Well, the problem seems to be that there's no dedicated physical USB 3.0 port on my machine, the physical port act as the one or the other depending on what you connect. All physical ports have the SuperSpeed symbol, but none of them automatically connects to the (internal) USB 3.0 root hub if I connect a USB 2.0 device, so I assume there's some logic that detects whether the connected device is 2.0 or 3.0 and connects it accordingly. Like, when I connect a USB 3.0 storage device, lsusb shows it as connected to the 3.0 bus. So I my guess would be, if I use a dedicated (external) USB 3.0 hub, it would be detected as a 3.0 device and routed to the (internal) 3.0 bus, and thus the devices connected to the external hub would be as well. But, of course, that's just speculation. I might just get a 3.0 hub and try. Ralf Mardorf wrote on 13.10.2019 18:37 (GMT +02:00): > On Sun, 13 Oct 2019 18:19:15 +0200 (CEST), nik@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > >Or, if i connect an external USB 3.0 hub, will it wire external > >devices to the 3.0 internal bus? > > USB 3 is backward compatible. Occasionally I connect an USB 2 Scarlett > 18i20 2nd gen to a GA-B85M-D3H mobo's USB 3 slot of an Arch Linux > machine. This works without issues and allows lower latency, than is > possible with a PCIe slot assembled RME HDSPe AIO on the same machine. > Even if the USB 3 port shouldn't be the best for an audio device on > your machine, it at least should sort of work, perhaps causing xruns. > That it doesn't work at all, might be a pointer to an issue of your > computer. > > _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user