Mauro Carvalho Chehab | 8e080c2 | 2009-09-13 22:16:04 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | <title>Input/Output</title> |
| 2 | |
| 3 | <para>The V4L2 API defines several different methods to read from or |
| 4 | write to a device. All drivers exchanging data with applications must |
| 5 | support at least one of them.</para> |
| 6 | |
| 7 | <para>The classic I/O method using the <function>read()</function> |
| 8 | and <function>write()</function> function is automatically selected |
| 9 | after opening a V4L2 device. When the driver does not support this |
| 10 | method attempts to read or write will fail at any time.</para> |
| 11 | |
| 12 | <para>Other methods must be negotiated. To select the streaming I/O |
| 13 | method with memory mapped or user buffers applications call the |
| 14 | &VIDIOC-REQBUFS; ioctl. The asynchronous I/O method is not defined |
| 15 | yet.</para> |
| 16 | |
| 17 | <para>Video overlay can be considered another I/O method, although |
| 18 | the application does not directly receive the image data. It is |
| 19 | selected by initiating video overlay with the &VIDIOC-S-FMT; ioctl. |
| 20 | For more information see <xref linkend="overlay" />.</para> |
| 21 | |
| 22 | <para>Generally exactly one I/O method, including overlay, is |
| 23 | associated with each file descriptor. The only exceptions are |
| 24 | applications not exchanging data with a driver ("panel applications", |
| 25 | see <xref linkend="open" />) and drivers permitting simultaneous video capturing |
| 26 | and overlay using the same file descriptor, for compatibility with V4L |
| 27 | and earlier versions of V4L2.</para> |
| 28 | |
| 29 | <para><constant>VIDIOC_S_FMT</constant> and |
| 30 | <constant>VIDIOC_REQBUFS</constant> would permit this to some degree, |
| 31 | but for simplicity drivers need not support switching the I/O method |
| 32 | (after first switching away from read/write) other than by closing |
| 33 | and reopening the device.</para> |
| 34 | |
| 35 | <para>The following sections describe the various I/O methods in |
| 36 | more detail.</para> |
| 37 | |
| 38 | <section id="rw"> |
| 39 | <title>Read/Write</title> |
| 40 | |
| 41 | <para>Input and output devices support the |
| 42 | <function>read()</function> and <function>write()</function> function, |
| 43 | respectively, when the <constant>V4L2_CAP_READWRITE</constant> flag in |
| 44 | the <structfield>capabilities</structfield> field of &v4l2-capability; |
| 45 | returned by the &VIDIOC-QUERYCAP; ioctl is set.</para> |
| 46 | |
| 47 | <para>Drivers may need the CPU to copy the data, but they may also |
| 48 | support DMA to or from user memory, so this I/O method is not |
| 49 | necessarily less efficient than other methods merely exchanging buffer |
| 50 | pointers. It is considered inferior though because no meta-information |
| 51 | like frame counters or timestamps are passed. This information is |
| 52 | necessary to recognize frame dropping and to synchronize with other |
| 53 | data streams. However this is also the simplest I/O method, requiring |
| 54 | little or no setup to exchange data. It permits command line stunts |
| 55 | like this (the <application>vidctrl</application> tool is |
| 56 | fictitious):</para> |
| 57 | |
| 58 | <informalexample> |
| 59 | <screen> |
| 60 | > vidctrl /dev/video --input=0 --format=YUYV --size=352x288 |
| 61 | > dd if=/dev/video of=myimage.422 bs=202752 count=1 |
| 62 | </screen> |
| 63 | </informalexample> |
| 64 | |
| 65 | <para>To read from the device applications use the |
| 66 | &func-read; function, to write the &func-write; function. |
