* Re: USB keyboard recognized as HID keyboard but doesn't work [not found] <4DBF16D8.8040209@sieker.io> @ 2011-05-02 21:06 ` Alan Stern 2011-05-02 21:19 ` Adi J. Sieker 0 siblings, 1 reply; 18+ messages in thread From: Alan Stern @ 2011-05-02 21:06 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Adi J. Sieker; +Cc: Oliver Neukum, USB list, linux-input, linux-kernel On Mon, 2 May 2011, Adi J. Sieker wrote: > Attached is the usbmon trace when I plug the keyboard in. > > lsusb shows the keyboard as: > Bus 002 Device 008: ID 060b:0230 Solid Year > > Relevant section from /sys/kernel/debug/usb/devices > T: Bus=02 Lev=02 Prnt=02 Port=00 Cnt=01 Dev#= 8 Spd=1.5 MxCh= 0 > D: Ver= 1.10 Cls=00(>ifc ) Sub=00 Prot=00 MxPS= 8 #Cfgs= 1 > P: Vendor=060b ProdID=0230 Rev= 2.20 > S: Manufacturer=KB > S: Product=USB Keyboard > C:* #Ifs= 2 Cfg#= 1 Atr=a0 MxPwr=100mA > I:* If#= 0 Alt= 0 #EPs= 1 Cls=03(HID ) Sub=01 Prot=01 Driver=usbhid > E: Ad=81(I) Atr=03(Int.) MxPS= 8 Ivl=10ms > I:* If#= 1 Alt= 0 #EPs= 1 Cls=03(HID ) Sub=00 Prot=00 Driver=usbhid > E: Ad=82(I) Atr=03(Int.) MxPS= 8 Ivl=10ms Interestingly, the usbmon trace shows that the interrupt endpoint for interface 1 isn't being used by usbhid. I don't know why, but it shouldn't make much difference for your purposes since that interface appears to be associated with the gaming interface. But maybe I'm wrong and it is important somehow... The other noticeable thing is that the keyboard didn't accept the Set-Idle request for interface 1. You said before that the keyboard worked okay when driven by a guest Windows OS, right? Can you collect an equivalent usbmon trace for that? Comparing the two traces may be instructive. Alan Stern ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 18+ messages in thread
* Re: USB keyboard recognized as HID keyboard but doesn't work 2011-05-02 21:06 ` USB keyboard recognized as HID keyboard but doesn't work Alan Stern @ 2011-05-02 21:19 ` Adi J. Sieker 2011-05-02 22:29 ` Alan Stern 0 siblings, 1 reply; 18+ messages in thread From: Adi J. Sieker @ 2011-05-02 21:19 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Alan Stern; +Cc: Oliver Neukum, USB list, linux-input, linux-kernel [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1688 bytes --] On 02/05/11 23:06, Alan Stern wrote: > On Mon, 2 May 2011, Adi J. Sieker wrote: > >> Attached is the usbmon trace when I plug the keyboard in. >> >> lsusb shows the keyboard as: >> Bus 002 Device 008: ID 060b:0230 Solid Year >> >> Relevant section from /sys/kernel/debug/usb/devices >> T: Bus=02 Lev=02 Prnt=02 Port=00 Cnt=01 Dev#= 8 Spd=1.5 MxCh= 0 >> D: Ver= 1.10 Cls=00(>ifc ) Sub=00 Prot=00 MxPS= 8 #Cfgs= 1 >> P: Vendor=060b ProdID=0230 Rev= 2.20 >> S: Manufacturer=KB >> S: Product=USB Keyboard >> C:* #Ifs= 2 Cfg#= 1 Atr=a0 MxPwr=100mA >> I:* If#= 0 Alt= 0 #EPs= 1 Cls=03(HID ) Sub=01 Prot=01 Driver=usbhid >> E: Ad=81(I) Atr=03(Int.) MxPS= 8 Ivl=10ms >> I:* If#= 1 Alt= 0 #EPs= 1 Cls=03(HID ) Sub=00 Prot=00 Driver=usbhid >> E: Ad=82(I) Atr=03(Int.) MxPS= 8 Ivl=10ms > > Interestingly, the usbmon trace shows that the interrupt endpoint for > interface 1 isn't being used by usbhid. I don't know why, but it > shouldn't make much difference for your purposes since that interface > appears to be associated with the gaming interface. But maybe I'm > wrong and it is important somehow... > > The other noticeable thing is that the keyboard didn't accept the > Set-Idle request for interface 1. > > You said before that the keyboard worked okay when driven by a guest > Windows OS, right? Can you collect an equivalent usbmon trace for > that? Comparing the two traces may be instructive. I hope this is what you meant. :) Attached is a usbmon trace when I attach the keyboard to a VBox VM running a Windows XP guest. I have no idea how to get a USB trace from within Windows. The last block is when I pressed h twice in the Windows XP guest. Cheers Adi [-- Attachment #2: usbmon-guest.out --] [-- Type: text/plain, Size: 4576 bytes --] e6283180 3528948156 S Ci:2:008:0 s 80 06 0100 0000 0012 18 < e6283180 3528950914 C Ci:2:008:0 0 18 = 12011001 00000008 0b063002 20020102 0001 e6283180 3528950988 S Ci:2:008:0 s 80 06 0200 0000 0009 9 < e6283180 3528953041 C Ci:2:008:0 0 9 = 09023b00 020100a0 32 e6283180 3528953062 S Ci:2:008:0 s 80 06 0200 0000 003b 59 < e6283180 3528959915 C Ci:2:008:0 0 59 = 09023b00 020100a0 32090400 00010301 01000921 10010001 224b0007 05810308 ee1bd280 3528959982 C Ii:2:008:1 -108:8 0 f0267b00 3529284981 S Ci:2:008:0 s 80 06 0100 0000 0040 64 < f0267b00 3529287920 C Ci:2:008:0 0 18 = 12011001 00000008 0b063002 20020102 0001 f0267b00 3529361757 S Ci:2:008:0 s 80 06 0100 0000 0012 18 < f0267b00 3529364171 C Ci:2:008:0 0 18 = 12011001 00000008 0b063002 20020102 0001 f0267b00 3529365746 S Ci:2:008:0 s 80 06 0200 0000 0009 9 < f0267b00 3529367546 C Ci:2:008:0 0 9 = 09023b00 020100a0 32 f0267b00 3529373770 S Ci:2:008:0 s 80 06 0200 0000 00ff 255 < f0267b00 3529380045 C Ci:2:008:0 0 59 = 09023b00 020100a0 32090400 00010301 01000921 10010001 224b0007 05810308 f0267b00 3529383566 S Ci:2:008:0 s 80 06 0300 0000 00ff 255 < f0267b00 3529384668 C Ci:2:008:0 0 4 = 04030904 f0267b00 3529387503 S Ci:2:008:0 s 80 06 0302 0409 00ff 255 < f0267b00 3529390916 C Ci:2:008:0 0 26 = 1a035500 53004200 20004b00 65007900 62006f00 61007200 6400 f0267b00 3529394743 S Ci:2:008:0 s 80 06 0300 0000 00ff 255 < f0267b00 3529395919 C Ci:2:008:0 0 4 = 04030904 f0267b00 3529398208 S Ci:2:008:0 s 80 06 0302 0409 00ff 255 < f0267b00 3529401543 C Ci:2:008:0 0 26 = 1a035500 53004200 20004b00 65007900 62006f00 61007200 6400 f0267b00 3529423701 S Ci:2:008:0 s 80 06 0100 0000 0012 18 < f0267b00 3529426169 C Ci:2:008:0 0 18 = 12011001 00000008 0b063002 20020102 0001 f0267b00 3529429749 S Ci:2:008:0 s 80 06 0200 0000 0009 9 < f0267b00 3529431541 C Ci:2:008:0 0 9 = 09023b00 020100a0 32 f0267b00 3529437362 S Ci:2:008:0 s 80 06 0200 0000 003b 59 < f0267b00 3529443919 C Ci:2:008:0 0 59 = 09023b00 020100a0 32090400 00010301 01000921 10010001 224b0007 05810308 f0267b00 3529481095 S Ci:2:008:0 s 80 06 0300 0000 00ff 255 < f0267b00 3529482543 C Ci:2:008:0 0 4 = 04030904 f0267b00 3529485739 S Ci:2:008:0 s 80 06 0302 0409 00ff 255 < f0267b00 3529489045 C Ci:2:008:0 0 26 = 1a035500 53004200 20004b00 65007900 62006f00 61007200 6400 f0267b00 3529491035 S Ci:2:008:0 s 80 06 0300 0000 00ff 255 < f0267b00 3529492419 C Ci:2:008:0 0 4 = 04030904 f0267b00 3529494747 S Ci:2:008:0 s 80 06 0302 0409 00ff 255 < f0267b00 3529498043 C Ci:2:008:0 0 26 = 1a035500 53004200 20004b00 65007900 62006f00 61007200 6400 f0267b00 3529644847 S Ci:2:008:0 s 80 06 0300 0000 00ff 255 < f0267b00 3529646170 C Ci:2:008:0 0 4 = 04030904 f0267b00 3529649463 S Ci:2:008:0 s 80 06 0302 0409 00ff 255 < f0267b00 3529652916 C Ci:2:008:0 0 26 = 1a035500 53004200 20004b00 65007900 62006f00 61007200 6400 f0267b00 3529654618 S Ci:2:008:0 s 80 06 0300 0000 00ff 255 < f0267b00 3529655796 C Ci:2:008:0 0 4 = 04030904 f0267b00 3529657753 S Ci:2:008:0 s 80 06 0302 0409 00ff 255 < f0267b00 3529661043 C Ci:2:008:0 0 26 = 1a035500 53004200 20004b00 65007900 62006f00 61007200 6400 f0267b00 3529664864 S Co:2:008:0 s 21 0a 0000 0000 0000 0 f0267b00 3529665920 C Co:2:008:0 0 0 f0267b00 3529666626 S Ci:2:008:0 s 81 06 2200 0000 008b 139 < f0267b00 3529674418 C Ci:2:008:0 0 75 = 05010906 a1010507 19e029e7 15002501 75019508 81029501 75088101 95037501 f0267b00 3529693746 S Co:2:008:0 s 21 0a 0000 0001 0000 0 f0267b00 3529694542 C Co:2:008:0 -32 0 f0267b00 3529702370 S Ci:2:008:0 s 81 06 2200 0001 00ac 172 < f0267b00 3529713044 C Ci:2:008:0 0 108 = 05010980 a1018501 19812983 15002501 95037501 81029501 75058101 c0050c09 f0267b00 3529718373 S Ii:2:008:2 -115:8 8 < f0267b80 3529725741 S Ii:2:008:1 -115:8 8 < f0267b00 3529733548 C Ii:2:008:2 0:8 8 = 03000000 00000000 f0267b00 3529733614 S Ii:2:008:2 -115:8 8 < d8b15500 3530739916 S Co:2:008:0 s 21 09 0200 0000 0001 1 = 01 d8b15500 3530741428 C Co:2:008:0 0 1 > eea26600 3531740815 S Co:2:008:0 s 21 09 0200 0000 0001 1 = 01 eea26600 3531741804 C Co:2:008:0 0 1 > eea26c80 3532773340 S Co:2:008:0 s 21 09 0200 0000 0001 1 = 01 eea26c80 3532774436 C Co:2:008:0 0 1 > f0267b00 3581997851 C Ii:2:008:2 0:8 8 = 03000008 00000000 db7e2900 3582013998 S Ii:2:008:2 -115:8 8 < db7e2900 3582093846 C Ii:2:008:2 0:8 8 = 03000000 00000000 db7e2900 3582101235 S Ii:2:008:2 -115:8 8 < db7e2900 3582477849 C Ii:2:008:2 0:8 8 = 03000008 00000000 db7e2900 3582497373 S Ii:2:008:2 -115:8 8 < db7e2900 3582565849 C Ii:2:008:2 0:8 8 = 03000000 00000000 d58e0300 3582576419 S Ii:2:008:2 -115:8 8 < ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 18+ messages in thread
