For certain types of devices, including USB devices, the I/O Kit makes it possible to forgo a kernel driver and implement the driver completely in user space. For the end user, this provides a much better experience.
Not all USB devices are suitable for a user-space driver. A device that needs to be used by the system itself, such as a system-wide audio device or a USB storage device, must be implemented in the kernel.
The I/O Kit provides a user-space library known as IOUSBLib that an application uses to interact with a USB device. The IOUSBLib provides a user- space equivalent to the IOUSBDevice and IOUSBInterface kernel classes, known as IOUSBDeviceInterface and IOUSBInterfaceInterface, respectively.
An application can watch for the ...
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