USB gadget mode in laptop
From: Susanoo Tux <hidden>
Date: 2016-08-05 18:12:22
On Fri, Aug 5, 2016 at 4:01 PM, Greg KH [off-list ref] wrote:
On Thu, Aug 04, 2016 at 10:32:16PM +0530, Susanoo Tux wrote:quoted
Hello All, I was looking into USB gadget mode to work on my laptop. One simplebasic doubtquoted
I have is how do I know whether my USB controller supports gadget mode ?If itquoted
supports which module do I need to modprobe ?Why would a laptop support gadget mode? A USB "gadget" is USB hardware that acts like a device (keyboard, mouse, storage, etc.). Laptops almost never have that type of hardware in them as they are USB "hosts" and control USB devices. You can buy PCI devices that act as USB gadgets, and that's used for development of systems, and many smaller devices (phone, tablets, etc.) have hardware that can act in both host and gadget mode. But again, you need special hardware for this, something that I have never seen built into a laptop. So, sorry, I don't think you will be able to do this. greg k-h
Hi Greg, Its basically for embedded Linux simulation which I am running in my laptop. So, some applications I know needs USB device mode enabled. So, this requirement came into picture and worked on it and no use :(. Yes, Had looked into some PCI cards, where it can be installed into desktop and make it works as device mode. This is one option for me :). I think all the laptop manufacturers are closely depending on windows and don't enable the device mode (OTG) or I can say they don't put the OTG supported controller :(. AFAIK, only from windows 10 on wards they have OTG support. So, bad for Linux users where we have capability in OS but hardware won't supports. Not sure, windows 10 based laptop hardwares supports OTG now. Anyways, Great. Got clear picture now :) Thanks Greg Regards, SusanooTux -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.kernelnewbies.org/pipermail/kernelnewbies/attachments/20160805/a8f06f96/attachment.html