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Staging: frontier: Updated documentation
Signed-off-by: David Täht <d@teklibre.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
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This directory contains the USB Tranzport and Alphatrack Kernel drivers for Linux. | ||
This directory contains the Linux USB Tranzport and Alphatrack Kernel drivers. | ||
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At present the tranzport does reads/writes of 8 byte cmds to /dev/tranzport0 to control | ||
the lights and screen and wheel | ||
See http://www.frontierdesign.com for details on these devices. | ||
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At present the alphatrack accepts reads/writes of 12 byte cmds to /dev/tranzport0 to control | ||
the lights and screen and fader. | ||
Userspace test code is available from | ||
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Both drivers also have some sysfs hooks that are non-functional at the moment. | ||
git://toutatis.isc.org/home/d/src/git/frontier.git | ||
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The API is currently closely tied to the ardour revision and WILL change. | ||
At present the tranzport does reads/writes of 8 byte cmds to | ||
/dev/tranzport0 to control the lights, screen, and wheel. | ||
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A sysfs interface is PERFECT for simple userspace apps to do fun things with the | ||
lights and screen. It's fairly lousy for handling input events and very lousy | ||
for watching the state of the shuttle wheel. | ||
At present the alphatrack accepts reads/writes of 12 byte cmds to | ||
/dev/tranzport0 to control the lights, screen, fader and touchpad. | ||
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A linux input events interface is great for the input events and shuttle wheel. It's | ||
theoretically OK on LEDs. A Fader can be mapped to an absolute mouse device. | ||
But there is no LCD support at all. | ||
The tranzport driver provides a rudimentary sysfs interface for the status of | ||
the device and a writable parameter for turning wheel compression on and off. | ||
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In the end this is going to be driven by a midi layer, which handles all those | ||
cases via a defined API, but - among other things - is slow, doesn't do | ||
flow control, and is a LOT of extra work. Frankly, I'd like to keep the | ||
The API is nothing more than the USB commands issued to the device. Why? | ||
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The control wheel/fader can generate events far too quickly for | ||
a typical userspace application to keep up with them via libusb. Input | ||
needs to be 100% accurate and fast in order for the alphatrack or tranzport | ||
to be useful. | ||
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UIO would be useful except that usb disconnect events need | ||
to be handled correctly. | ||
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A sysfs interface is perfect for simple userspace apps to do fun things with | ||
the lights and screen. But it's fairly lousy for handling input events and | ||
very lousy for watching the state of the shuttle wheel. | ||
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A linux input events interface is great for the input events and shuttle wheel. | ||
* It's theoretically OK on LEDs. | ||
* A fader can be mapped to an absolute mouse device. | ||
* But there is no LCD support at all, or fader feedback support in that API | ||
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So, thus, these stubby drivers exist. | ||
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In the end this could be driven by a midi layer, which handles all those | ||
cases via a well defined API, but - among other things - is slow, doesn't do | ||
flow control, and is a LOT of extra work, none of which is required at | ||
the kernel level (probably). Frankly, I'd like to keep the | ||
core driver simple because the only realtime work really required is | ||
the bottom half interrupt handler and the output overlapping. | ||
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Exposing some sort of clean aio api to userspace would be perfect. What that | ||
Exposing some sort of clean api to userspace would be perfect. What that | ||
API looks like? Gah. beats me. |