Hello usb driver list

I want to port linux usb driver to a platform where non PCI host controller
exist.

Are there any guidelines/documents about how to port driver to such platform
?

Is it possible to take off the pci related stuff from the driver ?

Thanks.

Regards
Vivek

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Alan Stern
Sent: Monday, September 12, 2005 7:45 AM
To: Robert Marquardt
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Linux-usb-users] Possible bug with Linux USB driver stack

On Mon, 12 Sep 2005, Robert Marquardt wrote:

> Alan Stern wrote:
> 
> >>Simply by testing with a clean device which presents a high power 
> >>configuration followed by a low power configuration.
> > 
> > You made a long speech here, but you didn't answer my question.  How 
> > do you know which strategy Windows uses?  Did somebody at Microsoft tell
you?
> 
> Which word of the above is ambiguous?

None of it is ambiguous; I didn't say it was.  I said that it didn't answer
my question.  And it doesn't: Testing can reveal what Windows will do in a
few specific cases, but it can't tell you what the underlying strategy is.

>  And yes Microsoft has said that
> Windows only ever uses the first configuration.

Can you recall a URL or any other indication of where I can verify that?

> > The patch I pointed out to you contains exactly such a bugfix!  Why 
> > haven't you tried using it?
> 
> Currently i simply have no time to check it.
> I also do not want a fix only for me. My goal is a fixed kernel.

The Linux development process works like this: Someone points out a bug or
problem.  A fix is devised and -- this is the important part -- tested to
see if it works.

Only you can test the patch to see if it fixes your problem.  I can't do it,
since I don't have your hardware.  If the patch doesn't work, then clearly
it won't get into future kernels.  If it does work, we can proceed from
there.  Even if it doesn't get adopted in its current form, maybe a revised
version will be suitable and will get into the kernel.

In other words, the ball is in your court.  No further progress will happen
until you try out the patch.  Not having any time available is an
understandable bottleneck; it happens to me often.  Just remember that until
you do have time, there's no point complaining about this deficiency in
Linux.

Alan Stern



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