What are you “here” with today?

Forum Forums New users Welcome to antiX What are you “here” with today?

  • This topic has 1,419 replies, 37 voices, and was last updated May 11-10:54 pm by Brian Masinick.
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  • #104699
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    Brian Masinick
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      Using inxi today with antiX 22 and an active Web browser

      inxi -b
      System:
        Host: brian-antix-hp-14fq1025nr Kernel: 6.2.11-3-liquorix-amd64 arch: x86_64
          bits: 64 Desktop: IceWM v: 3.3.2 Distro: antiX-21-runit_x64-full Grup Yorum
          30 October 2021
      Machine:
        Type: Laptop System: HP product: HP Laptop 14-fq1xxx v: N/A
          serial: <superuser required>
        Mobo: HP model: 887C v: 59.11 serial: <superuser required> UEFI: AMI
          v: F.18 date: 11/26/2021
      Battery:
        ID-1: BAT0 charge: 40.6 Wh (99.8%) condition: 40.7/40.7 Wh (100.0%)
      CPU:
        Info: 6-core AMD Ryzen 5 5500U with Radeon Graphics [MT MCP] speed (MHz):
          avg: 2274 min/max: 1400/4056
      Graphics:
        Device-1: AMD Lucienne driver: amdgpu v: kernel
        Device-2: Chicony HP TrueVision HD Camera type: USB driver: uvcvideo
        Display: server: X.Org v: 1.20.11 driver: X: loaded: amdgpu
          unloaded: fbdev,modesetting,vesa dri: radeonsi gpu: amdgpu
          resolution: 1920x1080~60Hz
        API: OpenGL v: 4.6 Mesa 20.3.5 renderer: AMD RENOIR (DRM 3.49.0
          6.2.11-3-liquorix-amd64 LLVM 11.0.1)
      Network:
        Device-1: Realtek driver: rtw89_8852ae
      Drives:
        Local Storage: total: 238.47 GiB used: 30.52 GiB (12.8%)
      Info:
        Processes: 268 Uptime: 23m Memory: 7.1 GiB used: 1.49 GiB (21.1%)
        Shell: Bash inxi: 3.3.26

      --
      Brian Masinick

      #104760
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      Brian Masinick
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        Today’s forecast: 80°F | 59°F, currently in Greenville, SC at the “Mountain Shadows Station”
        near Travelers Rest, SC, it is 73°F and also feels like 73°F.

        Today: Sunny, with a high near 81°F. Southwest wind 5 to 7 mph.

        Tonight: Increasing clouds, with a low around 59°F. Light southwest wind.

        --
        Brian Masinick

        #104763
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        Brian Masinick
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          Mid day Saturday, April 15, 2023.

          Yesterday afternoon, my wife, an Italian American (born in the US to American parents, one of whom had Sicilian parents and the other who had Italian parents, so my wife has always had a natural curiosity about the “Italian Mafia”. Not only has their been movies about “The Godfather”, there have also been comedies like “Analyze This” and probably a few others. Yesterday was the opening of another Mafia drama/comedy romance called “Mafia Mama” and it certainly was entertaining.

          Back to the “quiet, safe life”, here’s the standard setup for my current test instance of antiX 23 in Beta testing.
          At this point, there are relatively minor differences with the current antiX 22 release, mostly new packages and
          a modest number of areas that need work, localization and completion. Looking very good indeed!

          inxi -b
            Host: antixBeta-hp-14-fq-1025 Kernel: 6.1.18-antix.1-amd64-smp arch: x86_64
              bits: 64 Desktop: IceWM v: 3.3.2 Distro: antiX-23-beta1-runit_x64-full Grup
              Yorum 21 March 2023
          Machine:
            Type: Laptop System: HP product: HP Laptop 14-fq1xxx v: N/A
              serial: <superuser required>
            Mobo: HP model: 887C v: 59.11 serial: <superuser required> UEFI: AMI
              v: F.18 date: 11/26/2021
          Battery:
            ID-1: BAT0 charge: 40.6 Wh (99.8%) condition: 40.7/40.7 Wh (100.0%)
          CPU:
            Info: 6-core AMD Ryzen 5 5500U with Radeon Graphics [MT MCP] speed (MHz):
              avg: 1532 min/max: 1400/4056
          Graphics:
            Device-1: AMD Lucienne driver: amdgpu v: kernel
            Device-2: Chicony HP TrueVision HD Camera type: USB driver: uvcvideo
            Display: server: X.Org v: 1.21.1.7 driver: X: loaded: amdgpu
              unloaded: fbdev,modesetting,vesa dri: radeonsi gpu: amdgpu
              resolution: 1920x1080~60Hz
            API: OpenGL v: 4.6 Mesa 22.3.6 renderer: AMD Radeon Graphics (renoir LLVM
              15.0.6 DRM 3.49 6.1.18-antix.1-amd64-smp)
          Network:
            Device-1: Realtek driver: rtw89_8852ae
          Drives:
            Local Storage: total: 238.47 GiB used: 20.45 GiB (8.6%)
          Info:
            Processes: 248 Uptime: 1m Memory: 7.1 GiB used: 655.6 MiB (9.0%) Shell: Bash
            inxi: 3.3.26

