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Linus Walleij0dd71e92006-05-04 18:47:07 +00001Building and Installing
2-----------------------
Linus Walleij6fd2f082006-03-28 07:19:22 +00003
Linus Walleij0dd71e92006-05-04 18:47:07 +00004See the "INSTALL" file.
5
6
7Heritage
8--------
9
10libmtp is based on several ancestors:
11
12* libptp2 by Mariusz Woloszyn was the starting point used
13 by Richard A. Low for the initial starter port. You can
14 find it at http://libptp.sourceforge.net/
15
16* libgphoto2 by Mariusz Woloszyn and Marcus Meissner was
17 used at a later stage since it was (is) more actively
18 maintained. libmtp tracks the PTP implementation in
19 libgphoto2 and considers it an upstream project. We will
20 try to submit anything generally useful back to libgphoto2
21 and not make double efforts. In practice this means we
22 use ptp.c, ptp.h and ptp-pack.c verbatim from the libgphoto2
23 source code. If you need to change things in these files,
24 make sure it is so general that libgphoto2 will want to
25 merge it to their codebase too. You find libgphoto2 as part
26 of gPhoto: http://gphoto.sourceforge.net/
27
28* libnjb was a project that Richard and Linus were working
Linus Walleijfcf88912006-06-05 13:23:33 +000029 on before libmtp. When Linus took Richards initial port
Linus Walleij0dd71e92006-05-04 18:47:07 +000030 and made an generic C API he re-used the philosophy and
31 much code from libnjb. Many of the sample programs are for
32 example taken quite literally from libnjb. You find it here:
33 http://libnjb.sourceforge.net/
34
35
36Compiling programs for libmtp
37-----------------------------
38
39libmtp has support for the pkg-config script by adding a libmtp.pc
40entry in $(prefix)/lib/pkgconfig. To compile a libmtp program,
41"just" write:
42
43gcc -o foo `pkg-config --cflags --libs libmtp` foo.c
44
45This also simplifies compilation using autoconf and pkg-config: just
46write e.g.
47
48PKG_CHECK_MODULES(MTP, libmtp)
49AC_SUBST(MTP_CFLAGS)
50AC_SUBST(MTP_LIBS)
51
52To have libmtp LIBS and CFLAGS defined. Needless to say, this will
53only work if you have pkgconfig installed on your system, but most
54people have nowadays.
55
56If your library is installed in e.g. /usr/local you may have to tell
57this to pkgconfig by setting the PKG_CONFIG_PATH thus:
58
59export PKG_CONFIG_PATH=/usr/local/lib/pkgconfig
60
61
62Documentation
63-------------
64
65Read the API documentation that can be generated with doxygen.
66It will be output in doc/html if you have Doxygen properly
67installed. (It will not be created unless you have Doxygen!)
68
69For information about the Media Transfer Protocol, see:
70http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Media_Transfer_Protocol
71
72
73Contributing
74------------
75
76See the project page at http://libmtp.sourceforge.net/
Linus Walleijee73ef22006-08-27 19:56:00 +000077We always need your help. There is a mailinglist and a
78bug report system there.
Linus Walleij6fd2f082006-03-28 07:19:22 +000079
Linus Walleija1b66f22007-05-10 20:02:16 +000080
81New Devices
82-----------
83
Linus Walleijfcf88912006-06-05 13:23:33 +000084If you happen upon a device which libmtp claims it cannot
85autodetect, please submit the vendor ID and device ID
Linus Walleij9ee29402007-10-31 20:24:48 +000086(these can be obtained from the "lsusb" and "lsusb -n"
87commands run as root) as a bug, patch or feature request
88on the Sourceforge bug tracker at our homepage. If it
89gives a sensible output from "mtp-detect" then please attach
90the result as well as it teach us some stuff about your
91device. If you've done some additional hacking, join our
92mailinglist and post your experiences there.
Linus Walleijda558be2007-03-10 21:42:25 +000093
Linus Walleija1b66f22007-05-10 20:02:16 +000094If you want to be able to hack some more and you're not
95afraid of C hacking, add an entry for your device's
96vendor/product ID and a descriptive string to the database
Linus Walleij6dc01682007-11-15 21:23:46 +000097in the file src/music-players.h.
Linus Walleija1b66f22007-05-10 20:02:16 +000098
99If you want to poke around to see if your device has some
100special pecularities, you can test some special device
Linus Walleij6dc01682007-11-15 21:23:46 +0000101flags (defined in src/device-flags.h) by inserting them
102together with your device entry in src/music-players.h.
