329 lines
12 KiB
Python
329 lines
12 KiB
Python
# Copyright 2009-2017 Wander Lairson Costa
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# Copyright 2009-2021 PyUSB contributors
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#
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# Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
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# modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
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# met:
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#
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# 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
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# notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
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#
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# 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
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# notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
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# documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
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#
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# 3. Neither the name of the copyright holder nor the names of its
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# contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from
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# this software without specific prior written permission.
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#
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# THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
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# "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
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# LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR
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# A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
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# HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
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# SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
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# LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
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# DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
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# THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
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# (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
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# OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
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r"""usb.util - Utility functions.
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This module exports:
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endpoint_address - return the endpoint absolute address.
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endpoint_direction - return the endpoint transfer direction.
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endpoint_type - return the endpoint type
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ctrl_direction - return the direction of a control transfer
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build_request_type - build a bmRequestType field of a control transfer.
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find_descriptor - find an inner descriptor.
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claim_interface - explicitly claim an interface.
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release_interface - explicitly release an interface.
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dispose_resources - release internal resources allocated by the object.
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get_langids - retrieve the list of supported string languages from the device.
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get_string - retrieve a string descriptor from the device.
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"""
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__author__ = 'Wander Lairson Costa'
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import operator
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import array
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from sys import hexversion
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import usb._interop as _interop
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# descriptor type
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DESC_TYPE_DEVICE = 0x01
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DESC_TYPE_CONFIG = 0x02
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DESC_TYPE_STRING = 0x03
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DESC_TYPE_INTERFACE = 0x04
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DESC_TYPE_ENDPOINT = 0x05
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# endpoint direction
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ENDPOINT_IN = 0x80
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ENDPOINT_OUT = 0x00
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# endpoint type
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ENDPOINT_TYPE_CTRL = 0x00
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ENDPOINT_TYPE_ISO = 0x01
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ENDPOINT_TYPE_BULK = 0x02
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ENDPOINT_TYPE_INTR = 0x03
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# control request type
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CTRL_TYPE_STANDARD = (0 << 5)
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CTRL_TYPE_CLASS = (1 << 5)
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CTRL_TYPE_VENDOR = (2 << 5)
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CTRL_TYPE_RESERVED = (3 << 5)
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# control request recipient
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CTRL_RECIPIENT_DEVICE = 0
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CTRL_RECIPIENT_INTERFACE = 1
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CTRL_RECIPIENT_ENDPOINT = 2
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CTRL_RECIPIENT_OTHER = 3
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# control request direction
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CTRL_OUT = 0x00
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CTRL_IN = 0x80
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_ENDPOINT_ADDR_MASK = 0x0f
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_ENDPOINT_DIR_MASK = 0x80
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_ENDPOINT_TRANSFER_TYPE_MASK = 0x03
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_CTRL_DIR_MASK = 0x80
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# For compatibility between Python 2 and 3
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_dummy_s = '\x00'.encode('utf-8')
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# speed type
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SPEED_LOW = 1
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SPEED_FULL = 2
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SPEED_HIGH = 3
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SPEED_SUPER = 4
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SPEED_UNKNOWN = 0
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def endpoint_address(address):
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r"""Return the endpoint absolute address.
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The address parameter is the bEndpointAddress field
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of the endpoint descriptor.
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"""
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return address & _ENDPOINT_ADDR_MASK
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def endpoint_direction(address):
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r"""Return the endpoint direction.
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The address parameter is the bEndpointAddress field
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of the endpoint descriptor.
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The possible return values are ENDPOINT_OUT or ENDPOINT_IN.
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"""
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return address & _ENDPOINT_DIR_MASK
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def endpoint_type(bmAttributes):
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r"""Return the transfer type of the endpoint.
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The bmAttributes parameter is the bmAttributes field
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of the endpoint descriptor.
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The possible return values are: ENDPOINT_TYPE_CTRL,
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ENDPOINT_TYPE_ISO, ENDPOINT_TYPE_BULK or ENDPOINT_TYPE_INTR.
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"""
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return bmAttributes & _ENDPOINT_TRANSFER_TYPE_MASK
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def ctrl_direction(bmRequestType):
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r"""Return the direction of a control request.
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The bmRequestType parameter is the value of the
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bmRequestType field of a control transfer.
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The possible return values are CTRL_OUT or CTRL_IN.
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"""
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return bmRequestType & _CTRL_DIR_MASK
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def build_request_type(direction, type, recipient):
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r"""Build a bmRequestType field for control requests.
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These is a conventional function to build a bmRequestType
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for a control request.
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The direction parameter can be CTRL_OUT or CTRL_IN.
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The type parameter can be CTRL_TYPE_STANDARD, CTRL_TYPE_CLASS,
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CTRL_TYPE_VENDOR or CTRL_TYPE_RESERVED values.
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The recipient can be CTRL_RECIPIENT_DEVICE, CTRL_RECIPIENT_INTERFACE,
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CTRL_RECIPIENT_ENDPOINT or CTRL_RECIPIENT_OTHER.
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Return the bmRequestType value.
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"""
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return recipient | type | direction
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def create_buffer(length):
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r"""Create a buffer to be passed to a read function.
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A read function may receive an out buffer so the data
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is read inplace and the object can be reused, avoiding
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the overhead of creating a new object at each new read
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call. This function creates a compatible sequence buffer
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of the given length.
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"""
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return array.array('B', _dummy_s * length)
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def find_descriptor(desc, find_all=False, custom_match=None, **args):
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r"""Find an inner descriptor.
