Connecting usb devices, Powering usb devices – Smart Technologies Smart Board 800 Series User Manual

Page 22

Advertising
background image

Connecting USB devices

USB attachment points are provided by a special class of USB device known as a hub. The

additional attachment points provided by a hub are called ports.

A host includes an embedded hub called the root hub that can provide one or more attachment

points. Hosts may also have other non-root internal hubs to provide further expansion capability.

These internal non-root hubs are tier 2 devices, and limit the number of external hubs that you can use

in a path.

Powering USB devices

A USB host can supply power for USB devices that are directly connected. USB devices that rely on

power from the cable are called bus-powered devices.

USB devices that have their own externally connected power supplies are called self-powered

devices.

When a bus-powered device connects to the host’s USB interface, the host allocates power in

increments called unit loads. A unit load is defined to be 100 mA. A device may be either a low-power

device using one unit load or a high power device, consuming up to five unit loads. When connecting,

all devices default to low-power. If required by the device, the host’s software controls the transition

to high-power by ensuring that adequate power is available. Hosts that are externally powered must

be able to supply up to five unit loads ( 500 mA) of power but may supply significantly more. Battery

powered hosts may supply from one to five unit loads but may limit the power to conserve battery

power.

A P P E N D I X

A

USB 2.0 specification primer

18

Advertising