JavaScript is required to for searching.
Skip Navigation Links
Exit Print View
man pages section 7: Device and Network Interfaces     Oracle Solaris 10 1/13 Information Library
search filter icon
search icon

Document Information

Preface

Introduction

Device and Network Interfaces

6to4(7M)

6to4tun(7M)

aac(7D)

adp(7D)

adpu320(7D)

afb(7d)

agpgart_io(7I)

AH(7P)

ahci(7D)

allkmem(7D)

amd8111s(7D)

amr(7D)

ARP(7P)

arp(7P)

ast(7D)

asy(7D)

ata(7D)

atun(7M)

audio1575(7D)

audio(7I)

audio810(7D)

audiocs(7D)

audioens(7D)

audiohd(7D)

audioixp(7D)

audio_support(7I)

audiots(7D)

audiovia823x(7D)

av1394(7D)

bbc_beep(7D)

bcm_sata(7D)

bd(7M)

bge(7D)

bmc(7D)

bnx(7D)

bnxe(7D)

bpp(7D)

bscbus(7D)

bscv(7D)

bufmod(7M)

cadp160(7D)

cadp(7D)

cdio(7I)

ce(7D)

cgsix(7D)

chxge(7D)

cmdk(7D)

connld(7M)

console(7D)

cpqary3(7D)

cpr(7)

cpuid(7D)

ctfs(7FS)

ctsmc(7D)

cvc(7D)

cvcredir(7D)

dad(7D)

daplt(7D)

dbri(7D)

dca(7D)

dcam1394(7D)

dcfs(7FS)

devfs(7FS)

devinfo(7D)

dkio(7I)

dlcosmk(7ipp)

dlpi(7P)

dm2s(7D)

dmfe(7D)

dnet(7D)

dr(7d)

drmach(7d)

dscpmk(7ipp)

dtrace(7D)

e1000(7D)

e1000g(7D)

ecpp(7D)

efb(7D)

ehci(7D)

elxl(7D)

emlxs(7D)

eri(7D)

esp(7D)

ESP(7P)

fas(7D)

fasttrap(7D)

fbio(7I)

fbt(7D)

fcip(7D)

fcp(7D)

fctl(7D)

fd(7D)

fdc(7D)

fdio(7I)

ffb(7D)

firewire(7D)

flowacct(7ipp)

fp(7d)

FSS(7)

ge(7D)

gld(7D)

glm(7D)

gpio_87317(7D)

grbeep(7d)

hci1394(7D)

hdio(7I)

hermon(7D)

hid(7D)

hme(7D)

hpfc(7D)

hsfs(7FS)

hubd(7D)

hxge(7D)

i2bsc(7D)

i2o_bs(7D)

i2o_scsi(7D)

ib(7D)

ibcm(7D)

ibd(7D)

ibdm(7D)

ibmf(7)

ibtl(7D)

icmp6(7P)

ICMP(7P)

icmp(7P)

idn(7d)

ieee1394(7D)

if(7P)

ifb(7d)

ifp(7D)

if_tcp(7P)

igb(7D)

igbvf(7D)

imraid_sas(7D)

inet6(7P)

inet(7P)

ip6(7P)

IP(7P)

ip(7P)

ipge(7D)

ipgpc(7ipp)

ipmi(7D)

ipnat(7I)

ipqos(7ipp)

iprb(7D)

ipsec(7P)

ipsecah(7P)

ipsecesp(7P)

iscsi(7D)

isdnio(7I)

iser(7D)

isp(7D)

ixgb(7d)

ixgbe(7D)

ixgbevf(7D)

jfb(7D)

jfca(7D)

kb(7M)

kdmouse(7D)

kfb(7D)

kmdb(7d)

kmem(7D)

kstat(7D)

ksyms(7D)

ldterm(7M)

llc1(7D)

llc2(7D)

lockstat(7D)

lofi(7D)

lofs(7FS)

log(7D)

logi(7D)

lsimega(7D)

lx_systrace(7D)

m64(7D)

marvell88sx(7D)

mc-opl(7D)

mcxe(7D)

md(7D)

mediator(7D)

mega_sas(7D)

mem(7D)

mga(7D)

mhd(7i)

mixer(7I)

mpt(7D)

mpt_sas(7D)

mr_sas(7D)

msglog(7D)

msm(7D)

mt(7D)

mtio(7I)

n2cp(7d)

n2rng(7d)

ncp(7D)

ncrs(7D)

nfb(7D)

ngdr(7d)

ngdrmach(7d)

nge(7D)

npe(7D)

ntwdt(7D)

ntxn(7D)

null(7D)

nulldriver(7D)

nv_sata(7D)

nxge(7D)

objfs(7FS)

oce(7D)

ocf_ibutton(7D)

ohci(7D)

openprom(7D)

oplkmdrv(7D)

oplmsu(7D)

oplpanel(7D)

pcata(7D)

pcelx(7D)

pcfs(7FS)

pcic(7D)

pcicmu(7D)

pcie_pci(7D)

pckt(7M)

pcmcia(7D)

pcmem(7D)

pcn(7D)

pcram(7D)

pcscsi(7D)

pcser(7D)

pfb(7D)

pf_key(7P)

pfmod(7M)

physmem(7D)

pipemod(7M)

pm(7D)

poll(7d)

prnio(7I)

profile(7D)

ptem(7M)

ptm(7D)

pts(7D)

pty(7D)

qfe(7d)

qlc(7D)

qlcnic(7D)

qlge(7D)

quotactl(7I)

qus(7D)

ramdisk(7D)

random(7D)

RARP(7P)

rarp(7P)

rge(7D)

route(7P)

routing(7P)

rtls(7D)

sad(7D)

sata(7D)

sbpro(7D)

scfd(7D)

scmi2c(7d)

scsa1394(7D)

scsa2usb(7D)

scsi_vhci(7D)