* Re: USB keyboard recognized as HID keyboard but doesn't work 2011-05-02 21:19 ` Adi J. Sieker @ 2011-05-02 22:29 ` Alan Stern 2011-05-03 9:40 ` Adi J. Sieker 0 siblings, 1 reply; 18+ messages in thread From: Alan Stern @ 2011-05-02 22:29 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Adi J. Sieker, Jiri Kosina Cc: Oliver Neukum, USB list, linux-input, Kernel development list On Mon, 2 May 2011, Adi J. Sieker wrote: > > Interestingly, the usbmon trace shows that the interrupt endpoint for > > interface 1 isn't being used by usbhid. I don't know why, but it > > shouldn't make much difference for your purposes since that interface > > appears to be associated with the gaming interface. But maybe I'm > > wrong and it is important somehow... > > > > The other noticeable thing is that the keyboard didn't accept the > > Set-Idle request for interface 1. > > > > You said before that the keyboard worked okay when driven by a guest > > Windows OS, right? Can you collect an equivalent usbmon trace for > > that? Comparing the two traces may be instructive. > > I hope this is what you meant. :) > Attached is a usbmon trace when I attach the keyboard to a VBox VM > running a Windows XP guest. I have no idea how to get a USB trace from > within Windows. The last block is when I pressed h twice in the Windows > XP guest. This is perfect. It shows that the H key is reported using the interrupt endpoint on interface 1, which explains why it's not working with usbhid. It also shows that the rejected Set-Idle request doesn't matter. At this point I don't know what the problem is, but now there's plenty of information in the email thread for the people on linux-input to debug this. Alan Stern ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 18+ messages in thread
* Re: USB keyboard recognized as HID keyboard but doesn't work 2011-05-02 22:29 ` Alan Stern @ 2011-05-03 9:40 ` Adi J. Sieker 2011-05-03 13:49 ` Alan Stern 0 siblings, 1 reply; 18+ messages in thread From: Adi J. Sieker @ 2011-05-03 9:40 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Alan Stern Cc: Jiri Kosina, Oliver Neukum, USB list, linux-input, Kernel development list On 03/05/11 00:29, Alan Stern wrote: > On Mon, 2 May 2011, Adi J. Sieker wrote: > >>> Interestingly, the usbmon trace shows that the interrupt endpoint for >>> interface 1 isn't being used by usbhid. I don't know why, but it >>> shouldn't make much difference for your purposes since that interface >>> appears to be associated with the gaming interface. But maybe I'm >>> wrong and it is important somehow... >>> >>> The other noticeable thing is that the keyboard didn't accept the >>> Set-Idle request for interface 1. >>> >>> You said before that the keyboard worked okay when driven by a guest >>> Windows OS, right? Can you collect an equivalent usbmon trace for >>> that? Comparing the two traces may be instructive. >> >> I hope this is what you meant. :) >> Attached is a usbmon trace when I attach the keyboard to a VBox VM >> running a Windows XP guest. I have no idea how to get a USB trace from >> within Windows. The last block is when I pressed h twice in the Windows >> XP guest. > > This is perfect. It shows that the H key is reported using the > interrupt endpoint on interface 1, which explains why it's not working > with usbhid. It also shows that the rejected Set-Idle request doesn't > matter. > Do you know of a way for me to tell the kernel/usbhid to use interface 1 and ignore interface 0? Thanks Adi ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 18+ messages in thread
* Re: USB keyboard recognized as HID keyboard but doesn't work 2011-05-03 9:40 ` Adi J. Sieker @ 2011-05-03 13:49 ` Alan Stern 2011-05-06 12:58 ` Jiri Kosina 0 siblings, 1 reply; 18+ messages in thread From: Alan Stern @ 2011-05-03 13:49 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Adi J. Sieker Cc: Jiri Kosina, Oliver Neukum, USB list, linux-input, Kernel development list On Tue, 3 May 2011, Adi J. Sieker wrote: > Do you know of a way for me to tell the kernel/usbhid to use interface 1 > and ignore interface 0? Well, you can always unbind interface 0 from usbhid -- it corresponds to the 2-1.1:1.0 file in /sys/bus/usb/drivers/usbhid/. If you do that, you'll probably find the few keys which _do_ currently work suddenly stop working. But there's nothing to be done immediately about interface 1; usbhid is _already_ using it. It just isn't using it correctly. Alan Stern ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 18+ messages in thread
* Re: USB keyboard recognized as HID keyboard but doesn't work 2011-05-03 13:49 ` Alan Stern @ 2011-05-06 12:58 ` Jiri Kosina 2011-05-06 13:59 ` Adi J. Sieker 0 siblings, 1 reply; 18+ messages in thread From: Jiri Kosina @ 2011-05-06 12:58 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Alan Stern, Adi J. Sieker Cc: Oliver Neukum, USB list, linux-input, Kernel development list On Tue, 3 May 2011, Alan Stern wrote: > > Do you know of a way for me to tell the kernel/usbhid to use interface 1 > > and ignore interface 0? > > Well, you can always unbind interface 0 from usbhid -- it corresponds > to the 2-1.1:1.0 file in /sys/bus/usb/drivers/usbhid/. If you do that, > you'll probably find the few keys which _do_ currently work suddenly > stop working. > > But there's nothing to be done immediately about interface 1; usbhid is > _already_ using it. It just isn't using it correctly. Adi, could you please provide output of cat /syse/kernel/debug/hid/<keyboard>/rdesc anytime after the keyboard has been plugged, and cat /syse/kernel/debug/hid/<keyboard>/events from the time you press any of the working and non-working keys? (both cases will be interesting). Oh, and the above assumes that you have debugfs mounted under /sys/kernel/debug. Thanks, -- Jiri Kosina SUSE Labs ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 18+ messages in thread
* Re: USB keyboard recognized as HID keyboard but doesn't work 2011-05-06 12:58 ` Jiri Kosina @ 2011-05-06 13:59 ` Adi J. Sieker 2011-05-07 22:24 ` Christoph Fritz 0 siblings, 1 reply; 18+ messages in thread From: Adi J. Sieker @ 2011-05-06 13:59 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Jiri Kosina Cc: Alan Stern, Oliver Neukum, USB list, linux-input, Kernel development list [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1289 bytes --] On 06/05/11 14:58, Jiri Kosina wrote: > On Tue, 3 May 2011, Alan Stern wrote: > >>> Do you know of a way for me to tell the kernel/usbhid to use interface 1 >>> and ignore interface 0? >> >> Well, you can always unbind interface 0 from usbhid -- it corresponds >> to the 2-1.1:1.0 file in /sys/bus/usb/drivers/usbhid/. If you do that, >> you'll probably find the few keys which _do_ currently work suddenly >> stop working. >> >> But there's nothing to be done immediately about interface 1; usbhid is >> _already_ using it. It just isn't using it correctly. > > Adi, > > could you please provide output of > > cat /syse/kernel/debug/hid/<keyboard>/rdesc > > anytime after the keyboard has been plugged, and in /sys/kernel/debug/hid I have two devices for the keyboard. One is 0003:060B:0230.0002 and the other 0003:060B:0230.0003 attached are the rdesc files for both devices. > > cat /syse/kernel/debug/hid/<keyboard>/events > from the time you press any of the working and non-working keys? (both > cases will be interesting). I only get events for the working keys on the *:0002 device. All other files were empty after I pressed some keys. The events for the working keys are attached in the *.events file. I