Revise per initial comments Returns the RT driver to the function state of previous iteration, which did not support the will_detach. Behavior should be fine without this feature. This removes much of the added bloat to track state, and handle requests in the APP_DETACH state which is no longer required. Removes the optional bloat added to the RT driver, such as responding to GETSTATE requests. Fixes the DFU Mode to extract the attr bits from the functional descriptor when opened. Fixes some incorrect bitwise if checks. Also, updates some naming of functions to be consistent with the rest of the library.

TinyUSB is an open-source cross-platform USB Host/Device stack for embedded system, designed to be memory-safe with no dynamic allocation and thread-safe with all interrupt events are deferred then handled in the non-ISR task function.

. ├── docs # Documentation ├── examples # Sample with Makefile and Segger Embedded build support ├── hw │ ├── bsp # Supported boards source files │ └── mcu # Low level mcu core & peripheral drivers ├── lib # Sources from 3rd party such as freeRTOS, fatfs ... ├── src # All sources files for TinyUSB stack itself. ├── test # Unit tests for the stack └── tools # Files used internally
Special thanks to all the people who spent their precious time and effort to help this project so far. Check out the CONTRIBUTORS.md file for the list of all contributors and their awesome work for the stack.
The stack supports the following MCUs:
Here is the list of supported Boards that can be used with provided examples.
Supports multiple device configurations by dynamically changing usb descriptors. Low power functions such like suspend, resume, and remote wakeup. Following device classes are supported:
Most active development is on the Device stack. The Host stack is under rework and largely untested.
TinyUSB is completely thread-safe by pushing all ISR events into a central queue, then process it later in the non-ISR context task function. It also uses semaphore/mutex to access shared resources such as CDC FIFO. Therefore the stack needs to use some of OS's basic APIs. Following OSes are already supported out of the box.
Here are the details for getting started with the stack.
Want to help add TinyUSB support for a new MCU? Read here for an explanation on the low-level API needed by TinyUSB.
MIT license for all TinyUSB sources src folder, Full license is here. However, each file is individually licensed especially those in lib and hw/mcu folder. Please make sure you understand all the license term for files you use in your project.
TinyUSB is currently used by these other projects: