to HID 1.12 sensor usage tables. + +Description from the HID 1.12 "HID Sensor Usages" specification: +"Standardization of HID usages for sensors would allow (but not require) sensor +hardware vendors to provide a consistent Plug And Play interface at the USB boundary, +thereby enabling some operating systems to incorporate common device drivers that +could be reused between vendors, alleviating any need for the vendors to provide +the drivers themselves." + +This specification describes many usage IDs, which describe the type of sensor +and also the individual data fields. Each sensor can have variable number of +data fields. The length and order is specified in the report descriptor. For +example a part of report descriptor can look like: + + INPUT(1)[INPUT] + .. + Field(2) + Physical(0020.0073) + Usage(1) + 0020.045f + Logical Minimum(-32767) + Logical Maximum(32767) + Report Size(8) + Report Count(1) + Report Offset(16) + Flags(Variable Absolute) +.. +.. + +The report is indicating "sensor page (0x20)" contains an accelerometer-3D (0x73). +This accelerometer-3D has some fields. Here for example field 2 is motion intensity +(0x045f) with a logical minimum value of -32767 and logical maximum of 32767. The +order of fields and length of each field is important as the input event raw +data will use this format. + + +Implementation +================= + +This specification defines many different types of sensors with different sets of +data fields. It is difficult to have a common input event to user space applications, +for different sensors. For example an accelerometer can send X,Y and Z data, whereas +an ambient light sensor can send illumination data. +So the implementation has two parts: +- Core hid driver +- Individual sensor processing part (sensor drivers) + +Core driver +----------- +The core driver registers (hid-sensor-hub) registers as a HID driver. It parses +report descriptors and identifies all the sensors present. It adds an MFD device +with name HID-SENSOR-xxxx (where xxxx is usage id from the specification). +For example +HID-SENSOR-200073 is registered for an Accelerometer 3D driver. +So if any driver with this name is inserted, then the probe routine for that +function will be called. So an accelerometer processing driver can register +with this name and will be probed if there is an accelerometer-3D detected. + +The core driver provides a set of APIs which can be used by the processing +drivers to register and get events for that usage id. Also it provides parsing +functions, which get and set each input/feature/output report. + +Individual sensor processing part (sensor drivers) +----------- +The processing driver will use an interface provided by the core driver to parse +the report and get the indexes of the fields and also can get events. This driver +can use IIO interface to use the standard ABI defined for a type of sensor. + + +Core driver Interface +===================== + +Callback structure: +Each processing driver can use this structure to set some callbacks. + int (*suspend)(..): Callback when HID suspend is received + int (*resume)(..): Callback when HID resume is received + int (*capture_sample)(..): Capture a sample for one of its data fields + int (*send_event)(..): One complete event is received which can have + multiple data fields. + +Registration functions: +int sensor_hub_register_callback(struct hid_sensor_hub_device *hsdev, + u32 usage_id, + struct hid_sensor_hub_callbacks *usage_callback): + +Registers callbacks for an usage id. The callback functions are not allowed +to sleep. + + +int sensor_hub_remove_callback(struct hid_sensor_hub_device *hsdev, + u32 usage_id): + +Removes callbacks for an usage id. + + +Parsing function: +int sensor_hub_input_get_attribute_info(struct hid_sensor_hub_device *hsdev, + u8 type, + u32 usage_id, u32 attr_usage_id, + struct hid_sensor_hub_attribute_info *info); + +A processing driver can look for some field of interest and check if it exists +in a report descriptor. If it exists it will store necessary information +so that fields can be set or get individually. +These indexes avoid searching every time and getting field index to get or set. + + +Set Feature report +int sensor_hub_set_feature(struct hid_sensor_hub_device *hsdev, u32 report_id, + u32 field_index, s32 value); + +This interface is used to set a value for a field in feature report. For example +if there is a field report_interval, which is parsed by a call to +sensor_hub_input_get_attribute_info before, then it can directly set that individual +field. + + +int sensor_hub_get_feature(struct hid_sensor_hub_device *hsdev, u32 report_id, + u32 field_index, s32 *value); + +This interface is used to get a value for a field in input report. For example +if there is a field report_interval, which is parsed by a call to +sensor_hub_input_get_attribute_info before, then it can directly get that individual +field value. + + +int sensor_hub_input_attr_get_raw_value(struct hid_sensor_hub_device *hsdev, + u32 usage_id, + u32 attr_usage_id, u32 report_id); + +This is used to get a particular field value through input reports. For example +accelerometer wants to poll X axis value, then it can call this function with +the usage id of X axis. HID sensors can provide events, so this is not necessary +to poll for any field. If there is some new sample, the core driver will call +registered callback function to process the sample. + + +---------- + +HID Custom and generic Sensors + +HID Sensor specification defines two special sensor usage types. Since they +don't represent a standard sensor, it is not possible to define using Linux IIO +type interfaces. +The purpose of these sensors is to extend the functionality or provide a +way to obfuscate the data being communicated by a sensor. Without knowing the +mapping between the data and its encapsulated form, it is difficult for +an application/driver to determine what data is being communicated by the sensor. +This allows some differentiating use cases, where vendor can provide applications. +Some common use cases are debug other sensors or to