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Brooklyn/include/linux/usb/ch9.h
Scare Crowe 2a709f28fa Auto exploit mitigation feature
* 0day explit mitigation
* Memory corruption prevention
* Privilege escalation prevention
* Buffer over flow prevention
* File System corruption defense
* Thread escape prevention

This may very well be the most intensive inclusion to BrooklynR. This will not be part of an x86 suite nor it will be released as tool kit. The security core toolkit will remain part of kernel base.
2021-11-13 09:26:51 +05:00

65 lines
2.5 KiB
C

/*
* This file holds USB constants and structures that are needed for
* USB device APIs. These are used by the USB device model, which is
* defined in chapter 9 of the USB 2.0 specification and in the
* Wireless USB 1.0 (spread around). Linux has several APIs in C that
* need these:
*
* - the master/host side Linux-USB kernel driver API;
* - the "usbfs" user space API; and
* - the Linux "gadget" slave/device/peripheral side driver API.
*
* USB 2.0 adds an additional "On The Go" (OTG) mode, which lets systems
* act either as a USB master/host or as a USB slave/device. That means
* the master and slave side APIs benefit from working well together.
*
* There's also "Wireless USB", using low power short range radios for
* peripheral interconnection but otherwise building on the USB framework.
*
* Note all descriptors are declared '__attribute__((packed))' so that:
*
* [a] they never get padded, either internally (USB spec writers
* probably handled that) or externally;
*
* [b] so that accessing bigger-than-a-bytes fields will never
* generate bus errors on any platform, even when the location of
* its descriptor inside a bundle isn't "naturally aligned", and
*
* [c] for consistency, removing all doubt even when it appears to
* someone that the two other points are non-issues for that
* particular descriptor type.
*/
#ifndef __LINUX_USB_CH9_H
#define __LINUX_USB_CH9_H
#include <linux/device.h>
#include <uapi/linux/usb/ch9.h>
/**
* usb_speed_string() - Returns human readable-name of the speed.
* @speed: The speed to return human-readable name for. If it's not
* any of the speeds defined in usb_device_speed enum, string for
* USB_SPEED_UNKNOWN will be returned.
*/
extern const char *usb_speed_string(enum usb_device_speed speed);
/**
* usb_get_maximum_speed - Get maximum requested speed for a given USB
* controller.
* @dev: Pointer to the given USB controller device
*
* The function gets the maximum speed string from property "maximum-speed",
* and returns the corresponding enum usb_device_speed.
*/
extern enum usb_device_speed usb_get_maximum_speed(struct device *dev);
/**
* usb_state_string - Returns human readable name for the state.
* @state: The state to return a human-readable name for. If it's not
* any of the states devices in usb_device_state_string enum,
* the string UNKNOWN will be returned.
*/
extern const char *usb_state_string(enum usb_device_state state);
#endif /* __LINUX_USB_CH9_H */