The uMTP-Responder allows files to be transferred to and from devices through the devices USB port.
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Implemented in C.
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Lightweight implementation.
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User space implementation.
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As few dependencies as possible.
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Hook to the FunctionFS/libcomposite or the GadgetFS Linux layer.
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Dynamic handles allocation (No file-system pre-scan).
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Unicode support.
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(Optional) Syslog support.
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Folder listing.
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Folder creation.
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Files & Folders upload.
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Files & Folders download.
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Files & Folders deletion.
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Files & Folders renaming.
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Files / folders changes async events.
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Up to 16 storage instances supported.
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Storages mount / unmount.
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Storages lock / unlock.
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Global and Storages GID/UID override options.
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GadgetFS and FunctionFS/libcomposite modes supported.
Any board with a USB device port should be compatible. The only requirement is to have the USB FunctionFS (CONFIG_USB_FUNCTIONFS) or GadgetFS (CONFIG_USB_GADGETFS) support enabled in your Linux kernel. You also need to enable the board-specific USB device port driver (eg. dwc2 for the RaspberryPi Zero).
uMTP-Responder is currently tested with various 4.x.x Linux kernel versions. This may work with earlier kernels (v3.x.x and some v2.6.x versions) but without any guarantee.
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Atmel Sama5D2 Xplained.
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Raspberry PI Zero (W).
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BeagleBone Black.
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Allwinner SoC based board.
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Freescale i.MX6 SabreSD. (Kernel v4.14)
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Samsung Artik710. (FunctionFS mode)
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Ultra96-V2 (Zynq UltraScale+, FunctionFS mode, SuperSpeed USB)
- Windows 7, Windows 10, Linux, Android.
A simple "make" should be enough if you build uMTPrd directly on the target.
If you are using a cross-compile environment, set the "CC" variable to your GCC cross compiler.
You can also enable the syslog support with the C flag "USE_SYSLOG" and the verbose/debug output with the "DEBUG" C flag.
examples:
On a cross-compile environment :
make CC=armv6j-hardfloat-linux-gnueabi-gcc
On a cross-compile environment with both syslog support and debug output options enabled :
make CC=armv6j-hardfloat-linux-gnueabi-gcc CFLAGS="-DUSE_SYSLOG -DDEBUG"
Note: syslog support and debug output options can be enabled separately.
(replace "armv6j-hardfloat-linux-gnueabi-gcc" with your target gcc cross-compiler)
If you want to use it on a Kernel version < 3.15 you need to compile uMTPrd with old-style FunctionFS descriptors support:
make CC=armv6j-hardfloat-linux-gnueabi-gcc CFLAGS="-DOLD_FUNCTIONFS_DESCRIPTORS"
A config file should copied into the folder /etc/umtprd/umtprd.conf This file defines the storage entries (host path and name), the MTP device name, the USB vendor & product IDs and the USB device configuration. Check the file umtprd.conf file for details on available options.
Once you have configured the correct settings in umtprd.conf, you can use umtprd_ffs.sh or umtprd_gfs.sh to launch it in FunctionFS/GadgetFS mode or use udev to launch the deamon when the usb device port is connected.
uMTP-Responder supports dynamic commands to add/mount/umount/remove storage and lock/unlock storage.
Examples:
Unlock all locked storage (set with the 'locked' option in the configuration file) :
umtprd -cmd:unlock
Lock all lockable storage (set with the 'locked' option in the configuration file) :
umtprd -cmd:lock
"addstorage"/"rmstorage" commands to dynamically add/remove storage :
umtprd '-cmd:addstorage:/tmp Tmp rw'
umtprd '-cmd:rmstorage:Tmp'
Use double-quotes when arguments have spaces in them:
umtprd '-cmd:addstorage:/path "My Path" rw,removable'
umtprd '-cmd:rmstorage:"My Path"'
"mount"/"unmount" commands to dynamically mount/unmount storage.
umtprd '-cmd:mount:"Storage name"'
umtprd '-cmd:unmount:"Storage name"'
This project is licensed under the GNU General Public License version 3 - see the LICENSE file for details