usb_set_interface (9) - Linux Manuals
usb_set_interface: Makes a particular alternate setting be current
NAME
usb_set_interface - Makes a particular alternate setting be current
SYNOPSIS
-
int usb_set_interface(struct usb_device
* dev, intinterface, int alternate);
ARGUMENTS
dev
-
- the device whose interface is being updated
interface
- the interface being updated
alternate
- the setting being chosen.
CONTEXT
DESCRIPTION
This is used to enable data transfers on interfaces that may not be enabled by default. Not all devices support such configurability. Only the driver bound to an interface may change its setting.
Within any given configuration, each interface may have several alternative settings. These are often used to control levels of bandwidth consumption. For example, the default setting for a high speed interrupt endpoint may not send more than 64 bytes per microframe, while interrupt transfers of up to 3KBytes per microframe are legal. Also, isochronous endpoints may never be part of an interface's default setting. To access such bandwidth, alternate interface settings must be made current.
Note that in the Linux USB subsystem, bandwidth associated with an endpoint in a given alternate setting is not reserved until an URB is submitted that needs that bandwidth. Some other operating systems allocate bandwidth early, when a configuration is chosen.
This call is synchronous, and may not be used in an interrupt context. Also, drivers must not change altsettings while urbs are scheduled for endpoints in that interface; all such urbs must first be completed (perhaps forced by unlinking).
RETURN
Zero on success, or else the status code returned by the underlying usb_control_msg call.
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