SCTP(7P)

sctp(7P)

scu(7D)

sd(7D)

SDC(7)

sdp(7D)

sdt(7D)

se(7D)

se_hdlc(7D)

ses(7D)

sesio(7I)

sf(7D)

sgen(7D)

sharefs(7FS)

si3124(7D)

sip(7P)

sk98sol(7D)

skfp(7D)

slp(7P)

smbios(7D)

smbus(7D)

socal(7D)

sockio(7I)

sol_ofs(7D)

sol_ucma(7D)

sol_uverbs(7D)

sppptun(7M)

spwr(7D)

ssd(7D)

st(7D)

stp4020(7D)

streamio(7I)

su(7D)

sxge(7D)

sxp(7D)

symhisl(7D)

sysmsg(7D)

systrace(7D)

tavor(7D)

TCP(7P)

tcp(7P)

termio(7I)

termiox(7I)

ticlts(7D)

ticots(7D)

ticotsord(7D)

timod(7M)

tirdwr(7M)

tmpfs(7FS)

todopl(7D)

tokenmt(7ipp)

tpf(7D)

tsalarm(7D)

tswtclmt(7ipp)

ttcompat(7M)

tty(7D)

ttymux(7D)

tun(7M)

tzmon(7d)

uata(7D)

udfs(7FS)

UDP(7P)

udp(7P)

ufs(7FS)

ugen(7D)

uhci(7D)

urandom(7D)

usb(7D)

usba(7D)

usb_ac(7D)

usb_ah(7M)

usb_as(7D)

usbecm(7D)

usbkbm(7M)

usb_mid(7D)

usbms(7M)

usbprn(7D)

usbsacm(7D)

usbser_edge(7D)

usbsksp(7D)

usbsprl(7D)

uscsi(7I)

usoc(7D)

virtualkm(7D)

visual_io(7I)

vni(7d)

volfs(7FS)

vuid2ps2(7M)

vuid3ps2(7M)

vuidm3p(7M)

vuidm4p(7M)

vuidm5p(7M)

vuidmice(7M)

wrsm(7D)

wrsmd(7D)

wscons(7D)

xge(7D)

xhci(7D)

xmemfs(7FS)

zcons(7D)

zero(7D)

zs(7D)

zsh(7D)

zulu(7d)

hid

- Human interface device (HID) class driver

Synopsis

keyboard@unit-address
mouse@unit-address
input@unit-address:consumer_control

Description

The hid driver is a USBA (Solaris USB Architecture) compliant client driver that supports the Human Interface Device Class (HID) 1.0 specification. The Human Interface Device (HID) class encompasses devices controlled by humans to operate computer systems. Typical examples of HID devices include keyboards, mice, trackballs, and joysticks. HID also covers front-panel controls such as knobs, switches, and buttons. A USB device with multiple interfaces may have one interface for audio and a HID interface to define the buttons that control the audio.

The hid driver is general and primarily handles the USB functionality of the device and generic HID functionality. For example, HID interfaces are required to have an interrupt pipe for the device to send data packets, and the hid driver opens the pipe to the interrupt endpoint and starts polling. The hid driver is also responsible for managing the device through the default control pipe. In addition to being a USB client driver, the hid driver is also a STREAMS driver so that modules may be pushed on top of it.

The HID specification is flexible, and HID devices dynamically describe their packets and other parameters through a HID report descriptor. The HID parser is a misc module that parses the HID report descriptor and creates a database of information about the device. The hid driver queries the HID parser to find out the type and characteristics of the HID device. The HID specification predefines packet formats for the boot protocol keyboard and mouse.

Files

/kernel/drv/hid

32–bit x86 ELF kernel hid module

/kernel/drv/amd64/hid

64–bit x86 ELF kernel hid module

/kernel/drv/sparcv9/hid

64–bit SPARC ELF kernel hid module

/kernel/misc/hidparser

32–bit x86 ELF kernel hidparser module

/kernel/misc/amd64/hidparser

64–bit x86 ELF kernel hidparser module

/kernel/misc/sparcv9/hidparser

64–bit SPARC ELF kernel hidparser module

Attributes

See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:

ATTRIBUTE TYPE
ATTRIBUTE VALUE
Architecture
SPARC, x86, PCI-based systems
Availability
SUNWusb

See Also

cfgadm_usb(1M), attributes(5), usba(7D), virtualkm(7D)

Writing Device Drivers

STREAMS Programming Guide

Universal Serial Bus Specification 1.0 and 1.1

Device Class Definition for Human Interface Devices (HID) 1.1

System Administration Guide: Basic Administration

http://www.sun.com/io

Diagnostics

hid_attach: Unsupported HID device.

The device requires a protocol not supported by the hid driver.

Parsing of hid descriptor failed.

The HID report descriptor cannot be parsed correctly. The device cannot be supported by the hid driver.

Invalid report descriptor.

The HID report descriptor is invalid. The device cannot be supported by the hid driver.

The following messages may be logged into the system log. They are formatted in the following manner:

<device path><hid<instance number>): message...
hid_attach: Unsupported HID device.

The device cannot be supported by this version of the HID driver.

Parsing of HID descriptor failed.

The device cannot be supported by this version of the HID driver.

Invalid report descriptor.

The device cannot be supported by this version of the HID driver.

Notes

The hid driver currently supports only keyboard, mouse and audio HID control devices.

Normally a mouse is not power managed and consquently, screen darkening can be undone with a mouse movement. If power management of the mouse is required, add the following line to hid.conf then reboot the system:

hid-mouse-pm-enable;

Modern mice that are power managed require a 'click' to wake up. Occasionally, this may cause unexpected results.