On Tue, 6 Apr 2021, Programmingkid wrote:
On Apr 6, 2021, at 10:01 AM, Howard Spoelstra <hsp.c...@gmail.com> wrote:
On Tue, Apr 6, 2021 at 3:44 PM Programmingkid <programmingk...@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi Gerd,
I was wondering if you had access to a Mac OS 10 or Mac OS 11 machine to test
USB support. I am on Mac OS 11.1 and cannot make USB devices work with any of
my guests. So far these are the guests I have tested with:
- Windows 7
- Mac OS 9.2
- Windows 2000
I have tried using USB flash drives, USB sound cards, and an USB headset. They
all show up under 'info usb', but cannot be used in the guest. My setup does
use a USB-C hub so I'm not sure if this is a bug with QEMU or an issue with the
hub. Would you have any information on this issue?
Hi John,
As far as the Mac OS 9.2 guest is concerned on a mac OS host, it does
not support USB 2.0. I was successful only in passing through a USB
flash drive that was forced into USB 1.1 mode by connecting it to a
real USB 1.1 hub and unloading the kext it used.
Best,
Howard
Hi Howard, I was actually thinking about CC'ing you for this email. Glad
you found it. Unloading kext files does not sound pleasant. Maybe there
is some better way of doing it.
In any case, until you make sure nothing tries to drive the device on the
host, passing it to a guest likely will fail because then two drivers from
two OSes would try to access it simultaneously which likely creates a mess
as the device and drivers don't expect this. So you can't just pass a
device through that the host has recognised and is driving without somehow
getting the host to leave it alone first before you can pass it through.
Unloading the driver is one way to do that (although it probably breaks
all other similar devices too). Maybe there's another way to unbind a
device from the host such as ejecting it first but then I'm not sure if
the low level USB needed for accessing the device still works after that
or it's completely forgotten. There's probably a doc somewhere that
describes how it works and how can you plug a device without also getting
higher level drivers to load or if there's no official ways for that then
you'll need to do some configuration on the host to avoid it grabbing
devices that you want to pass through. On Linux you can add an udev rule
to ignore the device (maybe also adding TAG+="uaccess" to allow console
users to use it without needing root access) but not sure how USB works on
macOS.
Regards,
BALATON Zoltan