On 11/18/2014 01:00 PM, Felipe Balbi wrote: > Hi, > > (fix your mailer, lines should be broken at 80-characters. > Documentation/email-clients.txt has tips) > > On Tue, Nov 18, 2014 at 12:52:11PM -0500, Jorge Ramirez-Ortiz wrote: >> On 11/18/2014 10:17 AM, Felipe Balbi wrote: >>> Hi, >>> >>> On Tue, Nov 18, 2014 at 09:19:36AM -0500, Jorge Ramirez-Ortiz wrote: >>>> Hi Felipe/Greg >>>> >>>> Thanks for your comments on my previous attempt. >>>> I think I addressed them here. >>> no you haven't. Read Documentation/SubmittingPatches, read the mailing >>> list archives and you'll see your basic mistake. >> For this fundamental mistake, could you not just share with me what I >> am missing? >> I don't see anything wrong other than maybe adding more maintainers to >> the DL as per the scripts since the feature itself is self >> explanatory. > Try to save your email from the mailing list and apply it with git am, > it should be very easy to see the problem. > > If you also look at the mailing list archives for other patch > submissions (as I suggested) you'll easily see what your mistake is. thanks, I get it now. > >>> you have no clue what these mean, do you ? How about reading the USB >>> specification of even http://www.beyondlogic.org/usbnutshell/usb1.shtml >> >> Unfortunately I do. >> It was easier to temporarily hack the driver code for a test - while I >> was at it - rather than modifying the host code. >> Since you asked for them, I though you would read the logs and wonder >> where the funny ids where coming from. > why do you even need to hack the host driver for these ? The driver > shows a Printer Class interface and the linux host side driver should > bind to it without any issues. the hack was on the gadget side. the usbhost test code in charge of sending the file to the device had the wrong ids. to save time -since I was modifying the gadget driver code and only for the tests (it is not part of the final patch) - I hacked those ids on the printer.c file. but anyway. lets move on. I removed those, recompiled the usb host code and sent the new traces. > >> That hack above would have given you an answer: so I kind of know what >> the ids are for. honestly. anyway, will send the new logs - it took >> me a while to find and modify the host test code. > Which host test code ? Why don't you just use lpr or even cat file > > /dev/lp0 or something like that ? it is some proprietary code that links libusb -part of a different project: it was useful as it generated some metrics I was interested in. > >>> do you want to debug that and find the culprit since you're already at >>> it ? >> probably: I still need to get used to this process, thanks for bearing >> with me on this. > no problem. > >> I spoke to Ricardo Ribalda three months ago while I was doing this >> stuff. but yes, I might work on this -after I finish with this >> patch!- since I have access to the hardware locally. > cool, that'll help. notice that the original PLX driver was still far from the theoretical 5Gbps target (I was expecting to measure at least 3Gbps and could only get 1Gbps). So 1Gbps should be the target to meet on the kernel.org net2280 - do you agree? > >>>> 3) Patch: >>>> --------- >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> From 9b5ee9330c5c02cf51328c350036c1dac998b732 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 >>>> From: Jorge Ramirez-Ortiz <jorge.ramirez-ortiz@xxxxxxxxxx> >>>> Date: Thu, 25 Sep 2014 16:17:20 -0400 >>>> Subject: [PATCH 2/3] usb: gadget: add USB3 support to the printer driver >>>> >>>> Add SS descriptors to support the capabilities provided by USB3 controller >>>> drivers; unit tests run using a PLX 3380 [max transfer speed measured of 1Gbps] >>>> >>>> This driver shall fallback to lower operating modes when the higher ones are >>>> not available. >>>> >>>> Signed-off-by: Jorge Ramirez-Ortiz <jorge.ramirez-ortiz@xxxxxxxxxx> > hint: > > Everything up until this point will go to commit log. > >>>> --- >>>> drivers/usb/gadget/legacy/printer.c | 65 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++---- >>>> 1 file changed, 59 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) >>>> >>>> diff --git a/drivers/usb/gadget/legacy/printer.c b/drivers/usb/gadget/legacy/printer.c >>>> index 6474081..456730b 100644 >>>> --- a/drivers/usb/gadget/legacy/printer.c >>>> +++ b/drivers/usb/gadget/legacy/printer.c >>>> @@ -208,6 +208,43 @@ static struct usb_descriptor_header *hs_printer_function[] = { >>>> NULL >>>> }; >>>> >>>> +/* >>>> + * Added endpoint descriptors for 3.0 devices >>>> + */ >>>> + >>>> +static struct usb_endpoint_descriptor ss_ep_in_desc = { >>>> + .bLength = USB_DT_ENDPOINT_SIZE, >>>> + .bDescriptorType = USB_DT_ENDPOINT, >>>> + .bmAttributes = USB_ENDPOINT_XFER_BULK, >>>> + .wMaxPacketSize = cpu_to_le16(1024), >>>> +}; >>>> As mentioned above, using the usb338x driver from PLX instead of the net2280 from >>>> kernel.org, the effective file transfer rate increases 1Gbps. >>>> >>> all your tabs have been converted into spaces. Perhaps try: >>> >>> $ git help send-email >>> >>> and figure out how to use that ? >>> >> crap. really sorry about this! > np > it should be fine now. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-usb" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html