I've been trying to get the OTG port on my headless embedded OMAP4460 Linux
system into Host mode for months, with no success (dead port) until yesterday,
when I learned that loading any gadget driver makes the Host mode accessible by
pulling the ID line low. Well, sort of, some of the time, wi
> -Original Message-
> From: Alan Stern [mailto:st...@rowland.harvard.edu]
> Sent: Monday, December 10, 2012 8:32 AM
> To: Cunningham, Robert
> Cc: Dan Williams; linux-usb@vger.kernel.org
> Subject: Re: BUG: smsc75xx driver assigns random MAC address at every init,
I believe I have found a critical bug in the smsc75xx driver and would like to
know the right way to proceed.
Problem:
1. Environment:
- Multiple hard-wired SMSC LAN7500 devices connected at boot time and never
removed (not removable, in my case).
- Tested under the following Ubuntu ARM-based s
> From: Dan Williams [mailto:d...@redhat.com]
> Sent: Friday, December 07, 2012 7:17 AM
> Subject: Re: Random MAC address from smsc75xx: How to permanently set?
>
> On Fri, 2012-12-07 at 14:13 +0000, Cunningham, Robert wrote:
> > > -Original Message
012-12-06 at 12:44 -0600, Dan Williams wrote:
> >> On Thu, 2012-12-06 at 18:35 +, Cunningham, Robert wrote:
> >> > I'm trying to bring up an OMAP4 system based on Variscite's OM44
> module running Linaro's Ubuntu Precise in a headless configuration. The
I'm trying to bring up an OMAP4 system based on Variscite's OM44 module running
Linaro's Ubuntu Precise in a headless configuration. The system contains two
SMSC LAN7500 USB-GigE chips (not dongles), both of which are fully functional.
The GigE chips don't have EEPROMS, so no permanent MAC addr