

- USB XHCI COMPLIANT HOST CONTROLLER TOSHIBA SERIAL
- USB XHCI COMPLIANT HOST CONTROLLER TOSHIBA DRIVERS
This util was useful enough to me that I wish it had been installed by default on the Surface and plugged into the built-in Windows Troubleshooting feature. It reset my USB Controller and put in the right driver and I'm back in business.
USB XHCI COMPLIANT HOST CONTROLLER TOSHIBA DRIVERS
It checks hardware and software versions and found a number of little drivers things wrong.and fixed them. There are a number of utilities you can check out but the most useful is the Surface Diagnostic Toolkit. In fact, these were updated just yesterday! Tried run troubleshooting in Win10, and then troubleshooting Hardware, it clearly shows Reinstall device driver, There is a problem with the driver for USB xHCI Compliant Host Controller. Clicked Update Driver, it just says the driver software is up to date. I had to do everything with the touchscreen.Īfter a little poking around on Microsoft Support websites, a friend turned me onto the " Surface Tools for IT." These are the tools that IT Departments use when they are rolling out a bunch of Surfaces to an organization and they are regularly updated. Tried to Uninstall the Driver and then re-boot the laptop, did not work. I tried disabling the USB 3.

Because the main USB device was dead that meant my Surface Type Keyboard didn't work, my mouse didn't work, nothing. Description: USB xHCI Compliant Host Controller Manufacturer: Generic USB xHCI Host Controller My mouse, keyboard, and printer are all plugged into USB 2.0 ports. I tried the usual stuff like Uninstalling the Device and rebooting, hoping Windows would heal it but it didn't work. I just wanted the Surface back the way it was, working, with the standard drivers. I know it's an Intel USB 3.0 xHCI Host Controller but I didn't want to go installing random Intel Drivers. That means everything USB didn't work since everything USB hangs off that root device node.
USB XHCI COMPLIANT HOST CONTROLLER TOSHIBA SERIAL
That "banged out" device in my Device Manager is the root Universal Serial Bus (USB) Controller for the Surface. However, yesterday while installing a 3rd party USB device something got goofed around with the drivers and I ended up in this state. It's worked great for years and I haven't had any issues with it. I've got a personal Surface Pro 3 that I like very much.