| 67 | Drivers must implement one I/O method if they |
| 68 | exchange data with applications, but it need not be this.<footnote> |
| 69 | <para>It would be desirable if applications could depend on |
| 70 | drivers supporting all I/O interfaces, but as much as the complex |
| 71 | memory mapping I/O can be inadequate for some devices we have no |
| 72 | reason to require this interface, which is most useful for simple |
| 73 | applications capturing still images.</para> |
| 74 | </footnote> When reading or writing is supported, the driver |
| 75 | must also support the &func-select; and &func-poll; |
| 76 | function.<footnote> |
| 77 | <para>At the driver level <function>select()</function> and |
| 78 | <function>poll()</function> are the same, and |
| 79 | <function>select()</function> is too important to be optional.</para> |
| 80 | </footnote></para> |
| 81 | </section> |
| 82 | |
| 83 | <section id="mmap"> |
| 84 | <title>Streaming I/O (Memory Mapping)</title> |
| 85 | |
| 86 | <para>Input and output devices support this I/O method when the |
| 87 | <constant>V4L2_CAP_STREAMING</constant> flag in the |
| 88 | <structfield>capabilities</structfield> field of &v4l2-capability; |
| 89 | returned by the &VIDIOC-QUERYCAP; ioctl is set. There are two |
| 90 | streaming methods, to determine if the memory mapping flavor is |
| 91 | supported applications must call the &VIDIOC-REQBUFS; ioctl.</para> |
| 92 | |
| 93 | <para>Streaming is an I/O method where only pointers to buffers |
| 94 | are exchanged between application and driver, the data itself is not |
| 95 | copied. Memory mapping is primarily intended to map buffers in device |
| 96 | memory into the application's address space. Device memory can be for |
| 97 | example the video memory on a graphics card with a video capture |
| 98 | add-on. However, being the most efficient I/O method available for a |
| 99 | long time, many other drivers support streaming as well, allocating |
| 100 | buffers in DMA-able main memory.</para> |
| 101 | |
| 102 | <para>A driver can support many sets of buffers. Each set is |
| 103 | identified by a unique buffer type value. The sets are independent and |
| 104 | each set can hold a different type of data. To access different sets |
| 105 | at the same time different file descriptors must be used.<footnote> |
| 106 | <para>One could use one file descriptor and set the buffer |
| 107 | type field accordingly when calling &VIDIOC-QBUF; etc., but it makes |
| 108 | the <function>select()</function> function ambiguous. We also like the |
| 109 | clean approach of one file descriptor per logical stream. Video |
| 110 | overlay for example is also a logical stream, although the CPU is not |
| 111 | needed for continuous operation.</para> |
| 112 | </footnote></para> |
| 113 | |
| 114 | <para>To allocate device buffers applications call the |
| 115 | &VIDIOC-REQBUFS; ioctl with the desired number of buffers and buffer |
| 116 | type, for example <constant>V4L2_BUF_TYPE_VIDEO_CAPTURE</constant>. |
| 117 | This ioctl can also be used to change the number of buffers or to free |
| 118 | the allocated memory, provided none of the buffers are still |
| 119 | mapped.</para> |
| 120 | |
| 121 | <para>Before applications can access the buffers they must map |
| 122 | them into their address space with the &func-mmap; function. The |
| 123 | location of the buffers in device memory can be determined with the |
Pawel Osciak | 53b5d57 | 2011-01-07 01:41:33 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 124 | &VIDIOC-QUERYBUF; ioctl. In the single-planar API case, the |
