On Tue, Aug 24, 2021 at 02:32:32PM +0200, Willy Tarreau wrote:
On Tue, Aug 24, 2021 at 02:19:26PM +0200, Johan Hovold wrote:
This reverts commit 3c18e9baee0ef97510dcda78c82285f52626764b.
These devices do not appear to send a zero-length packet when the transfer size is a multiple of the bulk-endpoint max-packet size. This means that incoming data may not be processed by the driver until a short packet is received or the receive buffer is full.
Revert back to using endpoint-sized receive buffers to avoid stalled reads.
Sorry for this, I didn't notice any issue here (aside for the chip working where it used not to). I have no idea what these zero-length packets correspond to, nor why they're affected by the transfer size. Do you have any idea what I should look for ? Because without that patch, the device is unusable for me :-/
Zero-length packets are used to indicate completion of bulk transfers that are multiples of the endpoint max-packet size (as per the USB spec). Without those the host controller driver doesn't now that the transfer is complete and that it should call the driver completion callback (and instead waits for the other completion conditions).
It may be possible to configure the device to send ZLPs somehow but since there's no public documentation for the protocol that may require some reverse engineering.
Johan