diff options
| author | Alan Ott <alan@signal11.us> | 2011-03-19 20:29:44 -0400 |
|---|---|---|
| committer | Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz> | 2011-03-22 06:43:50 -0400 |
| commit | c54ea4918c2b7722d7242ea53271356501988a9b (patch) | |
| tree | e4c7b3c77748eef20e8b844633643cb00d8bc5e2 /Documentation/hid | |
| parent | 99759619b27662d1290901228d77a293e6e83200 (diff) | |
HID: Documentation for hidraw
Documenation for the hidraw driver, with sample program.
Signed-off-by: Alan Ott <alan@signal11.us>
Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/hid')
| -rw-r--r-- | Documentation/hid/hidraw.txt | 119 |
1 files changed, 119 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/hid/hidraw.txt b/Documentation/hid/hidraw.txt new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..029e6cb9a7e --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/hid/hidraw.txt | |||
| @@ -0,0 +1,119 @@ | |||
| 1 | HIDRAW - Raw Access to USB and Bluetooth Human Interface Devices | ||
| 2 | ================================================================== | ||
| 3 | |||
| 4 | The hidraw driver provides a raw interface to USB and Bluetooth Human | ||
| 5 | Interface Devices (HIDs). It differs from hiddev in that reports sent and | ||
| 6 | received are not parsed by the HID parser, but are sent to and received from | ||
| 7 | the device unmodified. | ||
| 8 | |||
| 9 | Hidraw should be used if the userspace application knows exactly how to | ||
| 10 | communicate with the hardware device, and is able to construct the HID | ||
| 11 | reports manually. This is often the case when making userspace drivers for | ||
| 12 | custom HID devices. | ||
| 13 | |||
| 14 | Hidraw is also useful for communicating with non-conformant HID devices | ||
| 15 | which send and receive data in a way that is inconsistent with their report | ||
| 16 | descriptors. Because hiddev parses reports which are sent and received | ||
| 17 | through it, checking them against the device's report descriptor, such | ||
| 18 | communication with these non-conformant devices is impossible using hiddev. | ||
| 19 | Hidraw is the only alternative, short of writing a custom kernel driver, for | ||
| 20 | these non-conformant devices. | ||
| 21 | |||
| 22 | A benefit of hidraw is that its use by userspace applications is independent | ||
| 23 | of the underlying hardware type. Currently, Hidraw is implemented for USB | ||
| 24 | and Bluetooth. In the future, as new hardware bus types are developed which | ||
| 25 | use the HID specification, hidraw will be expanded to add support for these | ||
| 26 | new bus types. | ||
| 27 | |||
| 28 | Hidraw uses a dynamic major number, meaning that udev should be relied on to | ||
| 29 | create hidraw device nodes. Udev will typically create the device nodes | ||
| 30 | directly under /dev (eg: /dev/hidraw0). As this location is distribution- | ||
| 31 | and udev rule-dependent, applications should use libudev to locate hidraw | ||
| 32 | devices attached to the system. There is a tutorial on libudev with a | ||
| 33 | working example at: | ||
| 34 | http://www.signal11.us/oss/udev/ | ||
| 35 | |||
| 36 | The HIDRAW API | ||
| 37 | --------------- | ||
| 38 | |||
| 39 | read() | ||
| 40 | ------- | ||
| 41 | read() will read a queued report received from the HID device. On USB | ||
| 42 | devices, the reports read using read() are the reports sent from the device | ||
| 43 | on the INTERRUPT IN endpoint. By default, read() will block until there is | ||
| 44 | a report available to be read. read() can be made non-blocking, by passing | ||
| 45 | the O_NONBLOCK flag to open(), or by setting the O_NONBLOCK flag using | ||
| 46 | fcntl(). | ||
| 47 | |||
| 48 | On a device which uses numbered reports, the first byte of the returned data | ||