          --
          Brian Masinick

          #104769
          Moderator
          Brian Masinick
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            pinxi -b
            System:
              Host: brian-antix-hp-14fq1025nr Kernel: 6.1.18-antix.1-amd64-smp
                arch: x86_64 bits: 64 Desktop: IceWM v: 3.3.2 Distro: antiX-21-runit_x64-full
                Grup Yorum 30 October 2021
            Machine:
              Type: Laptop System: HP product: HP Laptop 14-fq1xxx v: N/A
                serial: <superuser required>
              Mobo: HP model: 887C v: 59.11 serial: <superuser required> UEFI: AMI
                v: F.18 date: 11/26/2021
            Battery:
              ID-1: BAT0 charge: 40.6 Wh (99.8%) condition: 40.7/40.7 Wh (100.0%)
            CPU:
              Info: 6-core AMD Ryzen 5 5500U with Radeon Graphics [MT MCP] speed (MHz):
                avg: 1399 min/max: 1400/4056
            Graphics:
              Device-1: AMD Lucienne driver: amdgpu v: kernel
              Device-2: Chicony HP TrueVision HD Camera type: USB driver: uvcvideo
              Display: server: X.Org v: 1.20.11 driver: X: loaded: amdgpu
                unloaded: fbdev,modesetting,vesa dri: radeonsi gpu: amdgpu
                resolution: 1920x1080~60Hz
              API: OpenGL v: 4.6 Mesa 20.3.5 renderer: AMD RENOIR (DRM 3.49.0
                6.1.18-antix.1-amd64-smp LLVM 11.0.1)
            Network:
              Device-1: Realtek driver: rtw89_8852ae
            Drives:
              Local Storage: total: 238.47 GiB used: 30.52 GiB (12.8%)
            Info:
              Processes: 250 Uptime: 1h 2m Memory: 7.1 GiB used: 733.4 MiB (10.1%)
              Shell: Bash pinxi: 3.3.26-13

            --
            Brian Masinick

            #104770
            Moderator
            Brian Masinick
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              Currently at GSP, Greenville-Spartanburg Airport it's Fair and 76°F, 24°C
              Humidity 	43%
              Wind Speed 	N 7 mph
              Barometer 	29.97 in (1014.1 mb)
              Dewpoint 	52°F (11°C)
              Visibility 	10.00 mi
              Heat Index	78°F (26°C)
              Last update 	15 Apr 2:53 pm EDT 

              --
              Brian Masinick

              #104771
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              Brian Masinick
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                The Mountain Shadows Wunderground Station near us is up to 78°F.

                --
                Brian Masinick

                #104813
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                Brian Masinick
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                  Quite a few antiX updated packages for the antiX 23 Beta test instance today,
                  Sunday, April 16, 2023, including antiX named packages, goodies, etc.

