Provided by:
usbmgr_1.0.0-4_i386 
NAME
usbmgr.conf - Config file for usbmgr
DESCRIPTION
usbmgr.conf is the main configuration file for usbmgr daemon, it has
the proper entries to support a wide list of USB devices and the
required usb kernel module to make them work.
Standard usbmgr distribution already has a list of well known devices
and their proper entries, so you don’t need to edit it to have it
working.
In case you want or need to add a new device, you can do it with the
help of dump_usbdev, it aids you in writing usbmgr.conf. After usbmgr
has been started, running dump_usbdev will dump infomation about all
attached devices in a format suitable for usbmgr.conf.
If you connect USB devices to your USB HUB, you’ll see a line like the
following.
-------------------------------------------------------------
class 0x9 subclass 0x0 protocol 0x0 module <module_name>
-------------------------------------------------------------
"class 0x9" means USB HUB. If no USB devices are connected, only the
root HUB will appear. Modifying "<module_name>" would make the
configuration for this device(HUB) complete. In the case of a HUB, you
should change "module_name" to "none" because the HUB driver is
included in usbcore.
After a USB mouse has been connected to the HUB, running dump_usbdev
will give you the following.
-------------------------------------------------------------
class 0x9 subclass 0x0 protocol 0x0 module <module_name>
vendor 0x56e product 0x4 module <module_name>
-------------------------------------------------------------
The 2nd line is new. This is the infomation about the USB mouse. The
USB mouse requires the "hid" and "mousedev" drivers. So,
"<module_name>" should be changed to "hid , mousedev". So the complete
usbmgr.conf entry would look like this:
-------------------------------------------------------------
class 0x9 subclass 0x0 protocol 0x0 module none
vendor 0x56e product 0x4 module hid , mousedev
-------------------------------------------------------------
You should copy this into /etc/usbmgr/usbmgr.conf, and then run
update_usbdb to create the configuration data.
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
None.
AUTHOR
Shuu Yamaguchi <shuu@wondernetworkresources.com>
This manual page was written by Rudy Godoy <rudy@kernel-panik.org>, for
the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others).
SEE ALSO
dump_usbdev(8), update_usbdb(8), usbmgr(5)