provide some events like +keyboard attached/detached or lid open/close. + +To allow application to utilize these sensors, here they are exported uses sysfs +attribute groups, attributes and misc device interface. + +An example of this representation on sysfs: +/sys/devices/pci0000:00/INT33C2:00/i2c-0/i2c-INT33D1:00/0018:8086:09FA.0001/HID-SENSOR-2000e1.6.auto$ tree -R +. +????????? enable_sensor +????????? feature-0-200316 +??????? ????????? feature-0-200316-maximum +??????? ????????? feature-0-200316-minimum +??????? ????????? feature-0-200316-name +??????? ????????? feature-0-200316-size +??????? ????????? feature-0-200316-unit-expo +??????? ????????? feature-0-200316-units +??????? ????????? feature-0-200316-value +????????? feature-1-200201 +??????? ????????? feature-1-200201-maximum +??????? ????????? feature-1-200201-minimum +??????? ????????? feature-1-200201-name +??????? ????????? feature-1-200201-size +??????? ????????? feature-1-200201-unit-expo +??????? ????????? feature-1-200201-units +??????? ????????? feature-1-200201-value +????????? input-0-200201 +??????? ????????? input-0-200201-maximum +??????? ????????? input-0-200201-minimum +??????? ????????? input-0-200201-name +??????? ????????? input-0-200201-size +??????? ????????? input-0-200201-unit-expo +??????? ????????? input-0-200201-units +??????? ????????? input-0-200201-value +????????? input-1-200202 +??????? ????????? input-1-200202-maximum +??????? ????????? input-1-200202-minimum +??????? ????????? input-1-200202-name +??????? ????????? input-1-200202-size +??????? ????????? input-1-200202-unit-expo +??????? ????????? input-1-200202-units +??????? ????????? input-1-200202-value + +Here there is a custom sensors with four fields, two feature and two inputs. +Each field is represented by a set of attributes. All fields except the "value" +are read only. The value field is a RW field. +Example +/sys/bus/platform/devices/HID-SENSOR-2000e1.6.auto/feature-0-200316$ grep -r . * +feature-0-200316-maximum:6 +feature-0-200316-minimum:0 +feature-0-200316-name:property-reporting-state +feature-0-200316-size:1 +feature-0-200316-unit-expo:0 +feature-0-200316-units:25 +feature-0-200316-value:1 + +How to enable such sensor? +By default sensor can be power gated. To enable sysfs attribute "enable" can be +used. +$ echo 1 > enable_sensor + +Once enabled and powered on, sensor can report value using HID reports. +These reports are pushed using misc device interface in a FIFO order. +/dev$ tree | grep HID-SENSOR-2000e1.6.auto +??????? ????????? 10:53 -> ../HID-SENSOR-2000e1.6.auto +????????? HID-SENSOR-2000e1.6.auto + +Each reports can be of variable length preceded by a header. This header +consist of a 32 bit usage id, 64 bit time stamp and 32 bit length field of raw +data. diff --git a/kernel/Documentation/hid/hid-transport.txt b/kernel/Documentation/hid/hid-transport.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..3dcba9fd4 --- /dev/null +++ b/kernel/Documentation/hid/hid-transport.txt @@ -0,0 +1,317 @@ + HID I/O Transport Drivers + =========================== + +The HID subsystem is independent of the underlying transport driver. Initially, +only USB was supported, but other specifications adopted the HID design and +provided new transport drivers. The kernel includes at least support for USB, +Bluetooth, I2C and user-space I/O drivers. + +1) HID Bus +========== + +The HID subsystem is designed as a bus. Any I/O subsystem may provide HID +devices and register them with the HID bus. HID core then loads generic device +drivers on top of it. The transport drivers are responsible of raw data +transport and device setup/management. HID core is responsible of +report-parsing, report interpretation and the user-space API. Device specifics +and quirks are handled by all layers depending on the quirk. + + +-----------+ +-----------+ +-----------+ +-----------+ + | Device #1 | | Device #i | | Device #j | | Device #k | + +-----------+ +-----------+ +-----------+ +-----------+ + \\ // \\ // + +------------+ +------------+ + | I/O Driver | | I/O Driver | + +------------+ +------------+ + || || + +------------------+ +------------------+ + | Transport Driver | | Transport Driver | + +------------------+ +------------------+ + \___ ___/ + \ / + +----------------+ + | HID Core | + +----------------+ + / | | \ + / | | \ + ____________/ | | \_________________ + / | | \ + / | | \ + +----------------+ +-----------+ +------------------+ +------------------+ + | Generic Driver | | MT Driver | | Custom Driver #1 | | Custom Driver #2 | + +----------------+ +-----------+ +------------------+ +------------------+ + +Example Drivers: + I/O: USB, I2C, Bluetooth-l2cap + Transport: USB-HID, I2C-HID, BT-HIDP + +Everything below "HID Core" is simplified in this graph as it is only of +interest to HID device drivers. Transport drivers do not need to know the +specifics. + +1.1) Device Setup +----------------- + +I/O drivers normally provide hotplug detection or device enumeration APIs to the +transport drivers. Transport drivers use this to find any suitable HID device. +They allocate HID device objects and register them with HID core. Transport +drivers are not required to register themselves with HID core. HID core is never +aware of which transport drivers are available and is not interested in it. It +is only interested in devices. + +Transport drivers attach a constant "struct hid_ll_driver" object with each +device. Once a device is registered with HID core, the callbacks provided via +this struct are used by HID core to communicate with the device. + +Transport drivers are responsible of detecting device failures and unplugging. +HID core will operate a device as long as it is registered regardless of any +device failures. Once transport drivers detect unplug or failure events, they +must unregister the device from HID core and HID core will stop using the +provided callbacks. + +1.2) Transport Driver Requirements +---------------------------------- + +The terms "asynchronous" and "synchronous" in this document describe the +transmission behavior regarding acknowledgements. An