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USB(4)			    Kernel Interfaces Manual			USB(4)

NAME
       usb -- Universal	Serial Bus

SYNOPSIS
       To  compile  this  driver  into the kernel, place the following line in
       your kernel configuration file:

	     device usb

       Alternatively, to load the driver as a module at	boot time,  place  the
       following line in loader.conf(5):

	     usb_load="YES"

USERLAND PROGRAMMING
       USB functions can be accessed from userland through the libusb library.
       See libusb(3) for more information.

DESCRIPTION
       FreeBSD	provides  machine-independent  bus support and drivers for USB
       devices in host and device side mode.

       The usb driver has three	layers:

	     USB Controller (Bus)

	     USB Device

	     USB Driver

       The controller attaches to a physical bus like pci(4).  The USB bus at-
       taches to the controller, and the root hub attaches to the  controller.
       Any  devices attached to	the bus	will attach to the root	hub or another
       hub attached to the USB bus.

       The uhub	device will always be present as it is	needed	for  the  root
       hub.

INTRODUCTION TO	USB
       The  USB	 is  a system where external devices can be connected to a PC.
       The most	common USB speeds are:

	     Low Speed (1.5 MBit/sec)

	     Full Speed	(12 MBit/sec)

	     High Speed	(480 MBit/sec)

	     SuperSpeed	(5 GBit/sec)

       Each USB	has a USB controller that is the master	of the bus.  The phys-
       ical communication is simplex which means the host controller only com-
       municates with one USB device at	a time.

       There can be up to 127 devices connected	to an USB HUB tree.   The  ad-
       dresses	are  assigned  dynamically by the host when each device	is at-
       tached to the bus.

       Within each device there	can be up to 16	endpoints.  Each  endpoint  is
       individually  addressed	and  the  addresses are	static.	 Each of these
       endpoints will communicate in one of  four  different  modes:  control,
       isochronous, bulk, or interrupt.	 A device always has at	least one end-
       point.	This  endpoint	has address 0 and is a control endpoint	and is
       used to give commands to	and extract basic data,	such  as  descriptors,
       from the	device.	 Each endpoint,	except the control endpoint, is	unidi-
       rectional.

       The endpoints in	a device are grouped into interfaces.  An interface is
       a  logical  unit	 within	 a device, e.g., a compound device with	both a
       keyboard	and a trackball, would present one interface for each.	An in-
       terface can sometimes be	set into  different  modes,  called  alternate
       settings,  which	affects	how it operates.  Different alternate settings
       can have	different endpoints within it.

       A device	may operate in different  configurations.   Depending  on  the
       configuration,  the  device may present different sets of endpoints and
       interfaces.

       The bus enumeration of the USB bus proceeds in several steps:

       1.   Any	interface specific driver can attach to	the device.

       2.   If none is found, generic interface	class drivers can attach.

SYSCTL VARIABLES
       The following variables are available as	both sysctl(8)	variables  and
       loader(8) tunables:

       hw.usb.debug
	       Debug  output  level,  where 0 is debugging disabled and	larger
	       values increase debug message verbosity.	 Default is 0.

SEE ALSO
       The USB specifications can be found at:

	     https://www.usb.org/documents

       libusb(3), aue(4), axe(4), axge(4), cue(4),  ehci(4),  kue(4),  mos(4),
       ohci(4),	 pci(4),  rue(4), ucom(4), udav(4), uhci(4), uhid(4), ukbd(4),
       ulpt(4),	 umass(4),  ums(4),  uplcom(4),	 urio(4),  uvscom(4),  xhci(4)
       usbconfig(8), usbdi(9)

STANDARDS
       The usb module complies with the	USB 3.0	standard.

HISTORY
       The  usb	 module	 has  been  inspired by	the NetBSD USB stack initially
       written by Lennart Augustsson.  The usb	module	was  written  by  Hans
       Petter Selasky <hselasky@FreeBSD.org>.

FreeBSD	13.2		       September 7, 2020			USB(4)

NAME | SYNOPSIS | USERLAND PROGRAMMING | DESCRIPTION | INTRODUCTION TO USB | SYSCTL VARIABLES | SEE ALSO | STANDARDS | HISTORY

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