Linus Walleija1b66f22007-05-10 20:02:16 +0000103Flags can be tested in isolation or catenated with "|"
104(binary OR). If relatives to your device use a certain
105flag, chances are high that a new device will need it
106too, typically from the same manufacturer.
107
108The most common flag that needs to be set is the
109DEVICE_FLAG_UNLOAD_DRIVER that detach any Linux kernel
110drivers that may have attached to the device making
Linus Walleij94f23d52007-08-04 19:37:28 +0000111MTP access impossible. This is however not expected to
112really work: this is a problem being tracked as of
113now (2007-08-04). See the "last resort" solutions below
114if you really need to get your dual-mode device to work
115with MTP.
Linus Walleija1b66f22007-05-10 20:02:16 +0000116
Linus Walleij91fb0282007-09-03 21:16:08 +0000117If you are a device vendor, please consider assigning one
118of your employees as a contact person for libmtp, have them
119sign up to the libmtp development list and answer questions
120and post new device ID:s as they are released to our
121mailing list. By the way: do you have spare devices you
122can give us? Send them to Richard (Mac support) or Linus
123(Linux support). (So far nobody did that except for Microsoft
124who sent us a Zune by proxy!)
125
Linus Walleija1b66f22007-05-10 20:02:16 +0000126If your device is very problematic we are curious of how it
Linus Walleijda558be2007-03-10 21:42:25 +0000127works under Windows, so we enjoy reading USB packet sniffs
128that reveal the low-level traffic carried out between
129Windows Media Player and your device. This can be done
Linus Walleij61c25682007-09-04 14:46:21 +0000130using e.g.:
131
132* USBsnoop:
133 http://benoit.papillault.free.fr/usbsnoop/
134
135* The trial version of HHD Softwares software-only
136 USB monitor. You need to get a copy of version 2.37 since
137 the newer trial versions won't let you carry out the
138 needed packet sniffs. (As of 2007-03-10 a copy can be found
139 at: http://www.cobbleware.com/files/usb-monitor-237.exe)
140
Linus Walleijda558be2007-03-10 21:42:25 +0000141There are other USB monitors as well, some more expensive
142alternatives use hardware and even measure electronic
143characteristics of the traffic (which is far too much
144detail for us).
145
Linus Walleij91fb0282007-09-03 21:16:08 +0000146Device sniffs are an easy read since the PTP/MTP protocol
147is nicely structured. All commands will have a structure such
148as this in the log, we examplify with a object list request:
149
150PTP REQEUST:
151000120: Bulk or Interrupt Transfer (UP), 03.09.2007 12:49:25.9843750 +0.0
152Pipe Handle: 0x863ce234 (Endpoint Address: 0x2)
153Send 0x20 bytes to the device:
154 20 00 00 00 01 00 05 98 23 00 00 00 27 03 00 10 ......?#...'...
155 Length TYPE CMD Trans# Param1
156
157 00 00 00 00 02 DC 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 .....Ü..........
158 Param2 Param3 Param4 Param5
159
160[OPTIONAL] DATA PHASE:
161000121: Bulk or Interrupt Transfer (UP), 03.09.2007 12:49:26.0 +0.0156250
162Pipe Handle: 0x863ce214 (Endpoint Address: 0x81)
163Get 0x1a bytes from the device:
164 1A 00 00 00 02 00 05 98 23 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 .......?#.......
165 Length TYPE CMD Trans# DATA
166
167 27 03 00 10 02 DC 04 00 00 30 '....Ü...0
168
169RESPONSE:
170000122: Bulk or Interrupt Transfer (UP), 03.09.2007 12:49:26.0 +0.0
171Pipe Handle: 0x863ce214 (Endpoint Address: 0x81)
172Get 0xc bytes from the device:
173 0C 00 00 00 03 00 01 20 23 00 00 00 ....... #...
174 Length TYPE CODE Trans#
175
176* One send (OUT to the device), two reads (IN from the device).
177
178* All three byte chunks commands are
179 sent/recieved/recieeved by the function ptp_transaction()
180 in the file ptp.c.
181
182* It boils down to ptp_usb_sendreq(), optionally ptp_usb_senddata()
183 or ptp_usb_getdata() and finally ptp_usb_getresp() in the file
184 libusb-glue.c. Notice ptp_usb_sendreq() and ptp_usb_getresp()
185 are ALWAYS called. The TYPE field correspond to this, so the
186 TYPES in this case are "COMMAND" (0x0001), "DATA" (0x0002),
187 and "RESPONSE" (0x0003).
188
189* Notice that the byte order is little endian, so you need to read
190 each field from right to left.