first pressed backspace and then the menu key. Cheers Adi [-- Attachment #2: 0003:060B:0230.0002.rdesc --] [-- Type: text/plain, Size: 9075 bytes --] 05 01 09 06 a1 01 05 07 19 e0 29 e7 15 00 25 01 75 01 95 08 81 02 95 01 75 08 81 01 95 03 75 01 05 08 19 01 29 03 91 02 95 05 75 01 91 01 95 06 75 08 26 ff 00 05 07 19 00 29 91 81 00 09 00 15 00 26 ff 00 75 08 95 08 b1 00 c0 INPUT[INPUT] Field(0) Usage(8) Keyboard.00e0 Keyboard.00e1 Keyboard.00e2 Keyboard.00e3 Keyboard.00e4 Keyboard.00e5 Keyboard.00e6 Keyboard.00e7 Logical Minimum(0) Logical Maximum(1) Report Size(1) Report Count(8) Report Offset(0) Flags( Variable Absolute ) Field(1) Usage(146) Keyboard.0000 Keyboard.0001 Keyboard.0002 Keyboard.0003 Keyboard.0004 Keyboard.0005 Keyboard.0006 Keyboard.0007 Keyboard.0008 Keyboard.0009 Keyboard.000a Keyboard.000b Keyboard.000c Keyboard.000d Keyboard.000e Keyboard.000f Keyboard.0010 Keyboard.0011 Keyboard.0012 Keyboard.0013 Keyboard.0014 Keyboard.0015 Keyboard.0016 Keyboard.0017 Keyboard.0018 Keyboard.0019 Keyboard.001a Keyboard.001b Keyboard.001c Keyboard.001d Keyboard.001e Keyboard.001f Keyboard.0020 Keyboard.0021 Keyboard.0022 Keyboard.0023 Keyboard.0024 Keyboard.0025 Keyboard.0026 Keyboard.0027 Keyboard.0028 Keyboard.0029 Keyboard.002a Keyboard.002b Keyboard.002c Keyboard.002d Keyboard.002e Keyboard.002f Keyboard.0030 Keyboard.0031 Keyboard.0032 Keyboard.0033 Keyboard.0034 Keyboard.0035 Keyboard.0036 Keyboard.0037 Keyboard.0038 Keyboard.0039 Keyboard.003a Keyboard.003b Keyboard.003c Keyboard.003d Keyboard.003e Keyboard.003f Keyboard.0040 Keyboard.0041 Keyboard.0042 Keyboard.0043 Keyboard.0044 Keyboard.0045 Keyboard.0046 Keyboard.0047 Keyboard.0048 Keyboard.0049 Keyboard.004a Keyboard.004b Keyboard.004c Keyboard.004d Keyboard.004e Keyboard.004f Keyboard.0050 Keyboard.0051 Keyboard.0052 Keyboard.0053 Keyboard.0054 Keyboard.0055 Keyboard.0056 Keyboard.0057 Keyboard.0058 Keyboard.0059 Keyboard.005a Keyboard.005b Keyboard.005c Keyboard.005d Keyboard.005e Keyboard.005f Keyboard.0060 Keyboard.0061 Keyboard.0062 Keyboard.0063 Keyboard.0064 Keyboard.0065 Keyboard.0066 Keyboard.0067 Keyboard.0068 Keyboard.0069 Keyboard.006a Keyboard.006b Keyboard.006c Keyboard.006d Keyboard.006e Keyboard.006f Keyboard.0070 Keyboard.0071 Keyboard.0072 Keyboard.0073 Keyboard.0074 Keyboard.0075 Keyboard.0076 Keyboard.0077 Keyboard.0078 Keyboard.0079 Keyboard.007a Keyboard.007b Keyboard.007c Keyboard.007d Keyboard.007e Keyboard.007f Keyboard.0080 Keyboard.0081 Keyboard.0082 Keyboard.0083 Keyboard.0084 Keyboard.0085 Keyboard.0086 Keyboard.0087 Keyboard.0088 Keyboard.0089 Keyboard.008a Keyboard.008b Keyboard.008c Keyboard.008d Keyboard.008e Keyboard.008f Keyboard.0090 Keyboard.0091 Logical Minimum(0) Logical Maximum(255) Report Size(8) Report Count(6) Report Offset(16) Flags( Array Absolute ) OUTPUT[OUTPUT] Field(0) Usage(3) LED.NumLock LED.CapsLock LED.ScrollLock Logical Minimum(0) Logical Maximum(1) Report Size(1) Report Count(3) Report Offset(0) Flags( Variable Absolute ) FEATURE[FEATURE] Field(0) Usage(8) Keyboard.0000 Keyboard.0000 Keyboard.0000 Keyboard.0000 Keyboard.0000 Keyboard.0000 Keyboard.0000 Keyboard.0000 Logical Minimum(0) Logical Maximum(255) Report Size(8) Report Count(8) Report Offset(0) Flags( Array Absolute ) Keyboard.00e0 ---> Key.LeftControl Keyboard.00e1 ---> Key.LeftShift Keyboard.00e2 ---> Key.LeftAlt Keyboard.00e3 ---> Key.LeftMeta Keyboard.00e4 ---> Key.RightCtrl Keyboard.00e5 ---> Key.RightShift Keyboard.00e6 ---> Key.RightAlt Keyboard.00e7 ---> Key.RightMeta Keyboard.0000 ---> Sync.Report Keyboard.0001 ---> Sync.Report Keyboard.0002 ---> Sync.Report Keyboard.0003 ---> Sync.Report Keyboard.0004 ---> Key.A Keyboard.0005 ---> Key.B Keyboard.0006 ---> Key.C Keyboard.0007 ---> Key.D Keyboard.0008 ---> Key.E Keyboard.0009 ---> Key.F Keyboard.000a ---> Key.G Keyboard.000b ---> Key.H Keyboard.000c ---> Key.I Keyboard.000d ---> Key.J Keyboard.000e ---> Key.K Keyboard.000f ---> Key.L Keyboard.0010 ---> Key.M Keyboard.0011 ---> Key.N Keyboard.0012 ---> Key.O Keyboard.0013 ---> Key.P Keyboard.0014 ---> Key.Q Keyboard.0015 ---> Key.R Keyboard.0016 ---> Key.S Keyboard.0017 ---> Key.T Keyboard.0018 ---> Key.U Keyboard.0019 ---> Key.V Keyboard.001a ---> Key.W Keyboard.001b ---> Key.X Keyboard.001c ---> Key.Y Keyboard.001d ---> Key.Z Keyboard.001e ---> Key.1 Keyboard.001f ---> Key.2 Keyboard.0020 ---> Key.3 Keyboard.0021 ---> Key.4 Keyboard.0022 ---> Key.5 Keyboard.0023 ---> Key.6 Keyboard.0024 ---> Key.7 Keyboard.0025 ---> Key.8 Keyboard.0026 ---> Key.9 Keyboard.0027 ---> Key.0 Keyboard.0028 ---> Key.Enter Keyboard.0029 ---> Key.Esc Keyboard.002a ---> Key.Backspace Keyboard.002b ---> Key.Tab Keyboard.002c ---> Key.Space Keyboard.002d ---> Key.Minus Keyboard.002e ---> Key.Equal Keyboard.002f ---> Key.LeftBrace Keyboard.0030 ---> Key.RightBrace Keyboard.0031 ---> Key.BackSlash Keyboard.0032 ---> Key.BackSlash Keyboard.0033 ---> Key.Semicolon Keyboard.0034 ---> Key.Apostrophe Keyboard.0035 ---> Key.Grave Keyboard.0036 ---> Key.Comma Keyboard.0037 ---> Key.Dot Keyboard.0038 ---> Key.Slash Keyboard.0039 ---> Key.CapsLock Keyboard.003a ---> Key.F1 Keyboard.003b ---> Key.F2 Keyboard.003c ---> Key.F3 Keyboard.003d ---> Key.F4 Keyboard.003e ---> Key.F5 Keyboard.003f ---> Key.F6 Keyboard.0040 ---> Key.F7 Keyboard.0041 ---> Key.F8 Keyboard.0042 ---> Key.F9 Keyboard.0043 ---> Key.F10 Keyboard.0044 ---> Key.F11 Keyboard.0045 ---> Key.F12 Keyboard.0046 ---> Key.SysRq Keyboard.0047 ---> Key.ScrollLock Keyboard.0048 ---> Key.Pause Keyboard.0049 ---> Key.Insert Keyboard.004a ---> Key.Home Keyboard.004b ---> Key.PageUp Keyboard.004c ---> Key.Delete Keyboard.004d ---> Key.End Keyboard.004e ---> Key.PageDown Keyboard.004f ---> Key.Right Keyboard.0050 ---> Key.Left Keyboard.0051 ---> Key.Down Keyboard.0052 ---> Key.Up Keyboard.0053 ---> Key.NumLock Keyboard.0054 ---> Key.KPSlash Keyboard.0055 ---> Key.KPAsterisk Keyboard.0056 ---> Key.KPMinus Keyboard.0057 ---> Key.KPPlus Keyboard.0058 ---> Key.KPEnter Keyboard.0059 ---> Key.KP1 Keyboard.005a ---> Key.KP2 Keyboard.005b ---> Key.KP3 Keyboard.005c ---> Key.KP4 Keyboard.005d ---> Key.KP5 Keyboard.005e ---> Key.KP6 Keyboard.005f ---> Key.KP7 Keyboard.0060 ---> Key.KP8 Keyboard.0061 ---> Key.KP9 Keyboard.0062 ---> Key.KP0 Keyboard.0063 ---> Key.KPDot Keyboard.0064 ---> Key.102nd Keyboard.0065 ---> Key.Compose Keyboard.0066 ---> Key.Power Keyboard.0067 ---> Key.KPEqual Keyboard.0068 ---> Key.F13 Keyboard.0069 ---> Key.F14 Keyboard.006a ---> Key.F15 Keyboard.006b ---> Key.F16 Keyboard.006c ---> Key.F17 Keyboard.006d ---> Key.F18 Keyboard.006e ---> Key.F19 Keyboard.006f ---> Key.F20 Keyboard.0070 ---> Key.F21 Keyboard.0071 ---> Key.F22 Keyboard.0072 ---> Key.F23 Keyboard.0073 ---> Key.F24 Keyboard.0074 ---> Key.Open Keyboard.0075 ---> Key.Help Keyboard.0076 ---> Key.Props Keyboard.0077 ---> Key.Front Keyboard.0078 ---> Key.Stop Keyboard.0079 ---> Key.Again Keyboard.007a ---> Key.Undo Keyboard.007b ---> Key.Cut Keyboard.007c ---> Key.Copy Keyboard.007d ---> Key.Paste Keyboard.007e ---> Key.Find Keyboard.007f ---> Key.Mute Keyboard.0080 ---> Key.VolumeUp Keyboard.0081 ---> Key.VolumeDown Keyboard.0082 ---> Key.Unknown Keyboard.0083 ---> Key.Unknown Keyboard.0084 ---> Key.Unknown Keyboard.0085 ---> Key.KPComma Keyboard.0086 ---> Key.Unknown Keyboard.0087 ---> Key.RO Keyboard.0088 ---> Key.Katakana/Hiragana Keyboard.0089 ---> Key.Yen Keyboard.008a ---> Key.Henkan Keyboard.008b ---> Key.Muhenkan Keyboard.008c ---> Key.KPJpComma Keyboard.008d ---> Key.Unknown Keyboard.008e ---> Key.Unknown Keyboard.008f ---> Key.Unknown Keyboard.0090 ---> Key.Hangeul Keyboard.0091 ---> Key.Hanja LED.NumLock ---> LED.NumLock LED.CapsLock ---> LED.CapsLock LED.ScrollLock ---> LED.ScrollLock [-- Attachment #3: 0003:060B:0230.0002-working-keys.events --] [-- Type: application/octet-stream, Size: 1030 bytes --] [-- Attachment #4: 0003:060B:0230.0003.rdesc --] [-- Type: text/plain, Size: 769 bytes --] 05 01 09 80 a1 01 85 01 19 81 29 83 15 00 25 01 95 03 75 01 81 02 95 01 75 05 81 01 c0 05 0c 09 01 a1 01 85 02 19 00 2a ff 7f 15 00 26 ff 7f 95 01 75 10 81 00 c0 05 01 09 06 a1 01 85 03 95 38 75 01 15 00 25 01 05 07 19 e0 29 e7 19 00 29 2f 81 02 c0 05 01 09 06 a1 01 85 04 95 38 75 01 15 00 25 01 05 07 19 30 29 67 81 02 c0 INPUT(1)[INPUT] Field(0) Usage(3) GenericDesktop.SystemPowerDown GenericDesktop.SystemSleep GenericDesktop.SystemWakeUp Logical Minimum(0) Logical Maximum(1) Report Size(1) Report Count(3) Report Offset(0) Flags( Variable Absolute ) GenericDesktop.SystemPowerDown ---> Sync.Report GenericDesktop.SystemSleep ---> Sync.Report GenericDesktop.SystemWakeUp ---> Sync.Report ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 18+ messages in thread
