Hi Greg, On Mon, Oct 07, 2019 at 01:06:33PM +0200, Greg KH wrote: > On Sat, Sep 28, 2019 at 10:49:55PM +0200, Harald Welte wrote: > > It seems that a lot of Linux kernel USB serial device drivers are > > ignoring the CREAD setting of termios.c_cflag. > > You just discovered something that has been broken since the first > usb-serial driver was written, all those years ago :) Amazing and frightening at the same time. I would have expected somebody had built something like a hardware test fixture to test those drivers during all those decades. Something like a "well-known" serial device as the tester, attaching to all the handshake etc. lines of the "device under test" and then running through many of the possible settings from HW to SW flow control, baud rate, parity, number of stop bits, break characters, etc. I have no shortage of projects to work on, but if somebody else was interested to host a physical setup with many different [USB] serial ports and some CI around, I might be tempted to build the actual tester hardware and some test suite software for it. > I did add support for this to the digi driver, as you saw, as the > hardware had support for it. For everything else, they are all just > dumb uarts and do not expose that information to the host computer and I > think everyone just forgot about this option. I am aware that many USB serial adapters are rather "dumb", hence my suggestion to add a related option to the core usb-serial, or even to the core tty/serial layer: If the driver doesn't process CREAD, simply discard the received bytes at this common/shared layer. > Given that you are the first to report it that I can think of, I don't > think very many people use half-duplex protocols with a shared Rx/Tx > (which is crazy anyway...) Every smart card interface [1] on this planet, including every SIM card in every mobile phone uses such a setup: asynchronous half-duplex communication with shared Rx/Tx. Sure, not many people attach something like that to a USB-Serial adapter (as oppose to a USB-CCID reader), but I just wanted to clarify it's not as obscure as one may think. You can actually buy ultra-low-cost SIM card readers built that way. Also, I would assume that RS-485 is still used in lots of technology, including e.g. DMX and industrial control systems. Unless you go for a rather obscure 4-wire RS-485, then you have the same half-duplex operation on shared medium. Please note that USB-RS485 adapters exist, using a variety of USB-serial chipsets. > > Please keep me in Cc of any responses, I'm not subscribed to linux-usb. > > Is there a specific usb-serial driver that you are using that you want > to have this support added to? I'm typically using cp2102 or FTDI based devices, though of course in terms of "market footprint", PL2303 probably beats all of the others. However, as indicated, maybe the "catch-all fall-back" in the core is an easy way to adhere termios rules about CREAD without having to hack up every driver individually? Thanks, Harald [1] well, not every, but most smart cards follow ISO 7816-3, which is what I'm talking about -- - Harald Welte <laforge@xxxxxxxxxxxx> http://laforge.gnumonks.org/ ============================================================================ "Privacy in residential applications is a desirable marketing option." (ETSI EN 300 175-7 Ch. A6)