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find_descriptor works in the same way as the core.find() function does,
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but it acts on general descriptor objects. For example, suppose you
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have a Device object called dev and want a Configuration of this
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object with its bConfigurationValue equals to 1, the code would
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be like so:
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>>> cfg = util.find_descriptor(dev, bConfigurationValue=1)
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You can use any field of the Descriptor as a match criteria, and you
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can supply a customized match just like core.find() does. The
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find_descriptor function also accepts the find_all parameter to get
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an iterator instead of just one descriptor.
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"""
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def desc_iter(**kwargs):
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for d in desc:
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tests = (val == getattr(d, key) for key, val in kwargs.items())
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if _interop._all(tests) and (custom_match is None or custom_match(d)):
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yield d
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if find_all:
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return desc_iter(**args)
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else:
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try:
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return _interop._next(desc_iter(**args))
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except StopIteration:
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return None
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def claim_interface(device, interface):
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r"""Explicitly claim an interface.
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PyUSB users normally do not have to worry about interface claiming,
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as the library takes care of it automatically. But there are situations
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where you need deterministic interface claiming. For these uncommon
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cases, you can use claim_interface.
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If the interface is already claimed, either through a previously call
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to claim_interface or internally by the device object, nothing happens.
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"""
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device._ctx.managed_claim_interface(device, interface)
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def release_interface(device, interface):
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r"""Explicitly release an interface.
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This function is used to release an interface previously claimed,
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either through a call to claim_interface or internally by the
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device object.
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Normally, you do not need to worry about claiming policies, as
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the device object takes care of it automatically.
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"""
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device._ctx.managed_release_interface(device, interface)
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def dispose_resources(device):
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r"""Release internal resources allocated by the object.
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Sometimes you need to provide deterministic resources
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freeing, for example to allow another application to
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talk to the device. As Python does not provide deterministic
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destruction, this function releases all internal resources
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allocated by the device, like device handle and interface
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policy.
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After calling this function, you can continue using the device
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object normally. If the resources will be necessary again, it
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will be allocated automatically.
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"""
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device._ctx.dispose(device)
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def get_langids(dev):
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r"""Retrieve the list of supported Language IDs from the device.
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Most client code should not call this function directly, but instead use
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the langids property on the Device object, which will call this function as
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needed and cache the result.
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USB LANGIDs are 16-bit integers familiar to Windows developers, where
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for example instead of en-US you say 0x0409. See the file USB_LANGIDS.pdf
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somewhere on the usb.org site for a list, which does not claim to be
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complete. It requires "system software must allow the enumeration and
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selection of LANGIDs that are not currently on this list." It also requires
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"system software should never request a LANGID not defined in the LANGID
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code array (string index = 0) presented by a device." Client code can
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check this tuple before issuing string requests for a specific language ID.
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dev is the Device object whose supported language IDs will be retrieved.
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The return value is a tuple of integer LANGIDs, possibly empty if the
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device does not support strings at all (which USB 3.1 r1.0 section
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9.6.9 allows). In that case client code should not request strings at all.
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A USBError may be raised from this function for some devices that have no
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string support, instead of returning an empty tuple. The accessor for the
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langids property on Device catches that case and supplies an empty tuple,
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so client code can ignore this detail by using the langids property instead
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of directly calling this function.
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"""
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from usb.control import get_descriptor
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buf = get_descriptor(
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dev,
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254,
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DESC_TYPE_STRING,
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0
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)
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# The array is retrieved by asking for string descriptor zero, which is
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# never the index of a real string. The returned descriptor has bLength
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# and bDescriptorType bytes followed by pairs of bytes representing
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# little-endian LANGIDs. That is, buf[0] contains the length of the
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# returned array, buf[2] is the least-significant byte of the first LANGID
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# (if any), buf[3] is the most-significant byte, and in general the LSBs of
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# all the LANGIDs are given by buf[2:buf[0]:2] and MSBs by buf[3:buf[0]:2].
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# If the length of buf came back odd, something is wrong.
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if len(buf) < 4 or buf[0] < 4 or buf[0]&1 != 0:
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return ()
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return tuple(map(lambda x,y: x+(y<<8), buf[2:buf[0]:2], buf[3:buf[0]:2]))
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def get_string(dev, index, langid = None):
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r"""Retrieve a string descriptor from the device.
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dev is the Device object which the string will be read from.
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index is the string descriptor index and langid is the Language
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ID of the descriptor. If langid is omitted, the string descriptor
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of the first Language ID will be returned.
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Zero is never the index of a real string. The USB spec allows a device to
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use zero in a string index field to indicate that no string is provided.
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So the caller does not have to treat that case specially, this function
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returns None if passed an index of zero, and generates no traffic
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to the device.
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The return value is the unicode string present in the descriptor, or None
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if the requested index was zero.
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"""
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if 0 == index:
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return None
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from usb.control import get_descriptor
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if langid is None:
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langids = dev.langids
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if 0 == len(langids):
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raise ValueError("The device has no langid"
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" (permission issue, no string descriptors supported or device error)")
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langid = langids[0]
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buf = get_descriptor(
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dev,
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254, # maximum even length
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DESC_TYPE_STRING,
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index,
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langid
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)
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blen = buf[0] & 0xfe # should be even, ignore any trailing byte (see #154)
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if hexversion >= 0x03020000:
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return buf[2:blen].tobytes().decode('utf-16-le')
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else:
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return buf[2:blen].tostring().decode('utf-16-le')
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