* Re: USB keyboard recognized as HID keyboard but doesn't work 2011-05-06 13:59 ` Adi J. Sieker @ 2011-05-07 22:24 ` Christoph Fritz 2011-05-08 19:51 ` Adi J. Sieker 2011-05-10 8:24 ` Adi J. Sieker 0 siblings, 2 replies; 18+ messages in thread From: Christoph Fritz @ 2011-05-07 22:24 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Adi J. Sieker Cc: Jiri Kosina, Alan Stern, Oliver Neukum, USB list, linux-input, Kernel development list On Fri, 2011-05-06 at 15:59 +0200, Adi J. Sieker wrote: > On 06/05/11 14:58, Jiri Kosina wrote: > > On Tue, 3 May 2011, Alan Stern wrote: > > > >>> Do you know of a way for me to tell the kernel/usbhid to use interface 1 > >>> and ignore interface 0? > >> > >> Well, you can always unbind interface 0 from usbhid -- it corresponds > >> to the 2-1.1:1.0 file in /sys/bus/usb/drivers/usbhid/. If you do that, > >> you'll probably find the few keys which _do_ currently work suddenly > >> stop working. > >> > >> But there's nothing to be done immediately about interface 1; usbhid is > >> _already_ using it. It just isn't using it correctly. > > > > Adi, > > > > could you please provide output of > > > > cat /syse/kernel/debug/hid/<keyboard>/rdesc > > > > anytime after the keyboard has been plugged, and > > in /sys/kernel/debug/hid I have two devices for the keyboard. One is > 0003:060B:0230.0002 and the other 0003:060B:0230.0003 > > attached are the rdesc files for both devices. > > > > > cat /syse/kernel/debug/hid/<keyboard>/events > > from the time you press any of the working and non-working keys? (both > > cases will be interesting). > > I only get events for the working keys on the *:0002 device. > All other files were empty after I pressed some keys. > > The events for the working keys are attached in the *.events file. > I first pressed backspace and then the menu key. Hi Adi, I'm not sure about my patch below because of interface one, maybe you can give it a try. Thanks, -- chf --- Subject: [PATCH] HID: add quirk for Solid Year keyboard ACK231 This patch adds HID_QUIRK_MULTI_INPUT to Solid Year keyboard ACK231 which reports keystrokes from inside a firmware-configuration interface instead of using its own interface. diff --git a/drivers/hid/hid-ids.h b/drivers/hid/hid-ids.h index 00a94b5..abbace9 100644 --- a/drivers/hid/hid-ids.h +++ b/drivers/hid/hid-ids.h @@ -528,6 +528,9 @@ #define USB_VENDOR_ID_SKYCABLE 0x1223 #define USB_DEVICE_ID_SKYCABLE_WIRELESS_PRESENTER 0x3F07 +#define USB_VENDOR_ID_SOLIDYEAR 0x060b +#define USB_DEVICE_ID_SOLIDYEAR_KEYBOARD_ACK231 0x0230 + #define USB_VENDOR_ID_SONY 0x054c #define USB_DEVICE_ID_SONY_VAIO_VGX_MOUSE 0x024b #define USB_DEVICE_ID_SONY_PS3_CONTROLLER 0x0268 diff --git a/drivers/hid/usbhid/hid-quirks.c b/drivers/hid/usbhid/hid-quirks.c index a8426f1..b099380 100644 --- a/drivers/hid/usbhid/hid-quirks.c +++ b/drivers/hid/usbhid/hid-quirks.c @@ -49,6 +49,7 @@ { USB_VENDOR_ID_ETURBOTOUCH, USB_DEVICE_ID_ETURBOTOUCH, HID_QUIRK_MULTI_INPUT }, { USB_VENDOR_ID_PANTHERLORD, USB_DEVICE_ID_PANTHERLORD_TWIN_USB_JOYSTICK, HID_QUIRK_MULTI_INPUT | HID_QUIRK_SKIP_OUTPUT_REPORTS }, { USB_VENDOR_ID_PLAYDOTCOM, USB_DEVICE_ID_PLAYDOTCOM_EMS_USBII, HID_QUIRK_MULTI_INPUT }, + { USB_VENDOR_ID_SOLIDYEAR, USB_DEVICE_ID_SOLIDYEAR_KEYBOARD_ACK231, HID_QUIRK_MULTI_INPUT }, { USB_VENDOR_ID_TOUCHPACK, USB_DEVICE_ID_TOUCHPACK_RTS, HID_QUIRK_MULTI_INPUT }, { USB_VENDOR_ID_ATEN, USB_DEVICE_ID_ATEN_UC100KM, HID_QUIRK_NOGET }, ^ permalink raw reply related [flat|nested] 18+ messages in thread
* Re: USB keyboard recognized as HID keyboard but doesn't work 2011-05-07 22:24 ` Christoph Fritz @ 2011-05-08 19:51 ` Adi J. Sieker 2011-05-08 21:26 ` Christoph Fritz 2011-05-10 8:24 ` Adi J. Sieker 1 sibling, 1 reply; 18+ messages in thread From: Adi J. Sieker @ 2011-05-08 19:51 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Christoph Fritz Cc: Jiri Kosina, Alan Stern, Oliver Neukum, USB list, linux-input, Kernel development list On 08/05/11 00:24, Christoph Fritz wrote: > On Fri, 2011-05-06 at 15:59 +0200, Adi J. Sieker wrote: >> On 06/05/11 14:58, Jiri Kosina wrote: >>> On Tue, 3 May 2011, Alan Stern wrote: >>> >>>>> Do you know of a way for me to tell the kernel/usbhid to use interface 1 >>>>> and ignore interface 0? >>>> >>>> Well, you can always unbind interface 0 from usbhid -- it corresponds >>>> to the 2-1.1:1.0 file in /sys/bus/usb/drivers/usbhid/. If you do that, >>>> you'll probably find the few keys which _do_ currently work suddenly >>>> stop working. >>>> >>>> But there's nothing to be done immediately about interface 1; usbhid is >>>> _already_ using it. It just isn't using it correctly. >>> >>> Adi, >>> >>> could you please provide output of >>> >>> cat /syse/kernel/debug/hid/<keyboard>/rdesc >>> >>> anytime after the keyboard has been plugged, and >> >> in /sys/kernel/debug/hid I have two devices for the keyboard. One is >> 0003:060B:0230.0002 and the other 0003:060B:0230.0003 >> >> attached are the rdesc files for both devices. >> >>> >>> cat /syse/kernel/debug/hid/<keyboard>/events >> > from the time you press any of the working and non-working keys? (both >> > cases will be interesting). >> >> I only get events for the working keys on the *:0002 device. >> All other files were empty after I pressed some keys. >> >> The events for the working keys are attached in the *.events file. >> I first pressed backspace and then the menu key. > > Hi Adi, > > I'm not sure about my patch below because of interface one, maybe you > can give it a try. > What kernel version do I need? I'm running Ubuntu 10.04, so can I apply this to a 2.6.32 Ubuntu kernel or do I need a current 2.6.39? Any ideas if I'll run into problems if I run Ubuntu 10.04 on a 2.6.39 kernel. Cheers Adi ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 18+ messages in thread
* Re: USB keyboard recognized as HID keyboard but doesn't work 2011-05-08 19:51 ` Adi J. Sieker @ 2011-05-08 21:26 ` Christoph Fritz 0 siblings, 0 replies; 18+ messages in thread From: Christoph Fritz @ 2011-05-08 21:26 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Adi J. Sieker Cc: Jiri Kosina, Alan Stern, Oliver Neukum, USB list, linux-input, Kernel development list On Sun, May 08, 2011 at 09:51:42PM +0200, Adi J. Sieker wrote: > On 08/05/11 00:24, Christoph Fritz wrote: > > > > I'm not sure about my patch below because of interface one, maybe you > >can give it a try. > > > What kernel version do I need? I'm running Ubuntu 10.04, so can I > apply this to a 2.6.32 Ubuntu kernel or do I need a current 2.6.39? A current kernel is recommended. bye, -- chf ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 18+ messages in thread
