I tried adapting the example to make Windows File Explorer display a hierarchical folder structure in Windows 11, but I have not been able to achieve it.
My question is: is this possible using USBX? I strongly believe it should be.
It would be greatly appreciated if someone could point me to any documentation or examples showing how to implement this properly. I have already reviewed the Media Transfer Protocol v1.1 specification, the PIMA 15740:2000 standard (Photographic and Imaging Manufacturers Association) and the eclipse usbx documentation but I could not find anything useful regarding this specific issue.
I have also created a post in the ST Community describing the problem in more detail. If anyone could take a look, I would really appreciate it:
https://community.st.com/t5/stm32-mcus-embedded-software/stm32-azure-rtos-usbx-mtp-hierarchical-folder-structure-not/m-p/896408#M75244
I tried adapting the example to make Windows File Explorer display a hierarchical folder structure in Windows 11, but I have not been able to achieve it.
My question is: is this possible using USBX? I strongly believe it should be.
It would be greatly appreciated if someone could point me to any documentation or examples showing how to implement this properly. I have already reviewed the Media Transfer Protocol v1.1 specification, the PIMA 15740:2000 standard (Photographic and Imaging Manufacturers Association) and the eclipse usbx documentation but I could not find anything useful regarding this specific issue.
I have also created a post in the ST Community describing the problem in more detail. If anyone could take a look, I would really appreciate it:
https://community.st.com/t5/stm32-mcus-embedded-software/stm32-azure-rtos-usbx-mtp-hierarchical-folder-structure-not/m-p/896408#M75244