                  pinxi -b
                  System:
                    Host: antixBeta-hp-14-fq-1025 Kernel: 6.2.11-3-liquorix-amd64 arch: x86_64
                      bits: 64 Desktop: IceWM v: 3.3.3 Distro: antiX-23-beta1-runit_x64-full Grup
                      Yorum 21 March 2023
                  Machine:
                    Type: Laptop System: HP product: HP Laptop 14-fq1xxx v: N/A
                      serial: <superuser required>
                    Mobo: HP model: 887C v: 59.11 serial: <superuser required> UEFI: AMI
                      v: F.18 date: 11/26/2021
                  Battery:
                    ID-1: BAT0 charge: 40.6 Wh (99.8%) condition: 40.7/40.7 Wh (100.0%)
                  CPU:
                    Info: 6-core AMD Ryzen 5 5500U with Radeon Graphics [MT MCP] speed (MHz):
                      avg: 2041 min/max: 1400/4056
                  Graphics:
                    Device-1: AMD Lucienne driver: amdgpu v: kernel
                    Device-2: Chicony HP TrueVision HD Camera type: USB driver: uvcvideo
                    Display: server: X.Org v: 1.21.1.7 driver: X: loaded: amdgpu
                      unloaded: fbdev,modesetting,vesa dri: radeonsi gpu: amdgpu
                      resolution: 1920x1080~60Hz
                    API: OpenGL v: 4.6 Mesa 22.3.6 renderer: AMD Radeon Graphics (renoir LLVM
                      15.0.6 DRM 3.49 6.2.11-3-liquorix-amd64)
                  Network:
                    Device-1: Realtek driver: rtw89_8852ae
                  Drives:
                    Local Storage: total: 238.47 GiB used: 20.5 GiB (8.6%)
                  Info:
                    Processes: 245 Uptime: 1m Memory: 7.08 GiB used: 673.6 MiB (9.3%)
                    Shell: Bash pinxi: 3.3.26-15

                  --
                  Brian Masinick

                  #104825
                  Moderator
                  Brian Masinick
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                    Messing around with various USB images now; depending on the packaging, sometimes it’s hard to write down what I’ve stored on various disks.
                    This one is our friendly sibling, MX Linux AHS 21.3, which I also have installed on my HP-14. I do have something in which to put this disk so now I can label it accordingly, so “mission accomplished”. Like antiX it runs great from a live image.

                    --
                    Brian Masinick

                    #104830
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                    Brian Masinick
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                      Now I’m here with another USB that’s running antiX Beta 1.

                      inxi -b
                      System:
                        Host: antix1 Kernel: 6.1.18-antix.1-amd64-smp arch: x86_64 bits: 64
                          Desktop: IceWM v: 3.3.3 Distro: antiX-23-beta1-runit_x64-full Grup Yorum 21
                          March 2023
                      Machine:
                        Type: Laptop System: HP product: HP Laptop 14-fq1xxx v: N/A
                          serial: <superuser required>
                        Mobo: HP model: 887C v: 59.11 serial: <superuser required> UEFI: AMI
                          v: F.18 date: 11/26/2021
                      Battery:
                        ID-1: BAT0 charge: 40.6 Wh (99.8%) condition: 40.7/40.7 Wh (100.0%)
                      CPU:
                        Info: 6-core AMD Ryzen 5 5500U with Radeon Graphics [MT MCP] speed (MHz):
                          avg: 1398 min/max: 1400/4056
                      Graphics:
                        Device-1: AMD Lucienne driver: amdgpu v: kernel
                        Device-2: Chicony HP TrueVision HD Camera type: USB driver: uvcvideo
                        Display: server: X.Org v: 1.21.1.7 driver: X: loaded: amdgpu
                          unloaded: fbdev,modesetting,vesa dri: radeonsi gpu: amdgpu
                          resolution: 1920x1080~60Hz
                        API: OpenGL v: 4.6 Mesa 22.3.6 renderer: AMD Radeon Graphics (renoir LLVM
                          15.0.6 DRM 3.49 6.1.18-antix.1-amd64-smp)
                      Network:
                        Device-1: Realtek driver: rtw89_8852ae
                      Drives:
                        Local Storage: total: 295.77 GiB used: 1.57 GiB (0.5%)
                      Info:
                        Processes: 231 Uptime: 23m Memory: 7.1 GiB used: 2.71 GiB (38.2%)
                        Shell: Bash inxi: 3.3.25