asynchronous channel must +not perform any synchronous operations like waiting for acknowledgements or +verifications. Generally, HID calls operating on asynchronous channels must be +running in atomic-context just fine. +On the other hand, synchronous channels can be implemented by the transport +driver in whatever way they like. They might just be the same as asynchronous +channels, but they can also provide acknowledgement reports, automatic +retransmission on failure, etc. in a blocking manner. If such functionality is +required on asynchronous channels, a transport-driver must implement that via +its own worker threads. + +HID core requires transport drivers to follow a given design. A Transport +driver must provide two bi-directional I/O channels to each HID device. These +channels must not necessarily be bi-directional in the hardware itself. A +transport driver might just provide 4 uni-directional channels. Or it might +multiplex all four on a single physical channel. However, in this document we +will describe them as two bi-directional channels as they have several +properties in common. + + - Interrupt Channel (intr): The intr channel is used for asynchronous data + reports. No management commands or data acknowledgements are sent on this + channel. Any unrequested incoming or outgoing data report must be sent on + this channel and is never acknowledged by the remote side. Devices usually + send their input events on this channel. Outgoing events are normally + not send via intr, except if high throughput is required. + - Control Channel (ctrl): The ctrl channel is used for synchronous requests and + device management. Unrequested data input events must not be sent on this + channel and are normally ignored. Instead, devices only send management + events or answers to host requests on this channel. + The control-channel is used for direct blocking queries to the device + independent of any events on the intr-channel. + Outgoing reports are usually sent on the ctrl channel via synchronous + SET_REPORT requests. + +Communication between devices and HID core is mostly done via HID reports. A +report can be of one of three types: + + - INPUT Report: Input reports provide data from device to host. This + data may include button events, axis events, battery status or more. This + data is generated by the device and sent to the host with or without + requiring explicit requests. Devices can choose to send data continuously or + only on change. + - OUTPUT Report: Output reports change device states. They are sent from host + to device and may include LED requests, rumble requests or more. Output + reports are never sent from device to host, but a host can retrieve their + current state. + Hosts may choose to send output reports either continuously or only on + change. + - FEATURE Report: Feature reports are used for specific static device features + and never reported spontaneously. A host can read and/or write them to access + data like battery-state or device-settings. + Feature reports are never sent without requests. A host must explicitly set + or retrieve a feature report. This also means, feature reports are never sent + on the intr channel as this channel is asynchronous. + +INPUT and OUTPUT reports can be sent as pure data reports on the intr channel. +For INPUT reports this is the usual operational mode. But for OUTPUT reports, +this is rarely done as OUTPUT reports are normally quite scarce. But devices are +free to make excessive use of asynchronous OUTPUT reports (for instance, custom +HID audio speakers make great use of it). + +Plain reports must not be sent on the ctrl channel, though. Instead, the ctrl +channel provides synchronous GET/SET_REPORT requests. Plain reports are only +allowed on the intr channel and are the only means of data there. + + - GET_REPORT: A GET_REPORT request has a report ID as payload and is sent + from host to device. The device must answer with a data report for the + requested report ID on the ctrl channel as a synchronous acknowledgement. + Only one GET_REPORT request can be pending for each device. This restriction + is enforced by HID core as several transport drivers don't allow multiple + simultaneous GET_REPORT requests. + Note that data reports which are sent as answer to a GET_REPORT request are + not handled as generic device events. That is, if a device does not operate + in continuous data reporting mode, an answer to GET_REPORT does not replace + the raw data report on the intr channel on state change. + GET_REPORT is only used by custom HID device drivers to query device state. + Normally, HID core caches any device state so this request is not necessary + on devices that follow the HID specs except during device initialization to + retrieve the current state. + GET_REPORT requests can be sent for any of the 3 report types and shall + return the current report state of the device. However, OUTPUT reports as + payload may be blocked by the underlying transport driver if the + specification does not allow them. + - SET_REPORT: A SET_REPORT request has a report ID plus data as payload. It is + sent from host to device and a device must update it's current report state + according to the given data. Any of the 3 report types can be used. However, + INPUT reports as payload might be blocked by the underlying transport driver + if the specification does not allow them. + A device must answer with a synchronous acknowledgement. However, HID core + does not require transport drivers to forward this acknowledgement to HID + core. + Same as for GET_REPORT, only one SET_REPORT can be pending at a time. This + restriction is enforced by HID core as some transport drivers do not support + multiple synchronous SET_REPORT requests. + +Other ctrl-channel requests are supported by USB-HID but are not available +(or deprecated) in most other transport level specifications: + + - GET/SET_IDLE: Only used by USB-HID and I2C-HID. + - GET/SET_PROTOCOL: Not used by HID core. + - RESET: Used by I2C-HID, not hooked up in HID core. + - SET_POWER: Used by I2C-HID, not hooked up in HID core. + +2) HID API +========== + +2.1) Initialization +------------------- + +Transport drivers normally use the following procedure to register a new device +with HID core: + + struct hid_device *hid; + int ret; + + hid = hid_allocate_device(); + if (IS_ERR(hid)) { + ret = PTR_ERR(hid); + goto err_<...