STRUCT USB_REQUEST(9) Kernel Mode Gadget API STRUCT USB_REQUEST(9)NAMEstruct_usb_request - describes one i/o request
SYNOPSIS
struct usb_request {
void * buf;
unsigned length;
dma_addr_t dma;
unsigned no_interrupt:1;
unsigned zero:1;
unsigned short_not_ok:1;
void (* complete) (struct usb_ep *ep,struct usb_request *req);
void * context;
struct list_head list;
int status;
unsigned actual;
};
MEMBERS
buf
Buffer used for data. Always provide this; some controllers only
use PIO, or don´t use DMA for some endpoints.
length
Length of that data
dma
DMA address corresponding to ´buf´. If you don´t set this field,
and the usb controller needs one, it is responsible for mapping and
unmapping the buffer.
no_interrupt
If true, hints that no completion irq is needed. Helpful sometimes
with deep request queues that are handled directly by DMA
controllers.
zero
If true, when writing data, makes the last packet be “short” by
adding a zero length packet as needed;
short_not_ok
When reading data, makes short packets be treated as errors (queue
stops advancing till cleanup).
complete
Function called when request completes, so this request and its
buffer may be re-used. The function will always be called with
interrupts disabled, and it must not sleep. Reads terminate with a
short packet, or when the buffer fills, whichever comes first. When
writes terminate, some data bytes will usually still be in flight
(often in a hardware fifo). Errors (for reads or writes) stop the
queue from advancing until the completion function returns, so that
any transfers invalidated by the error may first be dequeued.
context
For use by the completion callback
list
For use by the gadget driver.
status
Reports completion code, zero or a negative errno. Normally, faults
block the transfer queue from advancing until the completion
callback returns. Code “-ESHUTDOWN” indicates completion caused by
device disconnect, or when the driver disabled the endpoint.
actual
Reports bytes transferred to/from the buffer. For reads (OUT
transfers) this may be less than the requested length. If the
short_not_ok flag is set, short reads are treated as errors even
when status otherwise indicates successful completion. Note that
for writes (IN transfers) some data bytes may still reside in a
device-side FIFO when the request is reported as complete.
DESCRIPTION
These are allocated/freed through the endpoint they´re used with. The
hardware´s driver can add extra per-request data to the memory it
returns, which often avoids separate memory allocations (potential
failures), later when the request is queued.
Request flags affect request handling, such as whether a zero length
packet is written (the “zero” flag), whether a short read should be
treated as an error (blocking request queue advance, the “short_not_ok”
flag), or hinting that an interrupt is not required (the “no_interrupt”
flag, for use with deep request queues).
Bulk endpoints can use any size buffers, and can also be used for
interrupt transfers. interrupt-only endpoints can be much less
functional.
NOTE
this is analagous to ´struct urb´ on the host side, except that it´s
thinner and promotes more pre-allocation.
AUTHOR
David Brownell <dbrownell@users.sourceforge.net>
Author.
COPYRIGHTKernel Hackers Manual 2.6. November 2013 STRUCT USB_REQUEST(9)