                      --
                      Brian Masinick

                      #104842
                      Moderator
                      Brian Masinick
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                        inxi -b
                        System:
                          Host: antix23 Kernel: 6.1.18-antix.1-amd64-smp arch: x86_64 bits: 64
                            Desktop: IceWM v: 3.3.3 Distro: antiX-23-beta1-runit_x64-full Grup Yorum 21
                            March 2023
                        Machine:
                          Type: Desktop System: Hewlett-Packard product: s5747c v: N/A
                            serial: <superuser required>
                          Mobo: PEGATRON model: 2A6C v: 5.00 serial: <superuser required>
                            BIOS: American Megatrends v: 6.01 date: 09/29/2010
                        CPU:
                          Info: dual core AMD Athlon II X2 255 [MCP] speed (MHz): avg: 3114
                        Graphics:
                          Device-1: NVIDIA C61 [GeForce 6150SE nForce 430] driver: N/A
                          Display: server: X.Org v: 1.21.1.7 driver: X: loaded: nouveau,vesa
                            unloaded: fbdev,modesetting dri: swrast gpu: N/A resolution: 1024x768
                          API: OpenGL v: 4.5 Mesa 22.3.6 renderer: llvmpipe (LLVM 15.0.6 128 bits)
                        Network:
                          Device-1: NVIDIA MCP61 Ethernet type: network bridge driver: forcedeth
                          Device-2: Ralink RT2790 Wireless 802.11n 1T/2R PCIe driver: rt2800pci
                        Drives:
                          Local Storage: total: 698.64 GiB used: 7.52 GiB (1.1%)
                        Info:
                          Processes: 147 Uptime: 4m Memory: 3.58 GiB used: 974.7 MiB (26.6%)
                          Shell: Bash inxi: 3.3.25

                        --
                        Brian Masinick

                        #104843
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                        Brian Masinick
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                          Notice that I’m now here with the much older HP Desktop System s5747c instead of the much newer HP-14 laptop.

                          Much slower than the laptop but this one has been testing out well too.

                          --
                          Brian Masinick

                          #104847
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                            Working on enhanced USB 3 support which will then kick in as soon as we start seeing USB 4 in the wilds, note the new fields ‘lanes:’ and ‘mode:’. Still polishing up and finding corner cases, but it’s shaping up nicely. Also was useful to once and for all force me to learn how the USB wiring actually works.

                            Answer, roughly: the power goes over dedicated power wires, for usb 3 and 4, sends usb 2 down its own wires, I think, which is why you see USB 2 device inserted into a usb 3 port, it shoots up to another usb 2 hub on the circuit. This is why sometimes usb 2 devices don’t work on usb 3 hubs, or why usb 3 adapters might fail to pass a signal from a usb 2 device. There’s more to it than that, but that is sort of how it works. USB 3 and 4 use dedicated lanes, like PCIe, with an up, or transfer channel (tx) and an in, or receive channel (rx). The kernel calls these rx_lanes/tx_lanes, but basically 1 standard lane is 1 rx and 1 tx lane. Except for USB4 v2 120 Gbps, which uses 3 lanes, but 2 of them are dedicated tx, and 1 dedicated rx.

                            This will start becoming an issue over next year when people post about why a device doesn’t show up, or why a usb 1 or 2 device shows up on a usb 2 hub when connected to a usb 3 or 4 hub or port.

                            There’s more to it than this, but this is far enough to let me update inxi to show this USB data.

