mtp_device-flags.h

Langue: en

Version: 321125 (ubuntu - 07/07/09)

Section: 3 (Bibliothèques de fonctions)

NAME

libmtp - device-flags.h

SYNOPSIS


Defines


#define DEVICE_FLAG_NONE 0x00000000

#define DEVICE_FLAG_BROKEN_MTPGETOBJPROPLIST_ALL 0x00000001

#define DEVICE_FLAG_UNLOAD_DRIVER 0x00000002

#define DEVICE_FLAG_BROKEN_MTPGETOBJPROPLIST 0x00000004

#define DEVICE_FLAG_NO_ZERO_READS 0x00000008

#define DEVICE_FLAG_IRIVER_OGG_ALZHEIMER 0x00000010

#define DEVICE_FLAG_ONLY_7BIT_FILENAMES 0x00000020

#define DEVICE_FLAG_NO_RELEASE_INTERFACE 0x00000040

#define DEVICE_FLAG_IGNORE_HEADER_ERRORS 0x00000080

#define DEVICE_FLAG_BROKEN_SET_OBJECT_PROPLIST 0x00000100

#define DEVICE_FLAG_OGG_IS_UNKNOWN 0x00000200

#define DEVICE_FLAG_BROKEN_SET_SAMPLE_DIMENSIONS 0x00000400

#define DEVICE_FLAG_ALWAYS_PROBE_DESCRIPTOR 0x00000800

Detailed Description

Special device flags to deal with bugs in specific devices.

Copyright (C) 2005-2007 Richard A. Low <richard@wentnet.com> Copyright (C) 2005-2007 Linus Walleij <triad@df.lth.se> Copyright (C) 2006-2007 Marcus Meissner Copyright (C) 2007 Ted Bullock

This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Lesser General Public License for more details.

You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License along with this library; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.

This file is supposed to be included by both libmtp and libgphoto2.

Define Documentation

#define DEVICE_FLAG_ALWAYS_PROBE_DESCRIPTOR 0x00000800

Some devices, particularly SanDisk Sansas, need to always have their 'OS Descriptor' probed in order to work correctly. This flag provides that extra massage.

#define DEVICE_FLAG_BROKEN_MTPGETOBJPROPLIST 0x00000004

This means that the PTP_OC_MTP_GetObjPropList is broken and won't properly return all object properties if parameter 3 is set to 0xFFFFFFFFU.

#define DEVICE_FLAG_BROKEN_MTPGETOBJPROPLIST_ALL 0x00000001

This means that the PTP_OC_MTP_GetObjPropList is broken in the sense that it won't return properly formatted metadata for ALL files on the device when you request an object property list for object 0xFFFFFFFF with parameter 3 likewise set to 0xFFFFFFFF. Compare to DEVICE_FLAG_BROKEN_MTPGETOBJECTPROPLIST which only signify that it's broken when getting metadata for a SINGLE object. A typical way the implementation may be broken is that it may not return a proper count of the objects.

#define DEVICE_FLAG_BROKEN_SET_OBJECT_PROPLIST 0x00000100

The Motorola RAZR2 V8 (others?) has broken set object proplist causing the metadata setting to fail. (The set object prop to set individual properties work on this device, but the metadata is plain ignored on tracks, though e.g. playlist names can be set.)

#define DEVICE_FLAG_BROKEN_SET_SAMPLE_DIMENSIONS 0x00000400

The Creative Zen is quite unstable in libmtp but seems to be better with later firmware versions. However, it still frequently crashes when setting album art dimensions. This flag disables setting the dimensions (which seems to make no difference to how the graphic is displayed).

#define DEVICE_FLAG_IGNORE_HEADER_ERRORS 0x00000080

This flag was introduced with the advent of Creative ZEN 8GB. The device sometimes return a broken PTP header like this: < 1502 0000 0200 01d1 02d1 01d2 > the latter 6 bytes (representing 'code' and 'transaction ID') contain junk. This is breaking the PTP/MTP spec but works on Windows anyway, probably because the Windows implementation does not check that these bytes are valid. To interoperate with devices like this, we need this flag to emulate the Windows bug.

#define DEVICE_FLAG_IRIVER_OGG_ALZHEIMER 0x00000010

This flag means that the device is prone to forgetting the OGG container file type, so that libmtp must look at the filename extensions in order to determine that a file is actually OGG. This is a clear and present firmware bug, and while firmware bugs should be fixed in firmware, we like OGG so much that we back it by introducing this flag. The error has only been seen on iriver devices. Turning this flag on won't hurt anything, just that the check against filename extension will be done for files of 'unknown' type.

#define DEVICE_FLAG_NO_RELEASE_INTERFACE 0x00000040

This flag indicates that the device will lock up if you try to get status of endpoints and/or release the interface when closing the device. This fixes problems with SanDisk Sansa devices especially. It may be a side-effect of a Windows behaviour of never releasing interfaces.

#define DEVICE_FLAG_NO_ZERO_READS 0x00000008

This means the device doesn't send zero packets to indicate end of transfer when the transfer boundary occurs at a multiple of 64 bytes (the USB 1.1 endpoint size). Instead, exactly one extra byte is sent at the end of the transfer if the size is an integer multiple of USB 1.1 endpoint size (64 bytes).

This behaviour is most probably a workaround due to the fact that the hardware USB slave controller in the device cannot handle zero writes at all, and the usage of the USB 1.1 endpoint size is due to the fact that the device will 'gear down' on a USB 1.1 hub, and since 64 bytes is a multiple of 512 bytes, it will work with USB 1.1 and USB 2.0 alike.

#define DEVICE_FLAG_NONE 0x00000000

These flags are used to indicate if some or other device need special treatment. These should be possible to concatenate using logical OR so please use one bit per feature and lets pray we don't need more than 32 bits...

#define DEVICE_FLAG_OGG_IS_UNKNOWN 0x00000200

The Samsung YP-T10 think Ogg files shall be sent with the 'unknown' (PTP_OFC_Undefined) file type, this gives a side effect that is a combination of the iRiver Ogg Alzheimer problem (have to recognized Ogg files on file extension) and a need to report the Ogg support (the device itself does not properly claim to support it) and need to set filetype to unknown when storing Ogg files, even though they're not actually unknown.

#define DEVICE_FLAG_ONLY_7BIT_FILENAMES 0x00000020

This flag indicates a limitation in the filenames a device can accept - they must be 7 bit (all chars <= 127/0x7F). It was found first on the Philips Shoqbox, and is a deviation from the PTP standard which mandates that any unicode chars may be used for filenames. I guess this is caused by a 7bit-only filesystem being used intrinsically on the device.

#define DEVICE_FLAG_UNLOAD_DRIVER 0x00000002

This means that under Linux, another kernel module may be using this device's USB interface, so we need to detach it if it is. Typically this is on dual-mode devices that will present both an MTP compliant interface and device descriptor *and* a USB mass storage interface. If the USB mass storage interface is in use, other apps (like our userspace libmtp through libusb access path) cannot get in and get cosy with it. So we can remove the offending application. Typically this means you have to run the program as root as well.

Author

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