* Re: USB keyboard recognized as HID keyboard but doesn't work 2011-05-07 22:24 ` Christoph Fritz 2011-05-08 19:51 ` Adi J. Sieker @ 2011-05-10 8:24 ` Adi J. Sieker 1 sibling, 0 replies; 18+ messages in thread From: Adi J. Sieker @ 2011-05-10 8:24 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Christoph Fritz Cc: Jiri Kosina, Alan Stern, Oliver Neukum, USB list, linux-input, Kernel development list On 08/05/11 00:24, Christoph Fritz wrote: > On Fri, 2011-05-06 at 15:59 +0200, Adi J. Sieker wrote: >> On 06/05/11 14:58, Jiri Kosina wrote: >>> On Tue, 3 May 2011, Alan Stern wrote: >>> >>>>> Do you know of a way for me to tell the kernel/usbhid to use interface 1 >>>>> and ignore interface 0? >>>> >>>> Well, you can always unbind interface 0 from usbhid -- it corresponds >>>> to the 2-1.1:1.0 file in /sys/bus/usb/drivers/usbhid/. If you do that, >>>> you'll probably find the few keys which _do_ currently work suddenly >>>> stop working. >>>> >>>> But there's nothing to be done immediately about interface 1; usbhid is >>>> _already_ using it. It just isn't using it correctly. >>> >>> Adi, >>> >>> could you please provide output of >>> >>> cat /syse/kernel/debug/hid/<keyboard>/rdesc >>> >>> anytime after the keyboard has been plugged, and >> >> in /sys/kernel/debug/hid I have two devices for the keyboard. One is >> 0003:060B:0230.0002 and the other 0003:060B:0230.0003 >> >> attached are the rdesc files for both devices. >> >>> >>> cat /syse/kernel/debug/hid/<keyboard>/events >> > from the time you press any of the working and non-working keys? (both >> > cases will be interesting). >> >> I only get events for the working keys on the *:0002 device. >> All other files were empty after I pressed some keys. >> >> The events for the working keys are attached in the *.events file. >> I first pressed backspace and then the menu key. > > Hi Adi, > > I'm not sure about my patch below because of interface one, maybe you > can give it a try. > Hi Christoph, I haven't gotten around to compiling a new kernel yet. Tzy-Jye Daniel Lin mentioned in a mail to me that adding usbhid.quirks=0x060b:0x0230:0x0040 to the kernel command line would achieve the same as the patch you posted. I did try that on a 2.6.32 kernel and that didn't help. I'll still generate a new kernel with your patch applied it's probably going to take a couple of days though. Cheers Adi the suppllied patch > Thanks, > -- chf > > --- > Subject: [PATCH] HID: add quirk for Solid Year keyboard ACK231 > > This patch adds HID_QUIRK_MULTI_INPUT to Solid Year keyboard ACK231 > which reports keystrokes from inside a firmware-configuration > interface instead of using its own interface. > > diff --git a/drivers/hid/hid-ids.h b/drivers/hid/hid-ids.h > index 00a94b5..abbace9 100644 > --- a/drivers/hid/hid-ids.h > +++ b/drivers/hid/hid-ids.h > @@ -528,6 +528,9 @@ > #define USB_VENDOR_ID_SKYCABLE 0x1223 > #define USB_DEVICE_ID_SKYCABLE_WIRELESS_PRESENTER 0x3F07 > > +#define USB_VENDOR_ID_SOLIDYEAR 0x060b > +#define USB_DEVICE_ID_SOLIDYEAR_KEYBOARD_ACK231 0x0230 > + > #define USB_VENDOR_ID_SONY 0x054c > #define USB_DEVICE_ID_SONY_VAIO_VGX_MOUSE 0x024b > #define USB_DEVICE_ID_SONY_PS3_CONTROLLER 0x0268 > diff --git a/drivers/hid/usbhid/hid-quirks.c b/drivers/hid/usbhid/hid-quirks.c > index a8426f1..b099380 100644 > --- a/drivers/hid/usbhid/hid-quirks.c > +++ b/drivers/hid/usbhid/hid-quirks.c > @@ -49,6 +49,7 @@ > { USB_VENDOR_ID_ETURBOTOUCH, USB_DEVICE_ID_ETURBOTOUCH, HID_QUIRK_MULTI_INPUT }, > { USB_VENDOR_ID_PANTHERLORD, USB_DEVICE_ID_PANTHERLORD_TWIN_USB_JOYSTICK, HID_QUIRK_MULTI_INPUT | HID_QUIRK_SKIP_OUTPUT_REPORTS }, > { USB_VENDOR_ID_PLAYDOTCOM, USB_DEVICE_ID_PLAYDOTCOM_EMS_USBII, HID_QUIRK_MULTI_INPUT }, > + { USB_VENDOR_ID_SOLIDYEAR, USB_DEVICE_ID_SOLIDYEAR_KEYBOARD_ACK231, HID_QUIRK_MULTI_INPUT }, > { USB_VENDOR_ID_TOUCHPACK, USB_DEVICE_ID_TOUCHPACK_RTS, HID_QUIRK_MULTI_INPUT }, > > { USB_VENDOR_ID_ATEN, USB_DEVICE_ID_ATEN_UC100KM, HID_QUIRK_NOGET }, > > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 18+ messages in thread
* USB keyboard recognized as HID keyboard but doesn't work @ 2011-04-30 20:23 Adi J. Sieker 2011-05-01 7:53 ` Oliver Neukum 0 siblings, 1 reply; 18+ messages in thread From: Adi J. Sieker @ 2011-04-30 20:23 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-input; +Cc: linux-kernel Hello, the lovely folks from #kernelnewbies suggested I write this mail since they are at a loss. I recently got a new USB keyboard which works fine in the BIOS and also in VBox Windows guests, but not on the host. The keyboard is a Keysonic KSK-8003 UX product details here: http://maxpoint.de/de/products/keyboards.php?pid=1_3_7&we_objectID=1220 The menu key and the backspace keys do work. The num lock led is on, though I can't switch num lock off. If I attch the keyboard to a VirtualBox VM running WindowsXP as a guest, it works as expected in the VM. I'm running 2.6.32-27-generic #49-Ubuntu. I tried the Ubuntu 10.10 LiveCD and that also didn't work. I haven't tried 11.04 yet though. The output of lsusb -v is available here http://pastie.org/1851416 The relevant part of dmesg output: [ 6.501902] input: KB USB Keyboard as /devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.0/usb2/2-1/2-1.3/2-1.3:1.0/input/input9 [ 6.502028] generic-usb 0003:060B:0230.0001: input,hidraw0: USB HID v1.10 Keyboard [KB USB Keyboard] on usb-0000:00:1d.0-1.3/input0 [ 6.503408] Bluetooth: Generic Bluetooth USB driver ver 0.6 [ 6.503508] usbcore: registered new interface driver btusb [ 6.516681] generic-usb: probe of 0003:060B:0230.0002 failed with error -22 I'd be grateful for any help and or pointers in the right to get this keyboard to work. Regards Adi ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 18+ messages in thread
* Re: USB keyboard recognized as HID keyboard but doesn't work 2011-04-30 20:23 Adi J. Sieker @ 2011-05-01 7:53 ` Oliver Neukum 2011-05-01 17:49 ` Adi J. Sieker 0 siblings, 1 reply; 18+ messages in thread From: Oliver Neukum @ 2011-05-01 7:53 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Adi J. Sieker, USB list; +Cc: linux-input, linux-kernel Am Samstag, 30. April 2011, 22:23:05 schrieb Adi J. Sieker: > Hello, > > the lovely folks from #kernelnewbies suggested I write this mail since > they are at a loss. > I recently got a new USB keyboard which works fine in the BIOS and also > in VBox Windows guests, but not on the host. > > The keyboard is a Keysonic KSK-8003 UX product details here: > http://maxpoint.de/de/products/keyboards.php?pid=1_3_7&we_objectID=1220 > > The menu key and the backspace keys do work. The num lock led is on, > though I can't switch num lock off. > If I attch the keyboard to a VirtualBox VM running WindowsXP as a guest, > it works as expected in the VM. This indicates that it is working on the USB level. > I'm running 2.6.32-27-generic #49-Ubuntu. I tried the Ubuntu 10.10 > LiveCD and that also didn't work. I haven't tried 11.04 yet though. Do you get anything on the event device? What does udev say when you plug in the device? Regards Oliver ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 18+ messages in thread
* Re: USB keyboard recognized as HID keyboard but doesn't work 2011-05-01 7:53 ` Oliver Neukum @ 2011-05-01 17:49 ` Adi J. Sieker 2011-05-02 14:04 ` Alan Stern 0 siblings, 1 reply; 18+ messages in thread From: Adi J. Sieker @ 2011-05-01 17:49 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Oliver Neukum; +Cc: USB list, linux-input, linux-kernel On 01/05/11 09:53, Oliver Neukum wrote: > Am Samstag, 30. April 2011, 22:23:05 schrieb Adi J. Sieker: >> Hello, >> >> the lovely folks from #kernelnewbies suggested I write this mail since >> they are at a loss. >> I recently got a new USB keyboard which works fine in the BIOS and also >> in VBox Windows guests, but not on the host. >> >> The keyboard is a Keysonic KSK-8003 UX product details here: >> http://maxpoint.de/de/products/keyboards.php?pid=1_3_7&we_objectID=1220 >> >> The menu key and the backspace keys do work. The num lock led is on, >> though I can't switch num lock off. >> If I attch the keyboard to a VirtualBox VM running WindowsXP as a guest, >> it works as expected in the VM. > This indicates that it is working on the USB level. > >> I'm running 2.6.32-27-generic #49-Ubuntu. I tried the Ubuntu 10.10 >> LiveCD and that also didn't work. I haven't tried 11.04 yet though. > Do you get anything on the event device? What does udev say when you > plug in the device? > udevadm monitor output is: monitor will print the received events for: UDEV - the event which udev sends out after rule processing KERNEL - the kernel uevent KERNEL[1304270944.379238] add /devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.0/usb2/2-1/2-1.3 (usb) KERNEL[1304270944.380140] add /devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.0/usb2/2-1/2-1.3/2-1.3:1.0 (usb) KERNEL[1304270944.380238] add /devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.0/usb2/2-1/2-1.3/2-1.3:1.0/0003:060B:0230.0004 (hid) KERNEL[1304270944.389434] add /devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.0/usb2/2-1/2-1.3/2-1.3:1.0/input/input17 (input) KERNEL[1304270944.389811] add /devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.0/usb2/2-1/2-1.3/2-1.3:1.0/input/input17/event7 (input) KERNEL[1304270944.389863] add /devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.0/usb2/2-1/2-1.3/2-1.3:1.0/0003:060B:0230.0004/hidraw/hidraw0 (hidraw) KERNEL[1304270944.389917] add /devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.0/usb2/2-1/2-1.3/2-1.3:1.1 (usb) KERNEL[1304270944.390031] add /devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.0/usb2/2-1/2-1.3/2-1.3:1.1/0003:060B:0230.0005 (hid) UDEV [1304270944.396889] add /devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.0/usb2/2-1/2-1.3 (usb) UDEV [1304270944.398067] add /devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.0/usb2/2-1/2-1.3/2-1.3:1.1 (usb) UDEV [1304270944.398122] add /devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.0/usb2/2-1/2-1.3/2-1.3:1.0 (usb) UDEV [1304270944.400048] add /devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.0/usb2/2-1/2-1.3/2-1.3:1.0/0003:060B:0230.0004 (hid) UDEV [1304270944.400947] add /devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.0/usb2/2-1/2-1.3/2-1.3:1.0/0003:060B:0230.0004/hidraw/hidraw0 (hidraw) UDEV [1304270944.401033] add /devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.0/usb2/2-1/2-1.3/2-1.3:1.1/0003:060B:0230.0005 (hid) UDEV [1304270944.408614] add /devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.0/usb2/2-1/2-1.3/2-1.3:1.0/input/input17 (input) UDEV [1304270944.415928] add /devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.0/usb2/2-1/2-1.3/2-1.3:1.0/input/input17/event7 (input) one thing I found out is that this keyboard has some special anti ghosting function for some keys. Where you can press multiple keys simultaneously and they are all recognized. This is apparently great for gaming. Which I'm not interested in... Cheers Adi -- Adi J. Sieker Steurentalstr. 2 79252 Stegen mobile: +49 / 178 / 88 5 88 13 tel: +49 / 7661 / 91 92 813 web: http://sieker.io/profile ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 18+ messages in thread
* Re: USB keyboard recognized as HID keyboard but doesn't work 2011-05-01 17:49 ` Adi J. Sieker @ 2011-05-02 14:04 ` Alan Stern 2011-05-02 19:35 ` Adi J. Sieker 0 siblings, 1 reply; 18+ messages in thread From: Alan Stern @ 2011-05-02 14:04 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Adi J. Sieker; +Cc: Oliver Neukum, USB list, linux-input, linux-kernel On Sun, 1 May 2011, Adi J. Sieker wrote: > On 01/05/11 09:53, Oliver Neukum wrote: > > Am Samstag, 30. April 2011, 22:23:05 schrieb Adi J. Sieker: > >> Hello, > >> > >> the lovely folks from #kernelnewbies suggested I write this mail since > >> they are at a loss. > >> I recently got a new USB keyboard which works fine in the BIOS and also > >> in VBox Windows guests, but not on the host. > >> > >> The keyboard is a Keysonic KSK-8003 UX product details here: > >> http://maxpoint.de/de/products/keyboards.php?pid=1_3_7&we_objectID=1220 > >> > >> The menu key and the backspace keys do work. The num lock led is on, > >> though I can't switch num lock off. > >> If I attch the keyboard to a VirtualBox VM running WindowsXP as a guest, > >> it works as expected in the VM. > > This indicates that it is working on the USB level. > > > >> I'm running 2.6.32-27-generic #49-Ubuntu. I tried the Ubuntu 10.10 > >> LiveCD and that also didn't work. I haven't tried 11.04 yet though. > > Do you get anything on the event device? What does udev say when you > > plug in the device? ... > one thing I found out is that this keyboard has some special anti > ghosting function for some keys. Where you can press multiple keys > simultaneously > and they are all recognized. This is apparently great for gaming. Which > I'm not interested in... Something else that might help is a usbmon trace showing what happens when you plug in the keyboard. Instructions are in the kernel source file Documentation/usb/usbmon.txt. In particular, while running the test try pressing some of the normal keys that don't work. Also, it would help to see the output from "lsusb -v" for this device -- but you'll have to unbind it from the usbhid driver first. Alan Stern ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 18+ messages in thread
* Re: USB keyboard recognized as HID keyboard but doesn't work 2011-05-02 14:04 ` Alan Stern @ 2011-05-02 19:35 ` Adi J. Sieker 2011-05-02 20:27 ` Alan Stern 0 siblings, 1 reply; 18+ messages in thread From: Adi J. Sieker @ 2011-05-02 19:35 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Alan Stern; +Cc: Oliver Neukum, USB list, linux-input, linux-kernel [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 2220 bytes --] On 02/05/11 16:04, Alan Stern wrote: > On Sun, 1 May 2011, Adi J. Sieker wrote: > >> On 01/05/11 09:53, Oliver Neukum wrote: >>> Am Samstag, 30. April 2011, 22:23:05 schrieb Adi J. Sieker: >>>> Hello, >>>> >>>> the lovely folks from #kernelnewbies suggested I write this mail since >>>> they are at a loss. >>>> I recently got a new USB keyboard which works fine in the BIOS and also >>>> in VBox Windows guests, but not on the host. >>>> >>>> The keyboard is a Keysonic KSK-8003 UX product details here: >>>> http://maxpoint.de/de/products/keyboards.php?pid=1_3_7&we_objectID=1220 >>>> >>>> The menu key and the backspace keys do work. The num lock led is on, >>>> though I can't switch num lock off. >>>> If I attch the keyboard to a VirtualBox VM running WindowsXP as a guest, >>>> it works as expected in the VM. >>> This indicates that it is working on the USB level. >>> >>>> I'm running 2.6.32-27-generic #49-Ubuntu. I tried the Ubuntu 10.10 >>>> LiveCD and that also didn't work. I haven't tried 11.04 yet though. >>> Do you get anything on the event device? What does udev say when you >>> plug in the device? > > ... > >> one thing I found out is that this keyboard has some special anti >> ghosting function for some keys. Where you can press multiple keys >> simultaneously >> and they are all recognized. This is apparently great for gaming. Which >> I'm not interested in... > > Something else that might help is a usbmon trace showing what happens > when you plug in the keyboard. Instructions are in the kernel source > file Documentation/usb/usbmon.txt. In particular, while running the > test try pressing some of the normal keys that don't work. > The attached file usbmon-working.out is the output when I pressed the backspace key. When I press any of the non working keys which is everything but the backspace and menu key. I don't get any output even when using 0u. > Also, it would help to see the output from "lsusb -v" for this device > -- but you'll have to unbind it from the usbhid driver first. > When attaching the keyboard I get 2 devices in /sys/bus/usb/drivers/usbhid/2-1.1:1.0 and /sys/bus/usb/drivers/usbhid/2-1.1:1.1 The output is in the attached lsusb.txt. Cheers Adi [-- Attachment #2: lsusb.txt --] [-- Type: text/plain, Size: 12597 bytes --] root@mini:/sys/bus/usb/drivers/usbhid# ls 1-1.2.2.1:1.0 bind module new_id uevent unbind root@mini:/sys/bus/usb/drivers/usbhid# ls 1-1.2.2.1:1.0 2-1.1:1.0 2-1.1:1.1 bind module new_id uevent unbind root@mini:/sys/bus/usb/drivers/usbhid# echo -n 2-1.1:1.0 >unbind root@mini:/sys/bus/usb/drivers/usbhid# echo -n 2-1.1:1.1 >unbind root@mini:/sys/bus/usb/drivers/usbhid# lsusb Bus 002 Device 006: ID 060b:0230 Solid Year Bus 002 Device 004: ID 0a5c:5801 Broadcom Corp. Bus 002 Device 003: ID 413c:8187 Dell Computer Corp. Bus 002 Device 002: ID 8087:0020 Bus 002 Device 001: ID 1d6b:0002 Linux Foundation 2.0 root hub Bus 001 Device 008: ID 1058:0704 Western Digital Technologies, Inc. Bus 001 Device 007: ID 046d:c024 Logitech, Inc. MX300 Optical Mouse Bus 001 Device 006: ID 0409:005a NEC Corp. HighSpeed Hub Bus 001 Device 005: ID 413c:2513 Dell Computer Corp. Bus 001 Device 004: ID 413c:2513 Dell Computer Corp. Bus 001 Device 003: ID 05ca:1814 