commit | e629d869c9b2a0cec0f3abec31b1226cf8b55a39 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org> | Tue May 07 15:29:04 2019 +0200 |
committer | Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org> | Tue May 07 15:29:04 2019 +0200 |
tree | e79cd47b3eb61f64693551e0482add5f83877181 | |
parent | cb38b13bf5f9ba921b37607f58e05d3e6a08327c [diff] | |
parent | 648a78cecbbfd3e4c9d8686f55603734b9dae8a9 [diff] |
Merge upstream usbhid-dump repo into usbutils repo This "merges" the usbhid-dump upstream repository (found at git@github.com:DIGImend/usbhid-dump.git) into the usbutils directory. We are doing this to make the management of the two simpler to handle overall, and hopefully reduce the size of the usbhid-dump source tree a bit. Note, this was done by "rewriting" the history of the usbhid-dump repository by moving it into the usbhid-dump subdirectory. All of the commits are still here, just under a new sha1 because of the rewrite. Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
This is a collection of USB tools for use on Linux and BSD systems to query what type of USB devices are connected to the system. This is to be run on a USB host (i.e. a machine you plug USB devices into), not on a USB device (i.e. a device you plug into a USB host.)
Note, usbutils depends on libusb, be sure that library is properly installed first.
To work with the “raw” repo, after cloning it just do:
./autogen.sh
Or if you like doing things “by hand” you can try the following:
Get the usbhid-dump git submodule:
git submodule init git submodule update
Initialize autobuild with:
autoreconf --install --symlink
Configure the project with:
./configure
Build everything with:
make
Install it, if you really want to, with:
make install