                            pinxi -Jazy1 --vs
                            pinxi 3.3.26-16 (2023-04-16)
                            USB:
                              Hub-1: 1-0:1
                                info: hi-speed hub with single TT
                                ports: 14
                                rev: 2.0
                                  speed: 480 Mb/s
                                chip-ID: 1d6b:0002
                                class-ID: 0900
                                Device-1: 1-4:2
                                  info: Wacom ET-0405A [Graphire2 (4x5)]
                                  type: mouse
                                  driver: usbhid,wacom
                                  interfaces: 1
                                  rev: 1.1
                                    speed: 1.5 Mb/s
                                  power: 40mA
                                  chip-ID: 056a:0011
                                  class-ID: 0301
                                Device-2: 1-9:3
                                  info: Tangtop HID Keyboard
                                  type: keyboard,mouse
                                  driver: hid-generic,usbhid
                                  interfaces: 2
                                  rev: 1.1
                                    speed: 1.5 Mb/s
                                  power: 100mA
                                  chip-ID: 0d3d:0001
                                  class-ID: 0301
                                Device-3: 1-10:4
                                  info: Microsoft Natural Keyboard Elite
                                  type: keyboard
                                  driver: hid-generic,usbhid
                                  interfaces: 1
                                  rev: 1.0
                                    speed: 1.5 Mb/s
                                  power: 100mA
                                  chip-ID: 045e:000b
                                  class-ID: 0301
                              Hub-2: 2-0:1
                                info: super-speed hub
                                ports: 8
                                rev: 3.1
                                  speed: 10 Gb/s
                                  lanes: 1
                                  mode: 3.2 gen-1x2
                                chip-ID: 1d6b:0003
                                class-ID: 0900
                                Device-1: 2-8:5
                                  info: SanDisk Ultra
                                  type: mass storage
                                  driver: usb-storage
                                  interfaces: 1
                                  rev: 3.0
                                    speed: 5 Gb/s
                                    lanes: 1
                                    mode: 3.2 gen-1x1
                                  power: 896mA
                                  chip-ID: 0781:5581
                                  class-ID: 0806
                                  serial: <filter>
                              Hub-3: 3-0:1
                                info: hi-speed hub with single TT
                                ports: 2
                                rev: 2.0
                                  speed: 480 Mb/s
                                chip-ID: 1d6b:0002
                                class-ID: 0900
                              Hub-4: 4-0:1
                                info: super-speed hub
                                ports: 2
                                rev: 3.1
                                  speed: 10 Gb/s
                                  lanes: 1
                                  mode: 3.2 gen-1x2
                                chip-ID: 1d6b:0003
                                class-ID: 0900
                              Hub-5: 5-0:1
                                info: hi-speed hub with single TT
                                ports: 4
                                rev: 2.0
                                  speed: 480 Mb/s
                                chip-ID: 1d6b:0002
                                class-ID: 0900
                                Device-1: 5-4:3
                                  info: American Power Conversion Uninterruptible Supply
                                  type: HID
                                  driver: hid-generic,usbhid
                                  interfaces: 1
                                  rev: 1.1
                                    speed: 1.5 Mb/s
                                  power: 2mA
                                  chip-ID: 051d:0002
                                  class-ID: 0300
                                  serial: <filter>
                              Hub-6: 6-0:1
                                info: super-speed hub
                                ports: 4
                                rev: 3.0
                                  speed: 5 Gb/s
                                  lanes: 1
                                  mode: 3.2 gen-1x1
                                chip-ID: 1d6b:0003
                                class-ID: 0900
                              Hub-7: 6-1:2
                                info: VIA Labs USB3.0 Hub
                                ports: 4
                                rev: 3.2
                                  speed: 5 Gb/s
                                  lanes: 1
                                  mode: 3.2 gen-1x1
                                chip-ID: 2109:0817
                                class-ID: 0900
                              Hub-8: 6-1.3:3
                                info: VIA Labs USB3.0 Hub
                                ports: 4
                                rev: 3.2
                                  speed: 5 Gb/s
                                  lanes: 1
                                  mode: 3.2 gen-1x1
                                chip-ID: 2109:0817
                                class-ID: 0900
                            #104848
                            Moderator
                            Brian Masinick
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                              h2, you may be old enough to remember RS232 (and RS232C I think it may have been)? RS232 was a 25 pin serial bus standard, then there was a 9 pin variation because the 25 pins were rarely used in applications; I’d go so far as to say that even the 9 pins were not always used, which is one reason we went to USB, then we have the wide and narrow variations, and the one I PREFER, when available, USB C, which plugs in whichever way you happen to plug it in, as long as the plug is inserted completely into the right location!

                              I also find it interesting that things like Ethernet and a few of the other high speed interfaces are rapidly falling off; I’ve not even been able to find a live Ethernet port within several miles of where I am, though fortunately some form of 5G or a variation of it is fairly prevalent and mostly stable at this point in time.

                              As far as USB 2 and USB 3, and whatever else, I’ll have to look that up to know precisely what it is, though generally speaking, I understand that they are all serial bus interfaces with a variety of connectors and specific locations where whatever active signals “remain” are placed to the various “pins” (or little “slices”) whatever you want to call what’s in the connectors these days!

                              If you are referring to the USB 2.0 interface versus the USB 3.0 interface, yeah – “USB 2.0 was released in the year 2000, which is also referred to as Hi-Speed USB.”
                              “USB 3.0 was released in November 2008, which is the third major version of the Universal Serial Bus standard for interfacing computers and electronic devices.
                              … the major one is the data transfer rate. The data transfer rate of USB 3.0 is up to 5 Gbit/s, which is about 10 times faster than the USB 2.0 standard.”

                              “Actually, it is not difficult to tell their physical difference. The USB 2.0 Connectors is colored white or black inside, while the USB 3.0 is colored blue inside.

