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usb_isoc_request(9s)

Kernel & Driver Data Structures                           usb_isoc_request(9S)



NAME
       usb_isoc_request - USB isochronous request structure

SYNOPSIS
       #include <sys/usb/usba.h>

INTERFACE LEVEL
       Solaris DDI specific (Solaris DDI)

DESCRIPTION
       A  request  sent  through an isochronous pipe is used to transfer large
       amounts of  packetized  data  with  relative  unreliability,  but  with
       bounded  service  periods.  A packet is guaranteed to be tried within a
       bounded time period, but  is  not  retried  upon  failure.  Isochronous
       transfers  are  supported on both USB 1.1 and USB 2.0 devices. For fur‐
       ther information, see section 5.6 of the USB 2.0  specification  avail‐
       able at https://www.usb.org/ .


       This  section  provides information on acceptable combinations of flags
       and attributes with additional details. The  following  fields  of  the
       usb_isoc_req_t are used to format an isochronous request.



         usb_frame_number_t
                         isoc_frame_no;   /* frame num to start sending req. */
         ushort_t       isoc_pkts_count; /* num USB pkts in this request */
         /*
          * The sum of all pkt lengths in an isoc request. Recommend to set it to
          * zero, so the sum of isoc_pkt_length in the isoc_pkt_descr list will be
          * used automatically and no check will be apply to this element.
          */
         ushort_t       isoc_pkts_length;
         ushort_t       isoc_error_count;/* num pkts completed w/errs */
         usb_req_attrs_t isoc_attributes;/* request-specific attrs */
         mblk_t          *isoc_data;     /* data to xfer */
                                          /* IN or OUT: alloc. by client. */
                                          /* Size=total of all pkt lengths. */
         usb_opaque_t     isoc_client_private; /* for client driver excl use. */
         struct usb_isoc_pkt_descr       /* (see below) */
                          *isoc_pkt_descr;

         /*
          * Normal callback function, called upon completion.
          * This function cannot block as it executes in soft interrupt context.
          */
         void       (*isoc_cb)(
                         usb_pipe_handle_t ph, struct usb_isoc_req *req);

         /* Exception callback function, for error handling. */
         void       (*isoc_exc_cb)(
                        usb_pipe_handle_t ph, struct usb_isoc_req *req);

         usb_cr_t  isoc_completion_reason; /* overall completion status */
                                            /* set by USBA framework */
                                            /* See usb_completion_reason(9S) */
         usb_cb_flags_t  isoc_cb_flags;    /* recovery done by callback hndlr */
                                            /* set by USBA on exception. */
                                            /* See usb_callback_flags(9S) */



       A  usb_isoc_pkt_descr_t  describes  the status of an isochronous packet
       transferred within a frame or microframe. The  following  fields  of  a
       usb_isoc_pkt_descr_t    packet    descriptor   are   used   within   an
       usb_isoc_req_t. The isoc_pkt_length is set by the client driver to  the
       amount  of  data  managed by the packet for input or output. The latter
       two fields are set by the USBA framework to indicate status. Any  pack‐
       ets with an isoc_completion_reason, other than USB_CR_OK, are reflected
       in the isoc_error_count of the usb_isoc_req_t.



              ushort_t    isoc_pkt_length;        /* number bytes to transfer */
               ushort_t    isoc_pkt_actual_length; /* actual number transferred */
               usb_cr_t    isoc_pkt_status;        /* completion status */



       If   two   multi-frame   isoc   requests   that   both   specify    the
       USB_ATTRS_ISOC_XFER_ASAP  attribute are scheduled closely together, the
       first frame of the second request is queued to  start  after  the  last
       frame of the first request.


       No stalls are seen in isochronous transfer exception callbacks. Because
       transfers are not retried upon failure, isochronous transfers  continue
       regardless of errors.


       Request attributes define special handling for transfers. The following
       attributes are valid for isochronous requests:

       USB_ATTRS_ISOC_START_FRAME    Start transferring at the starting  frame
                                     number  specified  in  the  isoc_frame_no
                                     field of the request.


       USB_ATTRS_ISOC_XFER_ASAP      Start transferring as soon  as  possible.
                                     The  USBA  framework  picks  an immediate
                                     frame number to map to the starting frame
                                     number.


       USB_ATTRS_SHORT_XFER_OK       Accept   transfers  where  less  data  is
                                     received than expected.



