#include <cyg/io/usb/usbs.h> |
cyg_bool usbs_rx_endpoint_halted
(usbs_rx_endpoint* ep);
void usbs_set_rx_endpoint_halted
(usbs_rx_endpoint* ep, cyg_bool new_state);
void usbs_start_rx_endpoint_wait
(usbs_rx_endpoint* ep, void (*)(void*, int) complete_fn, void * complete_data);
cyg_bool
usbs_tx_endpoint_halted
(usbs_tx_endpoint* ep);
void usbs_set_tx_endpoint_halted
(usbs_tx_endpoint* ep, cyg_bool new_state);
void usbs_start_tx_endpoint_wait
(usbs_tx_endpoint* ep, void (*)(void*, int) complete_fn, void * complete_data);
Description
Normal USB traffic involves straightforward handshakes, with either an ACK to indicate that a packet was transferred without errors, or a NAK if an error occurred, or if a peripheral is currently unable to process another packet from the host, or has no packet to send to the host. There is a third form of handshake, a STALL, which indicates that the endpoint is currently halted.
When an endpoint is halted it means that the host-side code needs to take some sort of recovery action before communication over that endpoint can resume. The exact circumstances under which this can happen are not defined by the USB specification, but one example would be a protocol violation if say the peripheral attempted to transmit more data to the host than was permitted by the protocol in use. The host can use the standard control messages get-status, set-feature and clear-feature to examine and manipulate the halted status of a given endpoint. There are USB-specific functions which can be used inside the peripheral to achieve the same effect. Once an endpoint has been halted the host can then interact with the peripheral using class or vendor control messages to perform appropriate recovery, and then the halted condition can be cleared.
Halting an endpoint does not constitute a device state change, and there is no mechanism by which higher-level code can be informed immediately. However, any ongoing receive or transmit operations will be aborted with an -EAGAIN error, and any new receives or transmits will fail immediately with the same error.
There are six functions to support halted endpoints, one set for
receive endpoints and another for transmit endpoints, with both sets
behaving in essentially the same way. The first,
usbs_rx_endpoint_halted
, can be used to determine
whether or not an endpoint is currently halted: it takes a single
argument that identifies the endpoint of interest. The second
function, usbs_set_rx_endpoint_halted
, can be
used to change the halted condition of an endpoint: it takes two
arguments; one to identify the endpoint and another to specify the new
state. The last function
usbs_start_rx_endpoint_wait
operates in much the
same way as usbs_start_rx_buffer
: when the
endpoint is no longer halted the device driver will invoke the
supplied completion function with a status of 0. The completion
function has the same signature as that for a transfer operation.
Often it will be possible to use a single completion function and have
the foreground code invoke either
usbs_start_rx_buffer
or
usbs_start_rx_endpoint_wait
depending on the
current state of the endpoint.