> From: "Felipe Balbi" <felipe.ba...@linux.intel.com>
> > I'm particularly interested in drivers/usb/core/config.c
> > which appears to enforce the USB specification by refusing to allow a
> > low speed CDC ACM.  (Comment "Some buggy low-speed devices ...", at
> > about line 300.)
> >
> > However, such devices exist and some are potentially quite useful (such
> > as Arduinos & digistump).  Various people have posted about not being
> > able to use them with Linux and I think the above file is the reason
> > (another well known OS family allows them).
>
> Here's the comment:
> 
>       /* Some buggy low-speed devices have Bulk endpoints, which is
>        * explicitly forbidden by the USB spec.  In an attempt to make
>        * them usable, we will try treating them as Interrupt endpoints.
>        */
> 
> The code isn't forbidding CDC ACM low speed devices, it's forbidding
> Bulk endpoints on Low speed, which don't exist :-) Are you saying there
> are Bulk endpoints on low speed Arduinos?

Yes - or I may have misunderstood the situation.

It is code which is derived from V-USB
https://www.obdev.at/products/vusb/index.html
and is described at
http://www.recursion.jp/prose/avrcdc/cdc-232.html

If it worked with Linux it would be a handy way to provide output (such as
debug data) from low-cost Arduinos and such like via USB.

To be clear: I am not saying the Linux USB code is wrong.  But it would
be good to have a way to have the above kind of code work, such that
screen / minicom etc can be used with it.

John
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