Ricoh Co., Ltd Bus 001 Device 002: ID 8087:0020 Bus 001 Device 001: ID 1d6b:0002 Linux Foundation 2.0 root hub root@mini:/sys/bus/usb/drivers/usbhid# lsusb -v -s 002:006 Bus 002 Device 006: ID 060b:0230 Solid Year Device Descriptor: bLength 18 bDescriptorType 1 bcdUSB 1.10 bDeviceClass 0 (Defined at Interface level) bDeviceSubClass 0 bDeviceProtocol 0 bMaxPacketSize0 8 idVendor 0x060b Solid Year idProduct 0x0230 bcdDevice 2.20 iManufacturer 1 KB iProduct 2 USB Keyboard iSerial 0 bNumConfigurations 1 Configuration Descriptor: bLength 9 bDescriptorType 2 wTotalLength 59 bNumInterfaces 2 bConfigurationValue 1 iConfiguration 0 bmAttributes 0xa0 (Bus Powered) Remote Wakeup MaxPower 100mA Interface Descriptor: bLength 9 bDescriptorType 4 bInterfaceNumber 0 bAlternateSetting 0 bNumEndpoints 1 bInterfaceClass 3 Human Interface Device bInterfaceSubClass 1 Boot Interface Subclass bInterfaceProtocol 1 Keyboard iInterface 0 HID Device Descriptor: bLength 9 bDescriptorType 33 bcdHID 1.10 bCountryCode 0 Not supported bNumDescriptors 1 bDescriptorType 34 Report wDescriptorLength 75 Report Descriptor: (length is 75) Item(Global): Usage Page, data= [ 0x01 ] 1 Generic Desktop Controls Item(Local ): Usage, data= [ 0x06 ] 6 Keyboard Item(Main ): Collection, data= [ 0x01 ] 1 Application Item(Global): Usage Page, data= [ 0x07 ] 7 Keyboard Item(Local ): Usage Minimum, data= [ 0xe0 ] 224 Control Left Item(Local ): Usage Maximum, data= [ 0xe7 ] 231 GUI Right Item(Global): Logical Minimum, data= [ 0x00 ] 0 Item(Global): Logical Maximum, data= [ 0x01 ] 1 Item(Global): Report Size, data= [ 0x01 ] 1 Item(Global): Report Count, data= [ 0x08 ] 8 Item(Main ): Input, data= [ 0x02 ] 2 Data Variable Absolute No_Wrap Linear Preferred_State No_Null_Position Non_Volatile Bitfield Item(Global): Report Count, data= [ 0x01 ] 1 Item(Global): Report Size, data= [ 0x08 ] 8 Item(Main ): Input, data= [ 0x01 ] 1 Constant Array Absolute No_Wrap Linear Preferred_State No_Null_Position Non_Volatile Bitfield Item(Global): Report Count, data= [ 0x03 ] 3 Item(Global): Report Size, data= [ 0x01 ] 1 Item(Global): Usage Page, data= [ 0x08 ] 8 LEDs Item(Local ): Usage Minimum, data= [ 0x01 ] 1 NumLock Item(Local ): Usage Maximum, data= [ 0x03 ] 3 Scroll Lock Item(Main ): Output, data= [ 0x02 ] 2 Data Variable Absolute No_Wrap Linear Preferred_State No_Null_Position Non_Volatile Bitfield Item(Global): Report Count, data= [ 0x05 ] 5 Item(Global): Report Size, data= [ 0x01 ] 1 Item(Main ): Output, data= [ 0x01 ] 1 Constant Array Absolute No_Wrap Linear Preferred_State No_Null_Position Non_Volatile Bitfield Item(Global): Report Count, data= [ 0x06 ] 6 Item(Global): Report Size, data= [ 0x08 ] 8 Item(Global): Logical Maximum, data= [ 0xff 0x00 ] 255 Item(Global): Usage Page, data= [ 0x07 ] 7 Keyboard Item(Local ): Usage Minimum, data= [ 0x00 ] 0 No Event Item(Local ): Usage Maximum, data= [ 0x91 ] 145 LANG 2 (Hanja Conversion, Korea) Item(Main ): Input, data= [ 0x00 ] 0 Data Array Absolute No_Wrap Linear Preferred_State No_Null_Position Non_Volatile Bitfield Item(Local ): Usage, data= [ 0x00 ] 0 No Event Item(Global): Logical Minimum, data= [ 0x00 ] 0 Item(Global): Logical Maximum, data= [ 0xff 0x00 ] 255 Item(Global): Report Size, data= [ 0x08 ] 8 Item(Global): Report Count, data= [ 0x08 ] 8 Item(Main ): Feature, data= [ 0x00 ] 0 Data Array Absolute No_Wrap Linear Preferred_State No_Null_Position Non_Volatile Bitfield Item(Main ): End Collection, data=none Endpoint Descriptor: bLength 7 bDescriptorType 5 bEndpointAddress 0x81 EP 1 IN bmAttributes 3 Transfer Type Interrupt Synch Type None Usage Type Data wMaxPacketSize 0x0008 1x 8 bytes bInterval 10 Interface Descriptor: bLength 9 bDescriptorType 4 bInterfaceNumber 1 bAlternateSetting 0 bNumEndpoints 1 bInterfaceClass 3 Human Interface Device bInterfaceSubClass 0 No Subclass bInterfaceProtocol 0 None iInterface 0 HID Device Descriptor: bLength 9 bDescriptorType 33 bcdHID 1.10 bCountryCode 0 Not supported bNumDescriptors 1 bDescriptorType 34 Report wDescriptorLength 108 Report Descriptor: (length is 108) Item(Global): Usage Page, data= [ 0x01 ] 1 Generic Desktop Controls Item(Local ): Usage, data= [ 0x80 ] 128 System Control Item(Main ): Collection, data= [ 0x01 ] 1 Application Item(Global): Report ID, data= [ 0x01 ] 1 Item(Local ): Usage Minimum, data= [ 0x81 ] 129 System Power Down Item(Local ): Usage Maximum, data= [ 0x83 ] 131 System Wake Up Item(Global): Logical Minimum, data= [ 0x00 ] 0 Item(Global): Logical Maximum, data= [ 0x01 ] 1 Item(Global): Report Count, data= [ 0x03 ] 3 Item(Global): Report Size, data= [ 0x01 ] 1 Item(Main ): Input, data= [ 0x02 ] 2 Data Variable Absolute No_Wrap Linear Preferred_State No_Null_Position Non_Volatile Bitfield Item(Global): Report Count, data= [ 0x01 ] 1 Item(Global): Report Size, data= [ 0x05 ] 5 Item(Main ): Input, data= [ 0x01 ] 1 Constant Array Absolute No_Wrap Linear Preferred_State No_Null_Position Non_Volatile Bitfield Item(Main ): End Collection, data=none Item(Global): Usage Page, data= [ 0x0c ] 12 Consumer Item(Local ): Usage, data= [ 0x01 ] 1 Consumer Control Item(Main ): Collection, data= [ 0x01 ] 1 Application Item(Global): Report ID, data= [ 0x02 ] 2 Item(Local ): Usage Minimum, data= [ 0x00 ] 0 Unassigned Item(Local ): Usage Maximum, data= [ 0xff 0x7f ] 32767 (null) Item(Global): Logical Minimum, data= [ 0x00 ] 0 Item(Global): Logical Maximum, data= [ 0xff 0x7f ] 32767 Item(Global): Report Count, data= [ 0x01 ] 1 Item(Global): Report Size, data= [ 0x10 ] 16 Item(Main ): Input, data= [ 0x00 ] 0 Data Array Absolute No_Wrap Linear Preferred_State No_Null_Position Non_Volatile Bitfield Item(Main ): End Collection, data=none Item(Global): Usage Page, data= [ 0x01 ] 1 Generic Desktop Controls Item(Local ): Usage, data= [ 0x06 ] 6 Keyboard Item(Main ): Collection, data= [ 0x01 ] 1 Application Item(Global): Report ID, data= [ 0x03 ] 3 Item(Global): Report Count, data= [ 0x38 ] 56 Item(Global): Report Size, data= [ 0x01 ] 1 Item(Global): Logical Minimum, data= [ 0x00 ] 0 Item(Global): Logical Maximum, data= [ 0x01 ] 1 Item(Global): Usage Page, data= [ 0x07 ] 7 Keyboard Item(Local ): Usage Minimum, data= [ 0xe0 ] 224 Control Left Item(Local ): Usage Maximum, data= [ 0xe7 ] 231 GUI Right Item(Local ): Usage Minimum, data= [ 0x00 ] 0 No Event Item(Local ): Usage Maximum, data= [ 0x2f ] 47 [ and { (Bracket and Braces Left) Item(Main ): Input, data= [ 0x02 ] 2 Data Variable Absolute No_Wrap Linear Preferred_State No_Null_Position Non_Volatile Bitfield Item(Main ): End Collection, data=none Item(Global): Usage Page, data= [ 0x01 ] 1 Generic Desktop Controls Item(Local ): Usage, data= [ 0x06 ] 6 Keyboard Item(Main ): Collection, data= [ 0x01 ] 1 Application Item(Global): Report ID, data= [ 0x04 ] 4 Item(Global): Report Count, data= [ 0x38 ] 56 Item(Global): Report Size, data= [ 0x01 ] 1 Item(Global): Logical Minimum, data= [ 0x00 ] 0 Item(Global): Logical Maximum, data= [ 0x01 ] 1 Item(Global): Usage Page, data= [ 0x07 ] 7 Keyboard Item(Local ): Usage Minimum, data= [ 0x30 ] 48 ] and } (Bracket and Braces Right) Item(Local ): Usage Maximum, data= [ 0x67 ] 103 Keypad = (Equal Sign) Item(Main ): Input, data= [ 0x02 ] 2 Data Variable Absolute No_Wrap Linear Preferred_State No_Null_Position Non_Volatile Bitfield Item(Main ): End Collection, data=none Endpoint Descriptor: bLength 7 bDescriptorType 5 bEndpointAddress 0x82 EP 2 IN bmAttributes 3 Transfer Type Interrupt Synch Type None Usage Type Data wMaxPacketSize 0x0008 1x 8 bytes bInterval 10 Device Status: 0x0000 (Bus Powered) root@mini:/sys/bus/usb/drivers/usbhid# [-- Attachment #3: usbmon-working.out --] [-- Type: text/plain, Size: 202 bytes --] f0486100 937500342 C Ii:2:007:1 0:8 8 = 00002a00 00000000 f0486100 937500404 S Ii:2:007:1 -115:8 8 < f0486100 937564339 C Ii:2:007:1 0:8 8 = 00000000 00000000 f0486100 937564394 S Ii:2:007:1 -115:8 8 < ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 18+ messages in thread
