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1 INTRODUCTION
2
3 The USB serial driver currently supports a number of different USB to
4 serial converter products, as well as some devices that use a serial
5 interface from userspace to talk to the device.
6
7 See the individual product section below for specific information about
8 the different devices.
9
10
11 CONFIGURATION
12
13 Currently the driver can handle up to 256 different serial interfaces at
14 one time.
15
16 The major number that the driver uses is 188 so to use the driver,
17 create the following nodes:
18 mknod /dev/ttyUSB0 c 188 0
19 mknod /dev/ttyUSB1 c 188 1
20 mknod /dev/ttyUSB2 c 188 2
21 mknod /dev/ttyUSB3 c 188 3
22 .
23 .
24 .
25 mknod /dev/ttyUSB254 c 188 254
26 mknod /dev/ttyUSB255 c 188 255
27
28 When the device is connected and recognized by the driver, the driver
29 will print to the system log, which node(s) the device has been bound
30 to.
31
32
33 SPECIFIC DEVICES SUPPORTED
34
35
36 ConnectTech WhiteHEAT 4 port converter
37
38 ConnectTech has been very forthcoming with information about their
39 device, including providing a unit to test with.
40
41 The driver is officially supported by Connect Tech Inc.
42 http://www.connecttech.com
43
44 For any questions or problems with this driver, please contact
45 Stuart MacDonald at stuartm@connecttech.com
46
47
48 HandSpring Visor, Palm USB, and Clié USB driver
49
50 This driver works with all HandSpring USB, Palm USB, and Sony Clié USB
51 devices.
52
53 Only when the device tries to connect to the host, will the device show
54 up to the host as a valid USB device. When this happens, the device is
55 properly enumerated, assigned a port, and then communication _should_ be
56 possible. The driver cleans up properly when the device is removed, or
57 the connection is canceled on the device.
58
59 NOTE:
60 This means that in order to talk to the device, the sync button must be
61 pressed BEFORE trying to get any program to communicate to the device.
62 This goes against the current documentation for pilot-xfer and other
63 packages, but is the only way that it will work due to the hardware
64 in the device.
65
66 When the device is connected, try talking to it on the second port
67 (this is usually /dev/ttyUSB1 if you do not have any other usb-serial
68 devices in the system.) The system log should tell you which port is
69 the port to use for the HotSync transfer. The "Generic" port can be used
70 for other device communication, such as a PPP link.
71
72 For some Sony Clié devices, /dev/ttyUSB0 must be used to talk to the
73 device. This is true for all OS version 3.5 devices, and most devices
74 that have had a flash upgrade to a newer version of the OS. See the
75 kernel system log for information on which is the correct port to use.
76
77 If after pressing the sync button, nothing shows up in the system log,
78 try resetting the device, first a hot reset, and then a cold reset if
79 necessary. Some devices need this before they can talk to the USB port
80 properly.
81
82 Devices that are not compiled into the kernel can be specified with module
83 parameters. e.g. modprobe visor vendor=0x54c product=0x66
84
85 There is a webpage and mailing lists for this portion of the driver at:
86 http://usbvisor.sourceforge.net/
87
88 For any questions or problems with this driver, please contact Greg
89 Kroah-Hartman at greg@kroah.com
90
91
92 PocketPC PDA Driver
93
94 This driver can be used to connect to Compaq iPAQ, HP Jornada, Casio EM500
95 and other PDAs running Windows CE 3.0 or PocketPC 2002 using a USB
96 cable/cradle.
97 Most devices supported by ActiveSync are supported out of the box.
98 For others, please use module parameters to specify the product and vendor
99 id. e.g. modprobe ipaq vendor=0x3f0 product=0x1125
100
101 The driver presents a serial interface (usually on /dev/ttyUSB0) over
102 which one may run ppp and establish a TCP/IP link to the PDA. Once this
103 is done, you can transfer files, backup, download email etc. The most
104 significant advantage of using USB is speed - I can get 73 to 113
105 kbytes/sec for download/upload to my iPAQ.
106
107 This driver is only one of a set of components required to utilize
108 the USB connection. Please visit http://synce.sourceforge.net which
109 contains the necessary packages and a simple step-by-step howto.
110
111 Once connected, you can use Win CE programs like ftpView, Pocket Outlook
112 from the PDA and xcerdisp, synce utilities from the Linux side.
