The USB Type-C Cable and Connector Specification defines the wire
connections for the USB Type-C to USB 2.0 Standard-A cable assembly
(Release 2.2, Chapter 3.5.2).
The Notes says that Pin A5 (CC) of the USB Type-C plug shall be connected
to Vbus through a resister Rp.
However, there is a large amount of such double Rp connected to Vbus
non-standard cables which produced by UGREEN circulating on the market, and
it can affects the normal operations of the state machine easily,
especially to CC1 and CC2 be pulled up at the same time.
In fact, we can regard those cables as sink to avoid abnormal state.
Message as follow:
[ 58.900212] VBUS on
[ 59.265433] CC1: 0 -> 3, CC2: 0 -> 3 [state TOGGLING, polarity 0, connected]
[ 62.623308] CC1: 3 -> 0, CC2: 3 -> 0 [state TOGGLING, polarity 0, disconnected]
[ 62.625006] VBUS off
[ 62.625012] VBUS VSAFE0V
Signed-off-by: Michael Wu <michael@allwinnertech.com>
Reviewed-by: Guenter Roeck <linux@roeck-us.net>
Reviewed-by: Heikki Krogerus <heikki.krogerus@linux.intel.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230920063030.66312-1-michael@allwinnertech.com
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
((cc) == TYPEC_CC_RP_DEF || (cc) == TYPEC_CC_RP_1_5 || \
(cc) == TYPEC_CC_RP_3_0)
+/* As long as cc is pulled up, we can consider it as sink. */
#define tcpm_port_is_sink(port) \
- ((tcpm_cc_is_sink((port)->cc1) && !tcpm_cc_is_sink((port)->cc2)) || \
- (tcpm_cc_is_sink((port)->cc2) && !tcpm_cc_is_sink((port)->cc1)))
+ (tcpm_cc_is_sink((port)->cc1) || tcpm_cc_is_sink((port)->cc2))
#define tcpm_cc_is_source(cc) ((cc) == TYPEC_CC_RD)
#define tcpm_cc_is_audio(cc) ((cc) == TYPEC_CC_RA)