Many MCC products – including most USB, Ethernet™, Bluetooth®, and PCI hardware – are supported under professional, open-source third-party Linux® drivers.
Hello, The USB-3105 is an HID device. If the LED is on, then it properly enumerated on the USB bus. You can test it on a Windows PC with InstaCal. If it tests OK, then you will need to contact the 3rd party developer of the Linux driver for advice.
Making the assumption that you will be running on a Linux operating system. You should have no problem running our Linux drivers on an ARM64 processor.
Yes, the Linux drivers do support the minilab-1008. However, because of recent updates to our Linux support the miniLAB-1008 was overlooked and not updated. I notified the developer and he has completed the update for the minilab-1008 and added the test script to the most recent Linux driver support of MCCLIBUSB.1.17.tgz
No Linux driver is currently expected/planned for the USB-230 series. None of the other existing Linux drivers are adaptable to the USB-230 series.
Yes. Both the USB-1608FS-Plus and the USB-ERB08 are currently supported under Linux. You can review a list of supported MC hardware
The USB-2600 and USB-2500 Series differ greatly in their internal architecture, and therefore the 3rd party USB-2600 Series Linux driver can not by migrated to the USB-2500 Series. No Linux driver is known to exist for the USB-2500 Series.
Thank you for bringing that to our attention. Yes, the current Linux driver does in fact support both the USB-2416 and our USB-2416-4AO. I will have the USB-2416-4AO added to our list of supported hardware.
Due to its complex architecture the USB-2537 or for that matter any of the USB-2500 Series do not have Linux drivers available. However, we do have a similar board that may work for your application. The USB-2637 has many of the features of the USB-2537 and has Linux drivers available for download.
Sorry, but at this time there are no plans to adopt Linux support for our USB-5100 Series devices. Please contact Measurement Computing to discuss alternative products with Linux support.
Regrettably, no new products will be added to our DAQFlex library. Support for existing hardware will continue. For an easier out-of-the-box Linux experience, we recommend using the MCC 3rd party drivers. Currently, the USB-230-OEM series is not supported by our Linux drivers. The hardware architecture of the USB-230-OEM series does not lend itself easily to Linux development. For that reason we have chosen to hold off with Linux development. For a low cost 16 bit DAQ device with Linux support, I would recommend one of our USB-1608G series products.
The USB-2600 and USB-2500 Series differ greatly in their internal architecture, and therefore the 3rd party USB-2600 Series Linux driver will not by migrate-able to the USB-2500 Series. No Linux driver is known to exist for the USB-2500 Series.
At this time, there are no plans to add LINUX support to the USB-QUAD08. If you would like to discuss this further or investigate alternative options, please feel free to give us a call.
Support for the USB-2600 Series is now available.
The USB-1608G and USB-1608GX differ only in the maximum A/D rate. So the same driver code/examples can be used. There are three avenues to using the USB-1608G series in Linux. MCC provides technical support only on the first of these three: 1) The DAQFlex DLL can be used with C#/VB.NET code via the MONO layer. 2) For C programmers, instead of using the DOT.NET DLL, you can obtain a 3rd party driver from our website that is supported by that 3rd party. 3) The third option is the most complex, which is to create your own driver using the open source documentation from MCC, along with an example posted on our Knowledgebase demonstrating using LIBUSB from C.