113
114 To use Pocket IE, follow the instructions given at
115 http://www.tekguru.co.uk/EM500/usbtonet.htm to achieve the same thing
116 on Win98. Omit the proxy server part; Linux is quite capable of forwarding
117 packets unlike Win98. Another modification is required at least for the
118 iPAQ - disable autosync by going to the Start/Settings/Connections menu
119 and unchecking the "Automatically synchronize ..." box. Go to
120 Start/Programs/Connections, connect the cable and select "usbdial" (or
121 whatever you named your new USB connection). You should finally wind
122 up with a "Connected to usbdial" window with status shown as connected.
123 Now start up PIE and browse away.
124
125 If it doesn't work for some reason, load both the usbserial and ipaq module
126 with the module parameter "debug" set to 1 and examine the system log.
127 You can also try soft-resetting your PDA before attempting a connection.
128
129 Other functionality may be possible depending on your PDA. According to
130 Wes Cilldhaire <billybobjoehenrybob@hotmail.com>, with the Toshiba E570,
131 ...if you boot into the bootloader (hold down the power when hitting the
132 reset button, continuing to hold onto the power until the bootloader screen
133 is displayed), then put it in the cradle with the ipaq driver loaded, open
134 a terminal on /dev/ttyUSB0, it gives you a "USB Reflash" terminal, which can
135 be used to flash the ROM, as well as the microP code.. so much for needing
136 Toshiba's $350 serial cable for flashing!! :D
137 NOTE: This has NOT been tested. Use at your own risk.
138
139 For any questions or problems with the driver, please contact Ganesh
140 Varadarajan <ganesh@veritas.com>
141
142
143 Keyspan PDA Serial Adapter
144
145 Single port DB-9 serial adapter, pushed as a PDA adapter for iMacs (mostly
146 sold in Macintosh catalogs, comes in a translucent white/green dongle).
147 Fairly simple device. Firmware is homebrew.
148 This driver also works for the Xircom/Entrgra single port serial adapter.
149
150 Current status:
151 Things that work:
152 basic input/output (tested with 'cu')
153 blocking write when serial line can't keep up
154 changing baud rates (up to 115200)
155 getting/setting modem control pins (TIOCM{GET,SET,BIS,BIC})
156 sending break (although duration looks suspect)
157 Things that don't:
158 device strings (as logged by kernel) have trailing binary garbage
159 device ID isn't right, might collide with other Keyspan products
160 changing baud rates ought to flush tx/rx to avoid mangled half characters
161 Big Things on the todo list:
162 parity, 7 vs 8 bits per char, 1 or 2 stop bits
163 HW flow control
164 not all of the standard USB descriptors are handled: Get_Status, Set_Feature
165 O_NONBLOCK, select()
166
167 For any questions or problems with this driver, please contact Brian
168 Warner at warner@lothar.com
169
170
171 Keyspan USA-series Serial Adapters
172
173 Single, Dual and Quad port adapters - driver uses Keyspan supplied
174 firmware and is being developed with their support.
175
176 Current status:
177 The USA-18X, USA-28X, USA-19, USA-19W and USA-49W are supported and
178 have been pretty throughly tested at various baud rates with 8-N-1
179 character settings. Other character lengths and parity setups are
180 presently untested.
181
182 The USA-28 isn't yet supported though doing so should be pretty
183 straightforward. Contact the maintainer if you require this
184 functionality.
185
186 More information is available at:
187 http://misc.nu/hugh/keyspan.html
188
189 For any questions or problems with this driver, please contact Hugh
190 Blemings at hugh@misc.nu
191
192
193 FTDI Single Port Serial Driver
194
195 This is a single port DB-25 serial adapter. More information about this
196 device and the Linux driver can be found at:
197 http://reality.sgi.com/bryder_wellington/ftdi_sio/
198
199 For any questions or problems with this driver, please contact Bill Ryder
200 at bryder@sgi.com
201
202
203 ZyXEL omni.net lcd plus ISDN TA
204
205 This is an ISDN TA. Please report both successes and troubles to
206 azummo@towertech.it
207
208
209 Cypress M8 CY4601 Family Serial Driver
210
211 This driver was in most part developed by Neil "koyama" Whelchel. It
212 has been improved since that previous form to support dynamic serial
213 line settings and improved line handling. The driver is for the most
214 part stable and has been tested on an smp machine. (dual p2)
215
216 Chipsets supported under CY4601 family:
217
218 CY7C63723, CY7C63742, CY7C63743, CY7C64013
219
220 Devices supported:
221
222 -DeLorme's USB Earthmate (SiRF Star II lp arch)
223 -Cypress HID->COM RS232 adapter
224
225 Note: Cypress Semiconductor claims no affiliation with the
226 the hid->com device.
227
228 Most devices using chipsets under the CY4601 family should
229 work with the driver. As long as they stay true to the CY4601
230 usbserial specification.