| 49 | will be the report number; the report data follows, beginning in the second | ||
| 50 | byte. For devices which do not use numbered reports, the report data | ||
| 51 | will begin at the first byte. | ||
| 52 | |||
| 53 | write() | ||
| 54 | -------- | ||
| 55 | The write() function will write a report to the device. For USB devices, if | ||
| 56 | the device has an INTERRUPT OUT endpoint, the report will be sent on that | ||
| 57 | endpoint. If it does not, the report will be sent over the control endpoint, | ||
| 58 | using a SET_REPORT transfer. | ||
| 59 | |||
| 60 | The first byte of the buffer passed to write() should be set to the report | ||
| 61 | number. If the device does not use numbered reports, the first byte should | ||
| 62 | be set to 0. The report data itself should begin at the second byte. | ||
| 63 | |||
| 64 | ioctl() | ||
| 65 | -------- | ||
| 66 | Hidraw supports the following ioctls: | ||
| 67 | |||
| 68 | HIDIOCGRDESCSIZE: Get Report Descriptor Size | ||
| 69 | This ioctl will get the size of the device's report descriptor. | ||
| 70 | |||
| 71 | HIDIOCGRDESC: Get Report Descriptor | ||
| 72 | This ioctl returns the device's report descriptor using a | ||
| 73 | hidraw_report_descriptor struct. Make sure to set the size field of the | ||
| 74 | hidraw_report_descriptor struct to the size returned from HIDIOCGRDESCSIZE. | ||
| 75 | |||
| 76 | HIDIOCGRAWINFO: Get Raw Info | ||
| 77 | This ioctl will return a hidraw_devinfo struct containing the bus type, the | ||
| 78 | vendor ID (VID), and product ID (PID) of the device. The bus type can be one | ||
| 79 | of: | ||
| 80 | BUS_USB | ||
| 81 | BUS_HIL | ||
| 82 | BUS_BLUETOOTH | ||
| 83 | BUS_VIRTUAL | ||
| 84 | which are defined in linux/input.h. | ||
| 85 | |||
| 86 | HIDIOCGRAWNAME(len): Get Raw Name | ||
| 87 | This ioctl returns a string containing the vendor and product strings of | ||
| 88 | the device. The returned string is Unicode, UTF-8 encoded. | ||
| 89 | |||
| 90 | HIDIOCGRAWPHYS(len): Get Physical Address | ||
| 91 | This ioctl returns a string representing the physical address of the device. | ||
| 92 | For USB devices, the string contains the physical path to the device (the | ||
| 93 | USB controller, hubs, ports, etc). For Bluetooth devices, the string | ||
| 94 | contains the hardware (MAC) address of the device. | ||
| 95 | |||
| 96 | HIDIOCSFEATURE(len): Send a Feature Report | ||
| 97 | This ioctl will send a feature report to the device. Per the HID | ||
| 98 | specification, feature reports are always sent using the control endpoint. | ||
| 99 | Set the first byte of the supplied buffer to the report number. For devices | ||
| 100 | which do not use numbered reports, set the first byte to 0. The report data | ||
| 101 | begins in the second byte. Make sure to set len accordingly, to one more | ||
| 102 | than the length of the report (to account for the report number). | ||
| 103 | |||
| 104 | HIDIOCGFEATURE(len): Get a Feature Report | ||
| 105 | This ioctl will request a feature report from the device using the control | ||
| 106 | endpoint. The first byte of the supplied buffer should be set to the report | ||
| 107 | number of the requested report. For devices which do not use numbered | ||
| 108 | reports, set the first byte to 0. The report will be returned starting at | ||
| 109 | the first byte of the buffer (ie: the report number is not returned). | ||
| 110 | |||
| 111 | Example | ||
| 112 | --------- | ||
| 113 | In samples/, find hid-example.c, which shows examples of read(), write(), | ||
| 114 | and all the ioctls for hidraw. The code may be used by anyone for any | ||
| 115 | purpose, and can serve as a starting point for developing applications using | ||
| 116 | hidraw. | ||
| 117 | |||
| 118 | Document by: | ||
| 119 | Alan Ott <alan@signal11.us>, Signal 11 Software | ||