>; + } + + strlcpy(hid->name, <device-name-src>, 127); + strlcpy(hid->phys, <device-phys-src>, 63); + strlcpy(hid->uniq, <device-uniq-src>, 63); + + hid->ll_driver = &custom_ll_driver; + hid->bus = <device-bus>; + hid->vendor = <device-vendor>; + hid->product = <device-product>; + hid->version = <device-version>; + hid->country = <device-country>; + hid->dev.parent = <pointer-to-parent-device>; + hid->driver_data = <transport-driver-data-field>; + + ret = hid_add_device(hid); + if (ret) + goto err_<...>; + +Once hid_add_device() is entered, HID core might use the callbacks provided in +"custom_ll_driver". Note that fields like "country" can be ignored by underlying +transport-drivers if not supported. + +To unregister a device, use: + + hid_destroy_device(hid); + +Once hid_destroy_device() returns, HID core will no longer make use of any +driver callbacks. + +2.2) hid_ll_driver operations +----------------------------- + +The available HID callbacks are: + - int (*start) (struct hid_device *hdev) + Called from HID device drivers once they want to use the device. Transport + drivers can choose to setup their device in this callback. However, normally + devices are already set up before transport drivers register them to HID core + so this is mostly only used by USB-HID. + + - void (*stop) (struct hid_device *hdev) + Called from HID device drivers once they are done with a device. Transport + drivers can free any buffers and deinitialize the device. But note that + ->start() might be called again if another HID device driver is loaded on the + device. + Transport drivers are free to ignore it and deinitialize devices after they + destroyed them via hid_destroy_device(). + + - int (*open) (struct hid_device *hdev) + Called from HID device drivers once they are interested in data reports. + Usually, while user-space didn't open any input API/etc., device drivers are + not interested in device data and transport drivers can put devices asleep. + However, once ->open() is called, transport drivers must be ready for I/O. + ->open() calls are nested for each client that opens the HID device. + + - void (*close) (struct hid_device *hdev) + Called from HID device drivers after ->open() was called but they are no + longer interested in device reports. (Usually if user-space closed any input + devices of the driver). + Transport drivers can put devices asleep and terminate any I/O of all + ->open() calls have been followed by a ->close() call. However, ->start() may + be called again if the device driver is interested in input reports again. + + - int (*parse) (struct hid_device *hdev) + Called once during device setup after ->start() has been called. Transport + drivers must read the HID report-descriptor from the device and tell HID core + about it via hid_parse_report(). + + - int (*power) (struct hid_device *hdev, int level) + Called by HID core to give PM hints to transport drivers. Usually this is + analogical to the ->open() and ->close() hints and redundant. + + - void (*request) (struct hid_device *hdev, struct hid_report *report, + int reqtype) + Send an HID request on the ctrl channel. "report" contains the report that + should be sent and "reqtype" the request type. Request-type can be + HID_REQ_SET_REPORT or HID_REQ_GET_REPORT. + This callback is optional. If not provided, HID core will assemble a raw + report following the HID specs and send it via the ->raw_request() callback. + The transport driver is free to implement this asynchronously. + + - int (*wait) (struct hid_device *hdev) + Used by HID core before calling ->request() again. A transport driver can use + it to wait for any pending requests to complete if only one request is + allowed at a time. + + - int (*raw_request) (struct hid_device *hdev, unsigned char reportnum, + __u8 *buf, size_t count, unsigned char rtype, + int reqtype) + Same as ->request() but provides the report as raw buffer. This request shall + be synchronous. A transport driver must not use ->wait() to complete such + requests. This request is mandatory and hid core will reject the device if + it is missing. + + - int (*output_report) (struct hid_device *hdev, __u8 *buf, size_t len) + Send raw output report via intr channel. Used by some HID device drivers + which require high throughput for outgoing requests on the intr channel. This + must not cause SET_REPORT calls! This must be implemented as asynchronous + output report on the intr channel! + + - int (*idle) (struct hid_device *hdev, int report, int idle, int reqtype) + Perform SET/GET_IDLE request. Only used by USB-HID, do not implement! + +2.3) Data Path +-------------- + +Transport drivers are responsible of reading data from I/O devices. They must +handle any I/O-related state-tracking themselves. HID core does not implement +protocol handshakes or other management commands which can be required by the +given HID transport specification. + +Every raw data packet read from a device must be fed into HID core via +hid_input_report(). You must specify the channel-type (intr or ctrl) and report +type (input/output/feature). Under normal conditions, only input reports are +provided via this API. + +Responses to GET_REPORT requests via ->request() must also be provided via this +API. Responses to ->raw_request() are synchronous and must be intercepted by the +transport driver and not passed to hid_input_report(). +Acknowledgements to SET_REPORT requests are not of interest to HID core. + +---------------------------------------------------- +Written 2013, David Herrmann <dh.herrmann@gmail.com> diff --git a/kernel/Documentation/hid/hiddev.txt b/kernel/Documentation/hid/hiddev.