231
232 Technical notes:
233
234 The Earthmate starts out at 4800 8N1 by default... the driver will
235 upon start init to this setting. usbserial core provides the rest
236 of the termios settings, along with some custom termios so that the
237 output is in proper format and parsable.
238
239 The device can be put into sirf mode by issuing NMEA command:
240 $PSRF100,<protocol>,<baud>,<databits>,<stopbits>,<parity>*CHECKSUM
241 $PSRF100,0,9600,8,1,0*0C
242
243 It should then be sufficient to change the port termios to match this
244 to begin communicating.
245
246 As far as I can tell it supports pretty much every sirf command as
247 documented online available with firmware 2.31, with some unknown
248 message ids.
249
250 The hid->com adapter can run at a maximum baud of 115200bps. Please note
251 that the device has trouble or is incapable of raising line voltage properly.
252 It will be fine with null modem links, as long as you do not try to link two
253 together without hacking the adapter to set the line high.
254
255 The driver is smp safe. Performance with the driver is rather low when using
256 it for transfering files. This is being worked on, but I would be willing to
257 accept patches. An urb queue or packet buffer would likely fit the bill here.
258
259 If you have any questions, problems, patches, feature requests, etc. you can
260 contact me here via email:
261 dignome@gmail.com
262 (your problems/patches can alternately be submitted to usb-devel)
263
264
265 Digi AccelePort Driver
266
267 This driver supports the Digi AccelePort USB 2 and 4 devices, 2 port
268 (plus a parallel port) and 4 port USB serial converters. The driver
269 does NOT yet support the Digi AccelePort USB 8.
270
271 This driver works under SMP with the usb-uhci driver. It does not
272 work under SMP with the uhci driver.
273
274 The driver is generally working, though we still have a few more ioctls
275 to implement and final testing and debugging to do. The parallel port
276 on the USB 2 is supported as a serial to parallel converter; in other
277 words, it appears as another USB serial port on Linux, even though
278 physically it is really a parallel port. The Digi Acceleport USB 8
279 is not yet supported.
280
281 Please contact Peter Berger (pberger@brimson.com) or Al Borchers
282 (alborchers@steinerpoint.com) for questions or problems with this
283 driver.
284
285
286 Belkin USB Serial Adapter F5U103
287
288 Single port DB-9/PS-2 serial adapter from Belkin with firmware by eTEK Labs.
289 The Peracom single port serial adapter also works with this driver, as
290 well as the GoHubs adapter.
291
292 Current status:
293 The following have been tested and work:
294 Baud rate 300-230400
295 Data bits 5-8
296 Stop bits 1-2
297 Parity N,E,O,M,S
298 Handshake None, Software (XON/XOFF), Hardware (CTSRTS,CTSDTR)*
299 Break Set and clear
300 Line contrl Input/Output query and control **
301
302 * Hardware input flow control is only enabled for firmware
303 levels above 2.06. Read source code comments describing Belkin
304 firmware errata. Hardware output flow control is working for all
305 firmware versions.
306 ** Queries of inputs (CTS,DSR,CD,RI) show the last
307 reported state. Queries of outputs (DTR,RTS) show the last
308 requested state and may not reflect current state as set by
309 automatic hardware flow control.
310
311 TO DO List:
312 -- Add true modem contol line query capability. Currently tracks the
313 states reported by the interrupt and the states requested.
314 -- Add error reporting back to application for UART error conditions.
315 -- Add support for flush ioctls.
316 -- Add everything else that is missing :)
317
318 For any questions or problems with this driver, please contact William
319 Greathouse at wgreathouse@smva.com
320
321
322 Empeg empeg-car Mark I/II Driver
323
324 This is an experimental driver to provide connectivity support for the
325 client synchronization tools for an Empeg empeg-car mp3 player.
326
327 Tips:
328 * Don't forget to create the device nodes for ttyUSB{0,1,2,...}
329 * modprobe empeg (modprobe is your friend)
330 * emptool --usb /dev/ttyUSB0 (or whatever you named your device node)
331
332 For any questions or problems with this driver, please contact Gary
333 Brubaker at xavyer@ix.netcom.com
334
335
336 MCT USB Single Port Serial Adapter U232
337
338 This driver is for the MCT USB-RS232 Converter (25 pin, Model No.
339 U232-P25) from Magic Control Technology Corp. (there is also a 9 pin
340 Model No. U232-P9). More information about this device can be found at
341 the manufacture's web-site: http://www.mct.com.tw.
