The hub repeater in a USB 1.x hub handles low- and full-speed traffic. A USB 2.0 hub also uses this type of repeater when its upstream port connects to a full-speed bus. In this case, the USB 2.0 hub doesn’t send or receive high-speed traffic but instead functions identically to a USB 1.x hub.
A low- and full-speed repeater re-transmits all low- and full-speed packets received from the host, including data that has passed through one or more additional hubs, to all enabled, full-speed, downstream ports. Enabled ports include all ports with attached devices that are ready to receive communications from the hub. Devices with ports that aren’t enabled include devices that the host controller has stopped communicating with due to errors or other problems, devices in the Suspend state, and devices that aren’t yet ready to communicate because they have just been attached or are in the process of exiting the Suspend state.
The hub repeater doesn’t translate, examine the contents of, or process the traffic to or from full-speed ports. The repeater just regenerates the edges of the signal transitions and passes the traffic on.
testingcorsairTags: Communications, controller, repeater, upset stomach, USB