191
192* This COMMAND has:
193 CMD 0x99805, we see in ptp.h that this is PTP_OC_MTP_GetObjPropList.
194 Transaction# 0x00000023.
195 REQUEST parameters 0x10000327, 0x00000000, 0x0000DC02, 0x00000000
196 0x00000000, in this case it means "get props for object 0x10000327",
197 "any format", "property 0xDC02" (PTP_OPC_ObjectFormat), then two
198 parameters that are always zero (no idea what they mean or their
199 use).
200
201* The DATA has:
202 CMD 0x99805, we see in ptp.h that this is PTP_OC_MTP_GetObjPropList.
203 Transaction# 0x00000023.
204 Then comes data 0x00000001, 0x10000327, 0xDC02, 0x0004, 0x3000
205 Which means in this case, (and this is the tricky part) "here
206 you have 1 property", "for object 0x10000327", "it is property
207 0xDC02" (PTP_OPC_ObjectFormat), "which is of type 0x0004"
208 (PTP_DTC_UINT16), "and set to 0x3000" (PTP_OFC_Undefined, it
209 is perfectly valid to have undefined object formats, since it
210 is a legal value defining this).
211
212* This RESPONSE has:
213 CMD 0x99805, we see in ptp.h that this is PTP_OC_MTP_GetObjPropList.
214 Return Code ("RC") = 0x2001, PTP_RC_OK, all went fine.
215 Transaction# 0x00000023.
Linus Walleijfcf88912006-06-05 13:23:33 +0000216
Linus Walleijd05fce62007-09-29 20:17:23 +0000217If you want to compare the Windows behaviour with a similar
Linus Walleij6dc01682007-11-15 21:23:46 +0000218operation using libmtp you can go into the src/libusb-glue.c
219file and uncomment the row that reads:
Linus Walleijd05fce62007-09-29 20:17:23 +0000220
221//#define ENABLE_USB_BULK_DEBUG
222
223(I.e. remove the two //.)
224
225This will make libmtp print out a hex dump of every bulk USB
226transaction. The bulk transactions contain all the PTP/MTP layer
227data, which is usually where the problems appear.
228
Linus Walleij6fd2f082006-03-28 07:19:22 +0000229
Linus Walleijbd7624c2007-05-28 10:48:54 +0000230Devices does not work - last resort:
231------------------------------------
232
233Some devices that are dual-mode are simply impossible to get
234to work under Linux because the usb-storage(.ko) kernel
235module hook them first, and refuse to release them, even
Linus Walleij94f23d52007-08-04 19:37:28 +0000236when we specify the DEVICE_FLAG_UNLOAD_DRIVER flag. (Maybe
237it DOES release it but the device will immediately be probed
238at the USB mass storage interface AGAIN because it
239enumerates.)
Linus Walleijbd7624c2007-05-28 10:48:54 +0000240
Linus Walleij584eb8d2007-09-05 19:51:27 +0000241Try this, if you have a recent 2.6.x Linux kernel,
242run (as root) something like:
243
244> rmmod usb_storage ; mtp-detect
245
246You can run most any command or a client like gnomad2 or
247Amarok immediately after the rmmod command. This works
248sometimes. Another way:
Linus Walleijbd7624c2007-05-28 10:48:54 +0000249
Linus Walleij94f23d52007-08-04 19:37:28 +0000250* Edit /etc/modprobe.d/blacklist
Linus Walleijbd7624c2007-05-28 10:48:54 +0000251
252* Add the line "blacklist usb-storage"
253
254* Reboot.
255
256Now none of you USB disks, flash memory sticks etc will be
257working (you just disabled them all). However you *can* try
258your device, and it might have started working because there
259is no longer a USB mass storage driver that tries to hook onto
260the mass storage interface of your device.
261
Linus Walleij94f23d52007-08-04 19:37:28 +0000262If not even blacklisting works (check with
263"lsmod | grep usb-storage"), there is some problem with
264something else and you may need to remove or rename the file
265/lib/modules/<VERSION>/kernel/drivers/usb/storage/usb-storage.ko
266manually.
267
Linus Walleijbd7624c2007-05-28 10:48:54 +0000268If you find the PerfectSolution(TM) to this dilemma, so you
269can properly switch for individual devices whether to use it
270as USB mass storage or not, please tell us how you did it. We
271know we cannot use udev, because udev is called after-the-fact:
272the device is already configured for USB mass storage when
273udev is called.