342
343 The driver is generally working, though it still needs some more testing.
344 It is derived from the Belkin USB Serial Adapter F5U103 driver and its
345 TODO list is valid for this driver as well.
346
347 This driver has also been found to work for other products, which have
348 the same Vendor ID but different Product IDs. Sitecom's U232-P25 serial
349 converter uses Product ID 0x230 and Vendor ID 0x711 and works with this
350 driver. Also, D-Link's DU-H3SP USB BAY also works with this driver.
351
352 For any questions or problems with this driver, please contact Wolfgang
353 Grandegger at wolfgang@ces.ch
354
355
356 Inside Out Networks Edgeport Driver
357
358 This driver supports all devices made by Inside Out Networks, specifically
359 the following models:
360 Edgeport/4
361 Rapidport/4
362 Edgeport/4t
363 Edgeport/2
364 Edgeport/4i
365 Edgeport/2i
366 Edgeport/421
367 Edgeport/21
368 Edgeport/8
369 Edgeport/8 Dual
370 Edgeport/2D8
371 Edgeport/4D8
372 Edgeport/8i
373 Edgeport/2 DIN
374 Edgeport/4 DIN
375 Edgeport/16 Dual
376
377 For any questions or problems with this driver, please contact Greg
378 Kroah-Hartman at greg@kroah.com
379
380
381 REINER SCT cyberJack pinpad/e-com USB chipcard reader
382
383 Interface to ISO 7816 compatible contactbased chipcards, e.g. GSM SIMs.
384
385 Current status:
386 This is the kernel part of the driver for this USB card reader.
387 There is also a user part for a CT-API driver available. A site
388 for downloading is TBA. For now, you can request it from the
389 maintainer (linux-usb@sii.li).
390
391 For any questions or problems with this driver, please contact
392 linux-usb@sii.li
393
394
395 Prolific PL2303 Driver
396
397 This driver supports any device that has the PL2303 chip from Prolific
398 in it. This includes a number of single port USB to serial
399 converters and USB GPS devices. Devices from Aten (the UC-232) and
400 IO-Data work with this driver, as does the DCU-11 mobile-phone cable.
401
402 For any questions or problems with this driver, please contact Greg
403 Kroah-Hartman at greg@kroah.com
404
405
406 KL5KUSB105 chipset / PalmConnect USB single-port adapter
407
408 Current status:
409 The driver was put together by looking at the usb bus transactions
410 done by Palm's driver under Windows, so a lot of functionality is
411 still missing. Notably, serial ioctls are sometimes faked or not yet
412 implemented. Support for finding out about DSR and CTS line status is
413 however implemented (though not nicely), so your favorite autopilot(1)
414 and pilot-manager -daemon calls will work. Baud rates up to 115200
415 are supported, but handshaking (software or hardware) is not, which is
416 why it is wise to cut down on the rate used is wise for large
417 transfers until this is settled.
418
419 Options supported:
420 If this driver is compiled as a module you can pass the following
421 options to it:
422 debug - extra verbose debugging info
423 (default: 0; nonzero enables)
424 use_lowlatency - use low_latency flag to speed up tty layer
425 when reading from from the device.
426 (default: 0; nonzero enables)
427
428 See http://www.uuhaus.de/linux/palmconnect.html for up-to-date
429 information on this driver.
430
431 AIRcable USB Dongle Bluetooth driver
432 If there is the cdc_acm driver loaded in the system, you will find that the
433 cdc_acm claims the device before AIRcable can. This is simply corrected
434 by unloading both modules and then loading the aircable module before
435 cdc_acm module
436
437 Generic Serial driver
438
439 If your device is not one of the above listed devices, compatible with
440 the above models, you can try out the "generic" interface. This
441 interface does not provide any type of control messages sent to the
442 device, and does not support any kind of device flow control. All that
443 is required of your device is that it has at least one bulk in endpoint,
444 or one bulk out endpoint.
445
446 To enable the generic driver to recognize your device, build the driver
447 as a module and load it by the following invocation:
448 insmod usbserial vendor=0x#### product=0x####
449 where the #### is replaced with the hex representation of your device's
450 vendor id and product id.
451
452 This driver has been successfully used to connect to the NetChip USB
453 development board, providing a way to develop USB firmware without
454 having to write a custom driver.
455
456 For any questions or problems with this driver, please contact Greg
457 Kroah-Hartman at greg@kroah.com
458
459
460 CONTACT:
461
462 If anyone has any problems using these drivers, with any of the above
463 specified products, please contact the specific driver's author listed
464 above, or join the Linux-USB mailing list (information on joining the
465 mailing list, as well as a link to its searchable archive is at
466 http://www.linux-usb.org/ )
467
468
469 Greg Kroah-Hartman
470 greg@kroah.com