| 125 | <structfield>m.offset</structfield> and <structfield>length</structfield> |
| 126 | returned in a &v4l2-buffer; are passed as sixth and second parameter to the |
| 127 | <function>mmap()</function> function. When using the multi-planar API, |
| 128 | struct &v4l2-buffer; contains an array of &v4l2-plane; structures, each |
| 129 | containing its own <structfield>m.offset</structfield> and |
| 130 | <structfield>length</structfield>. When using the multi-planar API, every |
| 131 | plane of every buffer has to be mapped separately, so the number of |
| 132 | calls to &func-mmap; should be equal to number of buffers times number of |
| 133 | planes in each buffer. The offset and length values must not be modified. |
| 134 | Remember, the buffers are allocated in physical memory, as opposed to virtual |
| 135 | memory, which can be swapped out to disk. Applications should free the buffers |
| 136 | as soon as possible with the &func-munmap; function.</para> |
Mauro Carvalho Chehab | 8e080c2 | 2009-09-13 22:16:04 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 137 | |
| 138 | <example> |
Pawel Osciak | 53b5d57 | 2011-01-07 01:41:33 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 139 | <title>Mapping buffers in the single-planar API</title> |
Mauro Carvalho Chehab | 8e080c2 | 2009-09-13 22:16:04 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 140 | <programlisting> |
| 141 | &v4l2-requestbuffers; reqbuf; |
| 142 | struct { |
| 143 | void *start; |
| 144 | size_t length; |
| 145 | } *buffers; |
| 146 | unsigned int i; |
| 147 | |
Pawel Osciak | c4c0a78 | 2011-01-12 05:57:26 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 148 | memset(&reqbuf, 0, sizeof(reqbuf)); |
Mauro Carvalho Chehab | 8e080c2 | 2009-09-13 22:16:04 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 149 | reqbuf.type = V4L2_BUF_TYPE_VIDEO_CAPTURE; |
| 150 | reqbuf.memory = V4L2_MEMORY_MMAP; |
| 151 | reqbuf.count = 20; |
| 152 | |
| 153 | if (-1 == ioctl (fd, &VIDIOC-REQBUFS;, &reqbuf)) { |
| 154 | if (errno == EINVAL) |
Pawel Osciak | c4c0a78 | 2011-01-12 05:57:26 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 155 | printf("Video capturing or mmap-streaming is not supported\n"); |
Mauro Carvalho Chehab | 8e080c2 | 2009-09-13 22:16:04 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 156 | else |
Pawel Osciak | c4c0a78 | 2011-01-12 05:57:26 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 157 | perror("VIDIOC_REQBUFS"); |
Mauro Carvalho Chehab | 8e080c2 | 2009-09-13 22:16:04 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 158 | |
Pawel Osciak | c4c0a78 | 2011-01-12 05:57:26 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 159 | exit(EXIT_FAILURE); |
Mauro Carvalho Chehab | 8e080c2 | 2009-09-13 22:16:04 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 160 | } |
| 161 | |
| 162 | /* We want at least five buffers. */ |
| 163 | |
| 164 | if (reqbuf.count < 5) { |
| 165 | /* You may need to free the buffers here. */ |
Pawel Osciak | c4c0a78 | 2011-01-12 05:57:26 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 166 | printf("Not enough buffer memory\n"); |
| 167 | exit(EXIT_FAILURE); |
Mauro Carvalho Chehab | 8e080c2 | 2009-09-13 22:16:04 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 168 | } |
| 169 | |
Pawel Osciak | c4c0a78 | 2011-01-12 05:57:26 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 170 | buffers = calloc(reqbuf.count, sizeof(*buffers)); |
| 171 | assert(buffers != NULL); |
Mauro Carvalho Chehab | 8e080c2 | 2009-09-13 22:16:04 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 172 | |
