A short example, for a driver that supports several specific USB devices
and their quirks, might have a MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE like this:
- static const struct usb_device_id mydriver_id_table = {
+ static const struct usb_device_id mydriver_id_table[] = {
{ USB_DEVICE (0x9999, 0xaaaa), driver_info: QUIRK_X },
{ USB_DEVICE (0xbbbb, 0x8888), driver_info: QUIRK_Y|QUIRK_Z },
...
{ } /* end with an all-zeroes entry */
- }
- MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE (usb, mydriver_id_table);
+ };
+ MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE(usb, mydriver_id_table);
Most USB device drivers should pass these tables to the USB subsystem as
well as to the module management subsystem. Not all, though: some driver
if exposing any operations through usbdevfs:
.ioctl = my_ioctl,
*/
- }
+ };
When the USB subsystem knows about a driver's device ID table, it's used when
choosing drivers to probe(). The thread doing new device processing checks