From: Mauro Carvalho Chehab Date: Wed, 5 Apr 2017 13:23:11 +0000 (-0300) Subject: usb.rst: get rid of some Sphinx errors X-Git-Url: https://git.stricted.de/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=69966c94b95832d51e7fbaa0e31a0ed5534c48e6;p=GitHub%2Fmoto-9609%2Fandroid_kernel_motorola_exynos9610.git usb.rst: get rid of some Sphinx errors Get rid of those warnings: Documentation/driver-api/usb/usb.rst:615: ERROR: Unknown target name: "usb_type". Documentation/driver-api/usb/usb.rst:615: ERROR: Unknown target name: "usb_dir". Documentation/driver-api/usb/usb.rst:615: ERROR: Unknown target name: "usb_recip". Documentation/driver-api/usb/usb.rst:679: ERROR: Unknown target name: "usbdevfs_urb_type". Signed-off-by: Mauro Carvalho Chehab Acked-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman Signed-off-by: Jonathan Corbet --- diff --git a/Documentation/driver-api/usb/usb.rst b/Documentation/driver-api/usb/usb.rst index d15ab8ae5239..5ebaf669704c 100644 --- a/Documentation/driver-api/usb/usb.rst +++ b/Documentation/driver-api/usb/usb.rst @@ -615,8 +615,8 @@ USBDEVFS_CONTROL The first eight bytes of this structure are the contents of the SETUP packet to be sent to the device; see the USB 2.0 specification for details. The bRequestType value is composed by combining a - USB_TYPE_\* value, a USB_DIR_\* value, and a USB_RECIP_\* - value (from **). If wLength is nonzero, it describes + ``USB_TYPE_*`` value, a ``USB_DIR_*`` value, and a ``USB_RECIP_*`` + value (from ``linux/usb.h``). If wLength is nonzero, it describes the length of the data buffer, which is either written to the device (USB_DIR_OUT) or read from the device (USB_DIR_IN). @@ -678,7 +678,7 @@ the blocking is separate. These requests are packaged into a structure that resembles the URB used by kernel device drivers. (No POSIX Async I/O support here, sorry.) It -identifies the endpoint type (USBDEVFS_URB_TYPE_\*), endpoint +identifies the endpoint type (``USBDEVFS_URB_TYPE_*``), endpoint (number, masked with USB_DIR_IN as appropriate), buffer and length, and a user "context" value serving to uniquely identify each request. (It's usually a pointer to per-request data.) Flags can modify requests