* Re: USB keyboard recognized as HID keyboard but doesn't work 2011-05-02 19:35 ` Adi J. Sieker @ 2011-05-02 20:27 ` Alan Stern 2011-05-02 20:49 ` Adi J. Sieker 0 siblings, 1 reply; 18+ messages in thread From: Alan Stern @ 2011-05-02 20:27 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Adi J. Sieker; +Cc: Oliver Neukum, USB list, linux-input, linux-kernel On Mon, 2 May 2011, Adi J. Sieker wrote: > > Something else that might help is a usbmon trace showing what happens > > when you plug in the keyboard. Instructions are in the kernel source > > file Documentation/usb/usbmon.txt. In particular, while running the > > test try pressing some of the normal keys that don't work. > > > > The attached file usbmon-working.out is the output when I pressed the > backspace key. When I press any of the non working keys which is > everything but the backspace and menu key. I don't get any output even > when using 0u. Sorry, I wasn't clear enough. I meant for you to start the usbmon trace _before_ plugging in the keyboard, so we can see what happens as the keyboard is initialized and probed. > > Also, it would help to see the output from "lsusb -v" for this device > > -- but you'll have to unbind it from the usbhid driver first. > > > > When attaching the keyboard I get 2 devices in > /sys/bus/usb/drivers/usbhid/2-1.1:1.0 and > /sys/bus/usb/drivers/usbhid/2-1.1:1.1 > > The output is in the attached lsusb.txt. The output looks good. It doesn't mean much to me, but the people on the linux-input mailing list should be able to get something out of it. Alan Stern ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 18+ messages in thread
* Re: USB keyboard recognized as HID keyboard but doesn't work 2011-05-02 20:27 ` Alan Stern @ 2011-05-02 20:49 ` Adi J. Sieker 0 siblings, 0 replies; 18+ messages in thread From: Adi J. Sieker @ 2011-05-02 20:49 UTC (permalink / raw) To: USB list; +Cc: linux-input, linux-kernel [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1523 bytes --] On 02/05/11 22:27, Alan Stern wrote: > On Mon, 2 May 2011, Adi J. Sieker wrote: > >>> Something else that might help is a usbmon trace showing what happens >>> when you plug in the keyboard. Instructions are in the kernel source >>> file Documentation/usb/usbmon.txt. In particular, while running the >>> test try pressing some of the normal keys that don't work. >>> >> >> The attached file usbmon-working.out is the output when I pressed the >> backspace key. When I press any of the non working keys which is >> everything but the backspace and menu key. I don't get any output even >> when using 0u. > > Sorry, I wasn't clear enough. I meant for you to start the usbmon > trace _before_ plugging in the keyboard, so we can see what happens as > the keyboard is initialized and probed. > You were clear enough, I just couldn't read. :) Attached is the usbmon trace when I plug the keyboard in. lsusb shows the keyboard as: Bus 002 Device 008: ID 060b:0230 Solid Year Relevant section from /sys/kernel/debug/usb/devices T: Bus=02 Lev=02 Prnt=02 Port=00 Cnt=01 Dev#= 8 Spd=1.5 MxCh= 0 D: Ver= 1.10 Cls=00(>ifc ) Sub=00 Prot=00 MxPS= 8 #Cfgs= 1 P: Vendor=060b ProdID=0230 Rev= 2.20 S: Manufacturer=KB S: Product=USB Keyboard C:* #Ifs= 2 Cfg#= 1 Atr=a0 MxPwr=100mA I:* If#= 0 Alt= 0 #EPs= 1 Cls=03(HID ) Sub=01 Prot=01 Driver=usbhid E: Ad=81(I) Atr=03(Int.) MxPS= 8 Ivl=10ms I:* If#= 1 Alt= 0 #EPs= 1 Cls=03(HID ) Sub=00 Prot=00 Driver=usbhid E: Ad=82(I) Atr=03(Int.) MxPS= 8 Ivl=10ms Cheers Adi [-- Attachment #2: usbmon.out --] [-- Type: text/plain, Size: 3675 bytes --] f7290780 1275690550 C Ii:2:002:1 0:2048 2 = 0200 f7290780 1275690564 S Ii:2:002:1 -115:2048 2 < ed799a80 1275690577 S Ci:2:002:0 s a3 00 0000 0001 0004 4 < ed799a80 1275690733 C Ci:2:002:0 0 4 = 01010100 ed799a80 1275690760 S Co:2:002:0 s 23 01 0010 0001 0000 0 ed799a80 1275690874 C Co:2:002:0 0 0 ed799a80 1275690896 S Co:2:002:0 s 23 03 0016 0001 0000 0 ed799a80 1275690994 C Co:2:002:0 0 0 ed799a80 1275691013 S Ci:2:002:0 s a3 00 0000 0001 0004 4 < ed799a80 1275691108 C Ci:2:002:0 0 4 = 01010000 ed799a80 1275721328 S Ci:2:002:0 s a3 00 0000 0001 0004 4 < ed799a80 1275721498 C Ci:2:002:0 0 4 = 01010000 ed799a80 1275753292 S Ci:2:002:0 s a3 00 0000 0001 0004 4 < ed799a80 1275753488 C Ci:2:002:0 0 4 = 01010000 ed799a80 1275785291 S Ci:2:002:0 s a3 00 0000 0001 0004 4 < ed799a80 1275785487 C Ci:2:002:0 0 4 = 01010000 ed799a80 1275817293 S Ci:2:002:0 s a3 00 0000 0001 0004 4 < ed799a80 1275817494 C Ci:2:002:0 0 4 = 01010000 ed799a80 1275817523 S Co:2:002:0 s 23 03 0004 0001 0000 0 ed799a80 1275817611 C Co:2:002:0 0 0 ed799a80 1275833290 S Ci:2:002:0 s a3 00 0000 0001 0004 4 < ed799a80 1275833487 C Ci:2:002:0 0 4 = 03031000 ed799a80 1275889293 S Co:2:002:0 s 23 01 0014 0001 0000 0 ed799a80 1275889496 C Co:2:002:0 0 0 ed799a80 1275889532 S Ci:2:000:0 s 80 06 0100 0000 0040 64 < ed799a80 1275892102 C Ci:2:000:0 0 18 = 12011001 00000008 0b063002 20020102 0001 ed799a80 1275892117 S Co:2:002:0 s 23 03 0004 0001 0000 0 ed799a80 1275892202 C Co:2:002:0 0 0 ed799a80 1275909792 S Ci:2:002:0 s a3 00 0000 0001 0004 4 < ed799a80 1275910014 C Ci:2:002:0 0 4 = 03031000 f7290780 1275946520 C Ii:2:002:1 0:2048 2 = 0200 f7290780 1275946525 S Ii:2:002:1 -115:2048 2 < ed799a80 1275965292 S Co:2:002:0 s 23 01 0014 0001 0000 0 ed799a80 1275965488 C Co:2:002:0 0 0 ed799a80 1275965498 S Co:2:000:0 s 00 05 0008 0000 0000 0 ed799a80 1275966256 C Co:2:000:0 0 0 ed799a80 1275985295 S Ci:2:008:0 s 80 06 0100 0000 0012 18 < ed799a80 1275988172 C Ci:2:008:0 0 18 = 12011001 00000008 0b063002 20020102 0001 ed799a80 1275988197 S Ci:2:008:0 s 80 06 0200 0000 0009 9 < ed799a80 1275990297 C Ci:2:008:0 0 9 = 09023b00 020100a0 32 ed799a80 1275990322 S Ci:2:008:0 s 80 06 0200 0000 003b 59 < ed799a80 1275996802 C Ci:2:008:0 0 59 = 09023b00 020100a0 32090400 00010301 01000921 10010001 224b0007 05810308 ed799a80 1275996831 S Ci:2:008:0 s 80 06 0300 0000 00ff 255 < ed799a80 1275998034 C Ci:2:008:0 0 4 = 04030904 ed799a80 1275998059 S Ci:2:008:0 s 80 06 0302 0409 00ff 255 < ed799a80 1276001661 C Ci:2:008:0 0 26 = 1a035500 53004200 20004b00 65007900 62006f00 61007200 6400 ed799a80 1276001690 S Ci:2:008:0 s 80 06 0301 0409 00ff 255 < ed799a80 1276002925 C Ci:2:008:0 0 6 = 06034b00 4200 ed799a80 1276003106 S Co:2:008:0 s 00 09 0001 0000 0000 0 ed799a80 1276004260 C Co:2:008:0 0 0 ed799a80 1276004420 S Co:2:008:0 s 21 0a 0000 0000 0000 0 ed799a80 1276005203 C Co:2:008:0 0 0 ed799a80 1276005225 S Ci:2:008:0 s 81 06 2200 0000 004b 75 < ed799a80 1276013206 C Ci:2:008:0 0 75 = 05010906 a1010507 19e029e7 15002501 75019508 81029501 75088101 95037501 ee1bd480 1276013657 S Co:2:008:0 s 21 09 0200 0000 0001 1 = 00 ee1bd280 1276013838 S Ii:2:008:1 -115:8 8 < ee1bdb00 1276014194 S Co:2:008:0 s 21 0a 0000 0001 0000 0 ee1bd480 1276014952 C Co:2:008:0 0 1 > ee1bdb00 1276015579 C Co:2:008:0 -32 0 ee1bdb00 1276015635 S Ci:2:008:0 s 81 06 2200 0001 006c 108 < ee1bdb00 1276026705 C Ci:2:008:0 0 108 = 05010980 a1018501 19812983 15002501 95037501 81029501 75058101 c0050c09 ee11ad80 1276027069 S Ci:2:002:0 s a3 00 0000 0001 0004 4 < ee11ad80 1276027199 C Ci:2:002:0 0 4 = 03030000 ee1bd480 1276051645 S Co:2:008:0 s 21 09 0200 0000 0001 1 = 01 ee1bd480 1276052955 C Co:2:008:0 0 1 > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 18+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2011-05-10 8:24 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 18+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed) -- links below jump to the message on this page -- [not found] <4DBF16D8.8040209@sieker.io> 2011-05-02 21:06 ` USB keyboard recognized as HID keyboard but doesn't work Alan Stern 2011-05-02 21:19 ` Adi J. Sieker 2011-05-02 22:29 ` Alan Stern 2011-05-03 9:40 ` Adi J. Sieker 2011-05-03 13:49 ` Alan Stern 2011-05-06 12:58 ` Jiri Kosina 2011-05-06 13:59 ` Adi J. Sieker 2011-05-07 22:24 ` Christoph Fritz 2011-05-08 19:51 ` Adi J. Sieker 2011-05-08 21:26 ` Christoph Fritz 2011-05-10 8:24 ` Adi J. Sieker 2011-04-30 20:23 Adi J. Sieker 2011-05-01 7:53 ` Oliver Neukum 2011-05-01 17:49 ` Adi J. Sieker 2011-05-02 14:04 ` Alan Stern 2011-05-02 19:35 ` Adi J. Sieker 2011-05-02 20:27 ` Alan Stern 2011-05-02 20:49 ` Adi J. Sieker
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