       The usb_isoc_req_t contains  an  array  of  descriptors  that  describe
       isochronous  packets.  One  isochronous  packet  is  sent  per frame or
       microframe. Because packets that comprise a transfer  are  sent  across
       consecutive frames or microframes, USB_ATTRS_ONE_XFER is invalid.


       See usb_request_attributes(9S) for more information.


       Isochronous transfers/requests are subject to the following constraints
       and caveats:



         1) The following table indicates combinations of usb_pipe_isoc_xfer
            flags argument and fields of the usb_isoc_req_t request argument
            (X = don't care). (Note that attributes considered in this table
            are ONE_XFER, START_FRAME, XFER_ASAP, and SHORT_XFER, and that
            some transfer types are characterized by multiple table entries.)

         Flags Type     Attributes          Data    Semantics
         ---------------------------------------------------------------
         X      X      X                    NULL    illegal

         X      X      ONE_XFER             X       illegal

         X      X      ISOC_START_FRAME     X       illegal
                       & ISOC_XFER_ASAP

         X      X      !ISOC_START_FRAME    X       illegal
                       & !ISOC_XFER_ASAP

         X      OUT    SHORT_XFER_OK        X       illegal

         X      IN     X                    !=NULL  See table note (A)

         X      X      ISOC_START_FRAME     !=NULL  See table note (B)

         X      X      ISOC_XFER_ASAP       !=NULL  See table note (C)

         Table notes:

             A) continuous polling, new data is returned in
                cloned request structures via continuous callbacks,
                original request is returned on stop polling

             B) invalid if the current_frame number is past
                "isoc_frame_no" or "isoc_frame_no" == 0

             C)"isoc_frame_no" is ignored. The USBA framework
                determines which frame to insert and start
                the transfer.

         2) USB_FLAGS_SLEEP indicates to wait for resources but
            not for completion.

         3) For polled reads:

           A. The USBA  framework  accepts  a  request  which
              specifies  the  size and number of packets to fill
              with data. The packets get filled one  packet  per
              (1  ms)  frame/(125 us) microframe.  All  requests
              have an implicit USB_ATTRS_SHORT_XFER_OK attribute
              set, since transfers  continue in spite of any en-
              countered. The amount of data read per packet  will
              match  the  isoc_pkt_length  field  of  the packet
              descriptor unless a  short  transfer  occurs.  The
              actual     size     is     returned     in     the
              isoc_pkt_actual_length   field   of   the   packet
              descriptor.  When  all packets of the request have
              been processed, a normal callback is done to  sig-
              nal the completion of the original request.

           B. When continuous polling is stopped, the original
              request is returned in an exception callback with a
              completion reason of USB_CR_STOPPED_POLLING.
              (NOTE: Polling can be restarted from  an exception
              callback corresponding to an original request.
              Please see usb_pipe_isoc_xfer(9F) for more information.

           C. Callbacks must be specified.

           The isoc_completion_reason indicates the status of the transfer. See
           usb_completion_reason(9s) for usb_cr_t definitions.

           The isoc_cb_flags are set prior to calling the exception
           callback handler to summarize recovery actions taken and
           errors encountered during recovery. See usb_callback_flags(9s)
           for usb_cb_flags_t definitions.

         --- Callback handling ---
         All usb request types share the same callback handling. Please see
         usb_callback_flags(9s) for a description of use and operation.




ATTRIBUTES
       See attributes(7) for descriptions of the following attributes:


       tab() box; cw(2.75i) |cw(2.75i) lw(2.75i) |lw(2.75i) ATTRIBUTE  TYPEAT‐
       TRIBUTE  VALUE  _  ArchitecturePCI-based systems _ Interface Stability‐
       Committed _ Availabilitysystem/io/usb


SEE ALSO
       attributes(7),      usb_pipe_intr_xfer(9F),      usb_alloc_request(9F),
       usb_get_current_frame_number(9F),
       usb_get_max_pkts_per_isoc_request(9F),          usb_pipe_bulk_xfer(9F),
       usb_pipe_ctrl_xfer(9F),  usb_pipe_isoc_xfer(9F),  usb_bulk_request(9S),
       usb_callback_flags(9S),                      usb_completion_reason(9S),
       usb_ctrl_request(9S), usb_intr_request(9S), usb_request_attributes(9S)



Oracle Solaris 11.4               27 Nov 2017             usb_isoc_request(9S)
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