>I am in the process of choosing a USB host stack for a product my company
>is working on. We are using uC/OS-II on a Sharp ARM9 SoC. ...
>I am wondering if anyone here has had any experience with these companies,
>or even better, with their USB host stacks.
I am curious if you checked out Micrium's USB host stack. Since you
are using their uC/OS, I would think you trust them to also make a
good USB host stack.
Lou
Reply by ●September 18, 20072007-09-18
On 1 Set, 16:34, "sarain" <srainwa...@fwmurphy.com> wrote:
> I am in the process of choosing aUSBhoststack for a product my company
> is working on. We are using uC/OS-II on a Sharp ARM9 SoC. So far we have
> narrowed our choices down to:
>
> Jungo's USBware embeddedUSBhoststack.http://www.jungo.com/usbware_embedded_usb_solution.html
>
> Micro Digital's smxUSBH embeddedUSBhoststack.http://www.smxinfo.com/rtos/usb/smxusbh.htm
>
> On Time's RTUSB-32 embeddedUSBhoststack.http://www.on-time.com/rtusb-32.htm
>
> I am wondering if anyone here has had any experience with these companies,
> or even better, with theirUSBhoststacks. As far as I can tell they all
> appear to be great companies but I would appreciate feedback from users
> and customers of these companies with information about what they found
> good and/or bad about them and their products.
>
> Thanks,
> Sarain
Hi,
during an Arrow Europe tradeshow, in June, I saw a demo of the "HCC
host-lite" library running on a board made by the Embedded Artists.
The board was the LPC2468 OEM.
The demo showed how the library was able to read/write files (FAT with
long file names) from an USB flash disk.
Look also at Thesycon's USB library. Those guys were selected by
Fujitsu to develop a USB host library for some microcontrollers (FUMA
library is open source but I think the controller is not OHCI
compliant).
Enrico
Reply by sarain●September 1, 20072007-09-01
I am in the process of choosing a USB host stack for a product my company
is working on. We are using uC/OS-II on a Sharp ARM9 SoC. So far we have
narrowed our choices down to:
Jungo's USBware embedded USB host stack.
http://www.jungo.com/usbware_embedded_usb_solution.html
Micro Digital's smxUSBH embedded USB host stack.
http://www.smxinfo.com/rtos/usb/smxusbh.htm
On Time's RTUSB-32 embedded USB host stack.
http://www.on-time.com/rtusb-32.htm
I am wondering if anyone here has had any experience with these companies,
or even better, with their USB host stacks. As far as I can tell they all
appear to be great companies but I would appreciate feedback from users
and customers of these companies with information about what they found
good and/or bad about them and their products.
Thanks,
Sarain