274
275
Linus Walleij15def332006-09-19 14:27:02 +0000276Calendar and contact support:
277-----------------------------
Linus Walleijd3bdf762006-02-20 22:21:56 +0000278
Linus Walleij3c16fe42006-04-30 07:53:41 +0000279The Creative Zen series can read VCALENDAR2 (.ics) files
Linus Walleij15def332006-09-19 14:27:02 +0000280and VCard (.vcf) files from programs like for example
281Evolution with the following limitations/conditions:
Linus Walleijd3bdf762006-02-20 22:21:56 +0000282
Linus Walleij3c16fe42006-04-30 07:53:41 +0000283- The file must be in DOS (CR/LF) format, use the unix2dos
284 program to convert if needed
Linus Walleij15def332006-09-19 14:27:02 +0000285
286- Repeat events in calendar files do not seem to be supported,
287 entries will only appear once.
288
289- Calendar (.ics) files should be stored in the folder "My Organizer"
290 when sent to the device (this directory should be autodetected
Linus Walleij80b2c722006-06-22 17:57:17 +0000291 for use with calendar files, otherwise use the option
Linus Walleij15def332006-09-19 14:27:02 +0000292 -f "My Organizer" to sendfile for this) Apparently this file can
293 also contain tasklists.
294
295- Contact (.vcf) files should be stored in the folder "My Contacts"
296 when sent to the device. (-f "My Contacts")
297
298- Some devices are picky about the name of the calendar and
299 contact files. For example the Zen Microphoto wants:
300
Linus Walleijb1318d12006-09-25 14:59:26 +0000301 Calendar: My Organizer/6651416.ics
302 Contacts: My Organizer/6651416.vcf
303
304
305Syncing in with Evolution and Creative Devices
306----------------------------------------------
307
308Evolution can easily export .ics an .vcf files, but you currently
309need some command-line hacking to get you stuff copied over in
310one direction host -> device. The examples/ directory contains a script
311created for the Creative Zen Microphoto by Nicolas Tetreault.
312
Linus Walleij6e8cef42006-12-03 20:45:04 +0000313
314It's Not Our Bug!
315-----------------
316
317Some MTP devices have strange pecularities. We try to work around
318these whenever we can, sometimes we cannot work around it or we
319cannot test your solution.
320
321* The Zen Vision:M (possibly more Creative Zens) has a firmware bug
322 that makes it drop the last two characters off a playlist name.
323 It is fixed in later firmware.
324
Linus Walleijc41f2e82007-03-12 22:26:00 +0000325* For Creative Technology devices, there are hard limits on how
326 many files can be put onto the device. For a 30 GiB device (like
327 the Zen Xtra) the limit is 6000, for a 60 GiB device the limit
328 is 15000 files. For further Creative pecularities, see the
329 FAQ sections at www.nomadness.net.
330
Linus Walleijd24a7ab2007-03-07 21:48:43 +0000331* Sandisk sansa c150 and probably several other Sandisk devices
332 (and possibly devices from other manufacturers) have a dual
333 mode with MTP and USB mass storage. The device will initially
334 claim to be mass storage so udev will capture is and make the
Linus Walleijda558be2007-03-10 21:42:25 +0000335 use of MTP mode impossible. One way of avoiding it could be to
Linus Walleijd24a7ab2007-03-07 21:48:43 +0000336 be to blacklist the "usb-storage" module in
337 /etc/modprobe.c/blacklist with a row like this:
Linus Walleijda558be2007-03-10 21:42:25 +0000338 "blacklist usb-storage". Some have even removed the
339 "usb-storage.ko" (kernel module file) to avoid loading.
Linus Walleijd24a7ab2007-03-07 21:48:43 +0000340
Linus Walleijda558be2007-03-10 21:42:25 +0000341* The iriver devices (possibly all of them) cannot handle the
Linus Walleij6e8cef42006-12-03 20:45:04 +0000342 enhanced GetObjectPropList MTP command (0x9805) properly. So
343 they have been banned from using it.
344
Linus Walleijda558be2007-03-10 21:42:25 +0000345* iriver devices have problems with older versions of libmtp and
Linus Walleij82265222007-03-04 19:47:08 +0000346 with new devices libmtp does not know of as of yet, since it
347 has an oldstyle USB device controller that cannot handle zero
Linus Walleijda558be2007-03-10 21:42:25 +0000348 writes. (Register your device with us!) All their devices are
349 likely to need a special device flag in the src/libusb-glue.c
350 database.
Linus Walleij82265222007-03-04 19:47:08 +0000351
Linus Walleij6e8cef42006-12-03 20:45:04 +0000352* The Samsung Yepp T9 has several strange characteristics, some
353 that we've managed to work around. (For example it will return
354 multiple PTP packages in a single transaction.)
355
Linus Walleijf2711b32007-02-26 20:18:40 +0000356* The early firmware for Philips HDD players is known to be
357 problematic. Please upgrade to as new firmware as you can get.