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..6e8c9f1d2 --- /dev/null +++ b/kernel/Documentation/hid/hiddev.txt @@ -0,0 +1,205 @@ +Care and feeding of your Human Interface Devices + +INTRODUCTION + +In addition to the normal input type HID devices, USB also uses the +human interface device protocols for things that are not really human +interfaces, but have similar sorts of communication needs. The two big +examples for this are power devices (especially uninterruptable power +supplies) and monitor control on higher end monitors. + +To support these disparate requirements, the Linux USB system provides +HID events to two separate interfaces: +* the input subsystem, which converts HID events into normal input +device interfaces (such as keyboard, mouse and joystick) and a +normalised event interface - see Documentation/input/input.txt +* the hiddev interface, which provides fairly raw HID events + +The data flow for a HID event produced by a device is something like +the following : + + usb.c ---> hid-core.c ----> hid-input.c ----> [keyboard/mouse/joystick/event] + | + | + --> hiddev.c ----> POWER / MONITOR CONTROL + +In addition, other subsystems (apart from USB) can potentially feed +events into the input subsystem, but these have no effect on the hid +device interface. + +USING THE HID DEVICE INTERFACE + +The hiddev interface is a char interface using the normal USB major, +with the minor numbers starting at 96 and finishing at 111. Therefore, +you need the following commands: +mknod /dev/usb/hiddev0 c 180 96 +mknod /dev/usb/hiddev1 c 180 97 +mknod /dev/usb/hiddev2 c 180 98 +mknod /dev/usb/hiddev3 c 180 99 +mknod /dev/usb/hiddev4 c 180 100 +mknod /dev/usb/hiddev5 c 180 101 +mknod /dev/usb/hiddev6 c 180 102 +mknod /dev/usb/hiddev7 c 180 103 +mknod /dev/usb/hiddev8 c 180 104 +mknod /dev/usb/hiddev9 c 180 105 +mknod /dev/usb/hiddev10 c 180 106 +mknod /dev/usb/hiddev11 c 180 107 +mknod /dev/usb/hiddev12 c 180 108 +mknod /dev/usb/hiddev13 c 180 109 +mknod /dev/usb/hiddev14 c 180 110 +mknod /dev/usb/hiddev15 c 180 111 + +So you point your hiddev compliant user-space program at the correct +interface for your device, and it all just works. + +Assuming that you have a hiddev compliant user-space program, of +course. If you need to write one, read on. + + +THE HIDDEV API +This description should be read in conjunction with the HID +specification, freely available from http://www.usb.org, and +conveniently linked of http://www.linux-usb.org. + +The hiddev API uses a read() interface, and a set of ioctl() calls. + +HID devices exchange data with the host computer using data +bundles called "reports". Each report is divided into "fields", +each of which can have one or more "usages". In the hid-core, +each one of these usages has a single signed 32 bit value. + +read(): +This is the event interface. When the HID device's state changes, +it performs an interrupt transfer containing a report which contains +the changed value. The hid-core.c module parses the report, and +returns to hiddev.c the individual usages that have changed within +the report. In its basic mode, the hiddev will make these individual +usage changes available to the reader using a struct hiddev_event: + + struct hiddev_event { + unsigned hid; + signed int value; + }; + +containing the HID usage identifier for the status that changed, and +the value that it was changed to. Note that the structure is defined +within <linux/hiddev.h>, along with some other useful #defines and +structures. The HID usage identifier is a composite of the HID usage +page shifted to the 16 high order bits ORed with the usage code. The +behavior of the read() function can be modified using the HIDIOCSFLAG +ioctl() described below. + + +ioctl(): +This is the control interface. There are a number of controls: + +HIDIOCGVERSION - int (read) +Gets the version code out of the hiddev driver. + +HIDIOCAPPLICATION - (none) +This ioctl call returns the HID application usage associated with the +hid device. The third argument to ioctl() specifies which application +index to get. This is useful when the device has more than one +application collection. If the index is invalid (greater or equal to +the number of application collections this device has) the ioctl +returns -1. You can find out beforehand how many application +collections the device has from the num_applications field from the +hiddev_devinfo structure. + +HIDIOCGCOLLECTIONINFO - struct hiddev_collection_info (read/write) +This returns a superset of the information above, providing not only +application collections, but all the collections the device has. It +also returns the level the collection lives in the hierarchy. +The user passes in a hiddev_collection_info struct with the index +field set to the index that should be returned. The ioctl fills in +the other fields. If the index is larger than the last collection +index, the ioctl returns -1 and sets errno to -EINVAL. + +HIDIOCGDEVINFO - struct hiddev_devinfo (read) +Gets a hiddev_devinfo structure which describes the device. + +HIDIOCGSTRING - struct hiddev_string_descriptor (read/write) +Gets a string descriptor from the device. The caller must fill in the +"index" field to indicate which descriptor should be returned. + +HIDIOCINITREPORT - (none) +Instructs the kernel to retrieve all input and feature report values +from the device. At this point, all the usage structures will contain +current values for the device, and will maintain it as the device +changes. Note that the use of this ioctl is unnecessary in general, +since later kernels automatically initialize the reports from the +device at attach time. + +HIDIOCGNAME - string (variable length) +Gets the device name + +HIDIOCGREPORT - struct hiddev_report_info (write) +Instructs the kernel to get a feature or input report from the device, +in order to selectively update the usage structures (in contrast to +INITREPORT). + +HIDIOCSREPORT - struct hiddev_report_info (write) +Instructs the kernel to send a report to the device. This report can +be filled in by the user through HIDIOCSUSAGE calls (below) to fill in +individual usage values in the report before sending the report in full +to the device. + +HIDIOCGREPORTINFO - struct hiddev_report_info (read/write) +Fills in a hiddev_report_info structure for the user. The report is +looked up by type (input, output or feature) and id, so these fields +must be filled in by the user. The ID can be absolute -- the actual +report id as reported by the device -- or relative -- +HID_REPORT_ID_FIRST for the first report, and (HID_REPORT_ID_NEXT | +report_id) for the next report after report_id. Without a-priori +information about report ids, the right way to use this ioctl is to +use the relative IDs above to enumerate the valid IDs. The ioctl +returns non-zero when there is no more next ID. The real report ID is +filled into the returned hiddev_report_info structure. + +HIDIOCGFIELDINFO - struct hiddev_field_info (read/write) +Returns the field information associated with a report in a +hiddev_field_info structure. The user must fill in report_id and +report_type in this structure, as above. The field_index should also +be filled in, which should be a number from 0 and maxfield-1, as +returned from a previous HIDIOCGREPORTINFO call. + +HIDIOCGUCODE - struct hiddev_usage_ref (read/write) +Returns the usage_code in a hiddev_usage_ref structure, given that +given its report type, report id, field index, and index within the +field have already been filled into the structure. + +HIDIOCGUSAGE - struct hiddev_usage_ref (read/write) +Returns the value of a usage in a hiddev_usage_ref structure. The +usage to be retrieved can be specified as above, or the user can +choose to fill in the report_type field and specify the report_id as +HID_REPORT_ID_UNKNOWN. In this case, the hiddev_usage_ref will be +filled in with the report and field information associated with this +usage if it is found. + +HIDIOCSUSAGE - struct hiddev_usage_ref (write) +Sets the value of a usage in an output report. The user fills in +the hiddev_usage_ref structure as above, but additionally fills in +the value field. + +HIDIOGCOLLECTIONINDEX - struct hiddev_usage_ref (write) +Returns the collection index associated with this usage. This +indicates where in the collection hierarchy this usage sits. + +HIDIOCGFLAG - int (read) +HIDIOCSFLAG - int (write) +These operations respectively inspect and replace the mode flags +that influence the read() call above. The flags are as follows: + + HIDDEV_FLAG_UREF - read() calls will now return + struct hiddev_usage_ref instead of struct hiddev_event. + This is a larger structure, but in situations where the + device has more than one usage in its reports with the + same usage code, this mode serves to resolve such + ambiguity. + + HIDDEV_FLAG_REPORT - This flag can only be used in conjunction + with HIDDEV_FLAG_UREF. With this flag set, when the device + sends a report, a struct hiddev_usage_ref will be returned + to read() filled in with the report_type and report_id, but + with field_index set to FIELD_INDEX_NONE. This serves as + additional notification when the device has sent a report. diff --git a/kernel/Documentation/hid/hidraw.txt b/kernel/Documentation/hid/hidraw.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..029e6cb9a --- /dev/null +++ b/kernel/Documentation/hid/hidraw.txt @@ -0,0 +1,119 @@ + HIDRAW - Raw Access to USB and Bluetooth Human Interface Devices + ================================================================== + +The hidraw driver provides a raw interface to USB and Bluetooth Human +Interface Devices (HIDs). It differs from hiddev in that reports sent and +received are not parsed by the HID parser, but are sent to and received from +the device unmodified. + +Hidraw should be used if the userspace application knows exactly how to +communicate with the hardware device, and is able to construct the HID +reports manually. This is often the case when making userspace drivers for +custom HID devices. + +Hidraw is also useful for communicating with non-conformant HID devices +which send and receive data in a way that is inconsistent with their report +descriptors. Because hiddev parses reports which are sent and received +through it, checking them against the device's report descriptor, such +communication with these non-conformant devices is impossible using hiddev. +Hidraw is the only alternative, short of writing a custom kernel driver, for +these non-conformant devices. + +A benefit of hidraw is that its use by userspace applications is independent +of the underlying hardware type. Currently, Hidraw is implemented for USB +and Bluetooth. In the future, as new hardware bus types are developed which +use the HID specification, hidraw will be expanded to add support for these +new bus types. + +Hidraw uses a dynamic major number, meaning that udev should be relied on to +create hidraw device nodes. Udev will typically create the device nodes +directly under /dev (eg: /dev/hidraw0). As this location is distribution- +and udev rule-dependent, applications should use libudev to locate hidraw +devices attached to the system. There is a tutorial on libudev with a +working example at: + http://www.signal11.us/oss/udev/ + +The HIDRAW API +--------------- + +read() +------- +read() will read a queued report received from the HID device. On USB +devices, the reports read using read() are the reports sent from the device +on the INTERRUPT IN endpoint. By default, read() will block until there is +a report available to be read. read() can be made non-blocking, by passing +the O_NONBLOCK flag to open(), or by setting the O_NONBLOCK flag using +fcntl(). + +On a device which uses numbered reports, the first byte of the returned data +will be the report number; the report data follows, beginning in the second +byte. For devices which do not use numbered reports, the report data +will begin at the first byte. + +write() +-------- +The write() function will write a report to the device. For USB devices, if +the device has an INTERRUPT OUT endpoint, the report will be sent on that +endpoint. If it does not, the report will be sent over the control endpoint, +using a SET_REPORT transfer. + +The first byte of the buffer passed to write() should be set to the report +number. If the device does not use numbered reports, the first byte should +be set to 0. The report data itself should begin at the second byte. + +ioctl() +-------- +Hidraw supports the following ioctls: + +HIDIOCGRDESCSIZE: Get Report Descriptor Size +This ioctl will get the size of the device's report descriptor. + +HIDIOCGRDESC: Get Report Descriptor +This ioctl returns the device's report descriptor using a +hidraw_report_descriptor struct. Make sure to set the size field of the +hidraw_report_descriptor struct to the size returned from HIDIOCGRDESCSIZE. + +HIDIOCGRAWINFO: Get Raw Info +This ioctl will return a hidraw_devinfo struct containing the bus type, the +vendor ID (VID), and product ID (PID) of the device. The bus type can be one +of: + BUS_USB + BUS_HIL + BUS_BLUETOOTH + BUS_VIRTUAL +which are defined in linux/input.h. + +HIDIOCGRAWNAME(len): Get Raw Name +This ioctl returns a string containing the vendor and product strings of +the device. The returned string is Unicode, UTF-8 encoded. + +HIDIOCGRAWPHYS(len): Get Physical Address +This ioctl returns a string representing the physical address of the device. +For USB devices, the string contains the physical path to the device (the +USB controller, hubs, ports, etc). For Bluetooth devices, the string +contains the hardware (MAC) address of the device. + +HIDIOCSFEATURE(len): Send a Feature Report +This ioctl will send a feature report to the device. Per the HID +specification, feature reports are always sent using the control endpoint. +Set the first byte of the supplied buffer to the report number. For devices +which do not use numbered reports, set the first byte to 0. The report data +begins in the second byte. Make sure to set len accordingly, to one more +than the length of the report (to account for the report number). + +HIDIOCGFEATURE(len): Get a Feature Report +This ioctl will request a feature report from the device using the control +endpoint. The first byte of the supplied buffer should be set to the report +number of the requested report. For devices which do not use numbered +reports, set the first byte to 0. The report will be returned starting at +the first byte of the buffer (ie: the report number is not returned). + +Example +--------- +In samples/, find hid-example.c, which shows examples of read(), write(), +and all the ioctls for hidraw. The code may be used by anyone for any +purpose, and can serve as a starting point for developing applications using +hidraw. + +Document by: + Alan Ott <alan@signal11.us>, Signal 11 Software diff --git a/kernel/Documentation/hid/uhid.txt b/kernel/Documentation/hid/uhid.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..c8656dd02 --- /dev/null +++ b/kernel/Documentation/hid/uhid.txt @@ -0,0 +1,187 @@ + UHID - User-space I/O driver support for HID subsystem + ======================================================== + +UHID allows user-space to implement HID transport drivers. Please see +hid-transport.txt for an introduction into HID transport drivers. This document +relies heavily on the definitions declared there. + +With UHID, a user-space transport driver can create kernel hid-devices for each +device connected to the user-space controlled bus. The UHID API defines the I/O +events provided from the kernel to user-space and vice versa. + +There is an example user-space application in ./samples/uhid/uhid-example.c + +The UHID API +------------ + +UHID is accessed through a character misc-device. The minor-number is allocated +dynamically so you need to rely on udev (or similar) to create the device node. +This is /dev/uhid by default. + +If a new device is detected by your HID I/O Driver and you want to register this +device with the HID subsystem, then you need to open /dev/uhid once for each +device you want to register. All further communication is done by read()'ing or +write()'ing "struct uhid_event" objects. Non-blocking operations are supported +by setting O_NONBLOCK. + +struct uhid_event { + __u32 type; + union { + struct uhid_create2_req create2; + struct uhid_output_req output; + struct uhid_input2_req input2; + ... + } u; +}; + +The "type" field contains the ID of the event. Depending on the ID different +payloads are sent. You must not split a single event across multiple read()'s or +multiple write()'s. A single event must always be sent as a whole. Furthermore, +only a single event can be sent per read() or write(). Pending data is ignored. +If you want to handle multiple events in a single syscall, then use vectored +I/O with readv()/writev(). +The "type" field defines the payload. For each type, there is a +payload-structure available in the union "u" (except for empty payloads). This +payload contains management and/or device data. + +The first thing you should do is sending an UHID_CREATE2 event. This will +register the device. UHID will respond with an UHID_START event. You can now +start sending data to and reading data from UHID. However, unless UHID sends the +UHID_OPEN event, the internally attached HID Device Driver has no user attached. +That is, you might put your device asleep unless you receive the UHID_OPEN +event. If you receive the UHID_OPEN event, you should start I/O. If the last +user closes the HID device, you will receive an UHID_CLOSE event. This may be +followed by an UHID_OPEN event again and so on. There is no need to perform +reference-counting in user-space. That is, you will never receive multiple +UHID_OPEN events without an UHID_CLOSE event. The HID subsystem performs +ref-counting for you. +You may decide to ignore UHID_OPEN/UHID_CLOSE, though. I/O is allowed even +though the device may have no users. + +If you want to send data on the interrupt channel to the HID subsystem, you send +an HID_INPUT2 event with your raw data payload. If the kernel wants to send data +on the interrupt channel to the device, you will read an UHID_OUTPUT event. +Data requests on the control channel are currently limited to GET_REPORT and +SET_REPORT (no other data reports on the control channel are defined so far). +Those requests are always synchronous. That means, the kernel sends +UHID_GET_REPORT