                              So if you want to find out whether the USB port on your computer or USB flash drive is 2.0 or 3.0, you can distinguish them by the USB port color inside.”

                              “Another physical difference between USB 2.0 and USB 3.0 is the number of wire connections.

                              USB 2.0 has a total of 4 connector wires, supporting half-duplex communication. As for USB 3.0, it has a total of 9 connector wires. With these five additional wires, it increases the bandwidth of USB 3.0 by permitting two-way communications simultaneously.”

                              There we have it: RS232 was 25 pin, then we went down to 9 pin, then USB went to 4 pin, but we eventually found a reason – SPEED – to add back 5 more pins to get more serial bus speed, now that we can actually take advantage of it (and more) in our electrical components!

                              --
                              Brian Masinick

                              #104849
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                              Brian Masinick
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                                Looking forward to seeing the new stuff in action; I use USB C 4′ cables to do so-called “fast charging” with my Android stuff.
                                As far as networking, it’s been 100% wireless because at least near me I can’t find any kind of wired connection; even our TV stuff uses 5G WiFi for the network interface and a single HDMI plug to connect between Hi-Def equipment components. Those “cables” are pretty short too, I think I may have a 6″ or 1′ HDMI between a BluRay and cable company interface.

                                Regarding that, I still can’t believe those buffoons! Despite that virtually everything is 100% digital, you still have to “fast forward” or fast reverse through recorded programs and there isn’t any easy way to punch in 75% forward, or some other value; ridiculous in my opinion. Too bad I’m retired; I’d revamp every interface in some of these devices and make a simple mechanism to navigate too!

                                --
                                Brian Masinick

                                #104850
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                                  https://tripplite.eaton.com/products/usb-connectivity-types-standards

                                  that has a diagram of the wires of the usb c connector, and explains it nicely.

                                  This one has very nice color coded connector diagrams:
                                  https://fabiensanglard.net/usbcheat/index.html which is maybe the fastest / easiest way to understand it.

                                  A few takeaways: only usb c connector can be used for usb 3.2 and 4, they need those 4 lane configurations.

                                  USB 3.x and 4 are easiest to understand if you know how PCIe works, which is similar, 1 lane is 2 channels, one up, one down, though USB 4 120Gbps uses 3 lanes, but seems to use 2 of them as transmit dedicated at 60 Gbps each, and 2 dedicated as receive, thus the ‘asynchronous’ name.

                                  This is my release notes:

                                  These are the known possible combinations:
                                  rev: 3.0 mode: 3.2 gen-1×1 lanes: 1 speed: 5 Gbps
                                  rev: 3.0 mode: 3.2 gen-1×2 lanes: 2 speed: 10 Gbps
                                  rev: 3.1 mode: 3.2 gen-1×1 lanes: 1 speed: 5 Gbps
                                  rev: 3.1 mode: 3.2 gen-1×2 lanes: 2 speed: 10 Gbps
                                  rev: 3.2 mode: 3.2 gen-1×1 lanes: 1 speed: 5 Gbps [wrong rev: seen this case]
                                  rev: 3.2 mode: 3.2 gen-1×2 lanes: 2 speed: 10 Gbps [wrong rev: possible case]
                                  rev: 3.2 mode: 3.2 gen-2×1 lanes: 1 speed: 10 Gbps
                                  rev: 3.2 mode: 3.2 gen-2×2 lanes: 2 speed: 20 Gbps
                                  rev: 4 mode: v1 gen-2×1 lanes; 1 speed: 10 Gbps
                                  rev: 4 mode: v1 gen-2×2 lanes: 2 speed: 20 Gbps
                                  rev: 4 mode: v1 gen-3×1 lanes: 1 speed: 20 Gbps
                                  rev: 4 mode: v2 gen-3×2 lanes: 2 speed: 40 Gbps
                                  rev: 4 mode: v2 gen-4×1 lanes: 1 speed: 40 Gbps
                                  rev: 4 mode: v2 gen-4×2 lanes: 2 speed: 80 Gbps
                                  rev: 4 mode: v2 gen-4×3-asymmetric lanes: 3 up, 1 down speed:120 Gbps

                                  USB4 v2 has figured out how to go from 5 Gbps per channel to 40.

                                  I still need to coinfirm some of this stuff before I release.

                                  • This reply was modified 3 weeks, 4 days ago by h2.
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