358 (Yes this requires some kind of Windows Installation I think.)
359
Linus Walleij9340aac2007-10-01 10:02:05 +0000360* Some devices that implement GetObjectPropList (0x9805) will
361 not return the entire object list if you request a list for object
362 0xffffffffu. (But they should.) So they may need the special
363 DEVICE_FLAG_BROKEN_MTPGETOBJPROPLIST_ALL.
364
365* Some (smaller) subset of devices cannot even get all the
366 properties for a single object in one go, these need the
367 DEVICE_FLAG_BROKEN_MTPGETOBJPROPLIST. Currently only the
368 iriver devices seem to have this bug.
369
370* The Toshiba Gigabeat S (and probably its sibling the
371 Microsoft Zune and other Toshiba devices) will only display
372 album information tags for a song in case there is also
373 an abstract album (created with the album interface) with
374 the exact same name.
Linus Walleijd132d8e2007-04-03 23:24:54 +0000375
376
377Lost symbols
378------------
379
380Shared libraries can be troublesome to users not experienced with
381them. The following is a condensed version of a generic question
382that has appeared on the libmtp mailing list from time to time.
383
384> PTP: Opening session
385> Queried Creative Zen Vision:M
386> gnomad2: relocation error: gnomad2: undefined symbol:
387> LIBMTP_Get_Storageinfo
388> (...)
389> Are these type of errors related to libmtp or something else?
390
391The problem is of a generic nature, and related to dynamic library
392loading. It is colloquially known as "dependency hell".
393(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dependency_hell)
394
395The gnomad2 application calls upon the dynamic linker in Linux to
396resolve the symbol "LIBMTP_Get_Storageinfo" or any other symbol
397(ELF symbol, or link point or whatever you want to call them, a
398symbol is a label on a memory address that the linker shall
399resolve from label to actual address.)
400For generic information on this subject see the INSTALL file and
401this Wikipedia page:
402
403http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Library_(computing)
404
405When Linux /lib/ld-linux.so.X is called to link the symbols compiled
406into gnomad2 (or any other executable using libmtp), it examines the
407ELF file for the libmtp.so.X file it finds first and cannot resolve
408the symbol "LIBMTP_Get_Storageinfo" (or whichever symbol you have a
409problem witj) from it, since it's probably not there. There are many
410possible causes of this symbol breakage:
411
4121) You installed precompiled libmtp and gnomad2 packages (RPMs, debs
413 whatever) that do not match up. Typical cause: your gnomad2 package was
414 built against a newer version of libmtp than what's installed on your
415 machine. Another typical cause: you installed a package you found on
416 the web, somewhere, the dependency resolution system did not protest
417 properly (as it should) or you forced it to install anyway, ignoring
418 some warnings.
419
4202) You compiled libmtp and/or gnomad2 from source, installing both or
421 either in /usr/local/lib and /usr/local/bin. This means at compile-time
422 gnomad2 finds the libmtp library in /usr/local/lib but at runtime, it
423 depends on the Linux system wide library loader (/lib/ld-linux.so.X) in
424 order to resolve the symbols. This loader will look into the file
425 /etc/ld.so.conf and/or the folder /etc/ld.so.conf.d in order to find
426 paths to libraries to be used for resolving the symbols. If you have
427 some older version of libmtp in e.g. /usr/lib (typically installed by a
428 package manager) it will take precedence over the new version you just
429 installed in /usr/local/lib and the newly compiled library in
430 /usr/local/lib will *not* be used, resulting in this error message.
431
4323) You really did install the very latest versions (as of writing libmtp
433 0.1.5 and gnomad2 2.8.11) from source and there really is no
434 pre-installed package of either on your machine. In that case I'm
435 totally lost, I have no idea what's causing this.
436
437Typical remedies:
438
4391) If you don't want to mess around with your system and risk these
440 situations, only use pre-packaged software that came with the
441 distribution or its official support channels. If it still breaks,
442 blame your distribution, they're not packaging correctly. Relying on
443 properly packaged software and not installing things yourself *is* the
444 Linux solution to the "dependency hell" problem.
445
4462) Read about dynamically linked library handling until the stuff I wrote
447 about in the previous list sounds like music to your ears, inspect
448 your /lib, /usr/lib, /usr/local/lib, /etc/ld.so.conf and the
449 /etc/ld.so.conf.d, remove all pre-packed versions using RPM, APT,
450 YaST or whatever your distribution uses, compile libmtp and gnomad2
451 (or whatever) from source only and you will be enlighted.
452
453I don't know if this helps you, it's the best answer we can give.