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USB: usbmon: fix-up docs and text API for sparse ISO

This is based on a patch that Alan Stern wrote. It did the same simple
thing in both text and binary cases. In the same time, Marton and I
fixed the binary side properly, but this leaves the text to be fixed.
It is not very important due to low maxium data size of text, but
let's add it just for extra correctness.

The pseudocode is too much to keep fixed up, and we have real code
to be used as examples now, so let's drop it too.

Signed-off-by: Pete Zaitcev <zaitcev@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
hifive-unleashed-5.1
Pete Zaitcev 2011-02-03 22:01:36 -07:00 committed by Greg Kroah-Hartman
parent ac8d674178
commit d25bc4db72
2 changed files with 12 additions and 33 deletions

View File

@ -12,6 +12,10 @@ Controller Drivers (HCD). So, if HCD is buggy, the traces reported by
usbmon may not correspond to bus transactions precisely. This is the same
situation as with tcpdump.
Two APIs are currently implemented: "text" and "binary". The binary API
is available through a character device in /dev namespace and is an ABI.
The text API is deprecated since 2.6.35, but available for convenience.
* How to use usbmon to collect raw text traces
Unlike the packet socket, usbmon has an interface which provides traces
@ -162,39 +166,11 @@ Here is the list of words, from left to right:
not machine words, but really just a byte stream split into words to make
it easier to read. Thus, the last word may contain from one to four bytes.
The length of collected data is limited and can be less than the data length
report in Data Length word.
Here is an example of code to read the data stream in a well known programming
language:
class ParsedLine {
int data_len; /* Available length of data */
byte data[];
void parseData(StringTokenizer st) {
int availwords = st.countTokens();
data = new byte[availwords * 4];
data_len = 0;
while (st.hasMoreTokens()) {
String data_str = st.nextToken();
int len = data_str.length() / 2;
int i;
int b; // byte is signed, apparently?! XXX
for (i = 0; i < len; i++) {
// data[data_len] = Byte.parseByte(
// data_str.substring(i*2, i*2 + 2),
// 16);
b = Integer.parseInt(
data_str.substring(i*2, i*2 + 2),
16);
if (b >= 128)
b *= -1;
data[data_len] = (byte) b;
data_len++;
}
}
}
}
reported in the Data Length word. In the case of an Isochronous input (Zi)
completion where the received data is sparse in the buffer, the length of
the collected data can be greater than the Data Length value (because Data
Length counts only the bytes that were received whereas the Data words
contain the entire transfer buffer).
Examples:

View File

@ -236,6 +236,9 @@ static void mon_text_event(struct mon_reader_text *rp, struct urb *urb,
fp++;
dp++;
}
/* Wasteful, but simple to understand: ISO 'C' is sparse. */
if (ev_type == 'C')
ep->length = urb->transfer_buffer_length;
}
ep->setup_flag = mon_text_get_setup(ep, urb, ev_type, rp->r.m_bus);