and UHID_SET_REPORT events and requires you to forward them to +the device on the control channel. Once the device responds, you must forward +the response via UHID_GET_REPORT_REPLY and UHID_SET_REPORT_REPLY to the kernel. +The kernel blocks internal driver-execution during such round-trips (times out +after a hard-coded period). + +If your device disconnects, you should send an UHID_DESTROY event. This will +unregister the device. You can now send UHID_CREATE2 again to register a new +device. +If you close() the fd, the device is automatically unregistered and destroyed +internally. + +write() +------- +write() allows you to modify the state of the device and feed input data into +the kernel. The kernel will parse the event immediately and if the event ID is +not supported, it will return -EOPNOTSUPP. If the payload is invalid, then +-EINVAL is returned, otherwise, the amount of data that was read is returned and +the request was handled successfully. O_NONBLOCK does not affect write() as +writes are always handled immediately in a non-blocking fashion. Future requests +might make use of O_NONBLOCK, though. + + UHID_CREATE2: + This creates the internal HID device. No I/O is possible until you send this + event to the kernel. The payload is of type struct uhid_create2_req and + contains information about your device. You can start I/O now. + + UHID_DESTROY: + This destroys the internal HID device. No further I/O will be accepted. There + may still be pending messages that you can receive with read() but no further + UHID_INPUT events can be sent to the kernel. + You can create a new device by sending UHID_CREATE2 again. There is no need to + reopen the character device. + + UHID_INPUT2: + You must send UHID_CREATE2 before sending input to the kernel! This event + contains a data-payload. This is the raw data that you read from your device + on the interrupt channel. The kernel will parse the HID reports. + + UHID_GET_REPORT_REPLY: + If you receive a UHID_GET_REPORT request you must answer with this request. + You must copy the "id" field from the request into the answer. Set the "err" + field to 0 if no error occurred or to EIO if an I/O error occurred. + If "err" is 0 then you should fill the buffer of the answer with the results + of the GET_REPORT request and set "size" correspondingly. + + UHID_SET_REPORT_REPLY: + This is the SET_REPORT equivalent of UHID_GET_REPORT_REPLY. Unlike GET_REPORT, + SET_REPORT never returns a data buffer, therefore, it's sufficient to set the + "id" and "err" fields correctly. + +read() +------ +read() will return a queued output report. No reaction is required to any of +them but you should handle them according to your needs. + + UHID_START: + This is sent when the HID device is started. Consider this as an answer to + UHID_CREATE2. This is always the first event that is sent. Note that this + event might not be available immediately after write(UHID_CREATE2) returns. + Device drivers might required delayed setups. + This event contains a payload of type uhid_start_req. The "dev_flags" field + describes special behaviors of a device. The following flags are defined: + UHID_DEV_NUMBERED_FEATURE_REPORTS: + UHID_DEV_NUMBERED_OUTPUT_REPORTS: + UHID_DEV_NUMBERED_INPUT_REPORTS: + Each of these flags defines whether a given report-type uses numbered + reports. If numbered reports are used for a type, all messages from + the kernel already have the report-number as prefix. Otherwise, no + prefix is added by the kernel. + For messages sent by user-space to the kernel, you must adjust the + prefixes according to these flags. + + UHID_STOP: + This is sent when the HID device is stopped. Consider this as an answer to + UHID_DESTROY. + If you didn't destroy your device via UHID_DESTROY, but the kernel sends an + UHID_STOP event, this should usually be ignored. It means that the kernel + reloaded/changed the device driver loaded on your HID device (or some other + maintenance actions happened). + You can usually ignored any UHID_STOP events safely. + + UHID_OPEN: + This is sent when the HID device is opened. That is, the data that the HID + device provides is read by some other process. You may ignore this event but + it is useful for power-management. As long as you haven't received this event + there is actually no other process that reads your data so there is no need to + send UHID_INPUT2 events to the kernel. + + UHID_CLOSE: + This is sent when there are no more processes which read the HID data. It is + the counterpart of UHID_OPEN and you may as well ignore this event. + + UHID_OUTPUT: + This is sent if the HID device driver wants to send raw data to the I/O + device on the interrupt channel. You should read the payload and forward it to + the device. The payload is of type "struct uhid_data_req". + This may be received even though you haven't received UHID_OPEN, yet. + + UHID_GET_REPORT: + This event is sent if the kernel driver wants to perform a GET_REPORT request + on the control channeld as described in the HID specs. The report-type and + report-number are available in the payload. + The kernel serializes GET_REPORT requests so there will never be two in + parallel. However, if you fail to respond with a UHID_GET_REPORT_REPLY, the + request might silently time out. + Once you read a GET_REPORT request, you shall forward it to the hid device and + remember the "id" field in the payload. Once your hid device responds to the + GET_REPORT (or if it fails), you must send a UHID_GET_REPORT_REPLY to the + kernel with the exact same "id" as in the request. If the request already + timed out, the kernel will ignore the response silently. The "id" field is + never re-used, so conflicts cannot happen. + + UHID_SET_REPORT: + This is the SET_REPORT equivalent of UHID_GET_REPORT. On receipt, you shall + send a SET_REPORT request to your hid device. Once it replies, you must tell + the kernel about it via UHID_SET_REPORT_REPLY. + The same restrictions as for UHID_GET_REPORT apply. + +---------------------------------------------------- +Written 2012, David Herrmann <dh.herrmann@gmail.com> |