| 173 | for (i = 0; i < reqbuf.count; i++) { |
| 174 | &v4l2-buffer; buffer; |
| 175 | |
Pawel Osciak | c4c0a78 | 2011-01-12 05:57:26 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 176 | memset(&buffer, 0, sizeof(buffer)); |
Mauro Carvalho Chehab | 8e080c2 | 2009-09-13 22:16:04 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 177 | buffer.type = reqbuf.type; |
| 178 | buffer.memory = V4L2_MEMORY_MMAP; |
| 179 | buffer.index = i; |
| 180 | |
| 181 | if (-1 == ioctl (fd, &VIDIOC-QUERYBUF;, &buffer)) { |
Pawel Osciak | c4c0a78 | 2011-01-12 05:57:26 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 182 | perror("VIDIOC_QUERYBUF"); |
| 183 | exit(EXIT_FAILURE); |
Mauro Carvalho Chehab | 8e080c2 | 2009-09-13 22:16:04 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 184 | } |
| 185 | |
| 186 | buffers[i].length = buffer.length; /* remember for munmap() */ |
| 187 | |
Pawel Osciak | c4c0a78 | 2011-01-12 05:57:26 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 188 | buffers[i].start = mmap(NULL, buffer.length, |
| 189 | PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE, /* recommended */ |
| 190 | MAP_SHARED, /* recommended */ |
| 191 | fd, buffer.m.offset); |
Mauro Carvalho Chehab | 8e080c2 | 2009-09-13 22:16:04 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 192 | |
| 193 | if (MAP_FAILED == buffers[i].start) { |
| 194 | /* If you do not exit here you should unmap() and free() |
| 195 | the buffers mapped so far. */ |
Pawel Osciak | c4c0a78 | 2011-01-12 05:57:26 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 196 | perror("mmap"); |
| 197 | exit(EXIT_FAILURE); |
Mauro Carvalho Chehab | 8e080c2 | 2009-09-13 22:16:04 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 198 | } |
| 199 | } |
| 200 | |
| 201 | /* Cleanup. */ |
| 202 | |
| 203 | for (i = 0; i < reqbuf.count; i++) |
Pawel Osciak | c4c0a78 | 2011-01-12 05:57:26 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 204 | munmap(buffers[i].start, buffers[i].length); |
Mauro Carvalho Chehab | 8e080c2 | 2009-09-13 22:16:04 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 205 | </programlisting> |
| 206 | </example> |
| 207 | |
Pawel Osciak | 53b5d57 | 2011-01-07 01:41:33 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 208 | <example> |
| 209 | <title>Mapping buffers in the multi-planar API</title> |
| 210 | <programlisting> |
| 211 | &v4l2-requestbuffers; reqbuf; |
| 212 | /* Our current format uses 3 planes per buffer */ |
| 213 | #define FMT_NUM_PLANES = 3; |
| 214 | |
| 215 | struct { |
| 216 | void *start[FMT_NUM_PLANES]; |
| 217 | size_t length[FMT_NUM_PLANES]; |
| 218 | } *buffers; |
| 219 | unsigned int i, j; |
| 220 | |
| 221 | memset(&reqbuf, 0, sizeof(reqbuf)); |
| 222 | reqbuf.type = V4L2_BUF_TYPE_VIDEO_CAPTURE_MPLANE; |
| 223 | reqbuf.memory = V4L2_MEMORY_MMAP; |
| 224 | reqbuf.count = 20; |
| 225 | |
| 226 | if (ioctl(fd, &VIDIOC-REQBUFS;, &reqbuf) < 0) { |
| 227 | if (errno == EINVAL) |
| 228 | printf("Video capturing or mmap-streaming is not supported\n"); |
| 229 | else |
| 230 | perror("VIDIOC_REQBUFS"); |
| 231 | |
| 232 | exit(EXIT_FAILURE); |
| 233 | } |
| 234 | |
| 235 | /* We want at least five buffers. */ |
| 236 | |
| 237 | if (reqbuf.count < 5) { |
| 238 | /* You may need to free the buffers here. */ |
| 239 | printf("Not enough buffer memory\n"); |
| 240 | exit(EXIT_FAILURE); |
| 241 | } |
| 242 | |
| 243 | buffers = calloc(reqbuf.count, sizeof(*buffers)); |
| 244 | assert(buffers != NULL); |
| 245 | |
| 246 | for (i = 0; i < reqbuf.count; i++) { |
| 247 | &v4l2-buffer; buffer; |
| 248 | &v4l2-plane; planes[FMT_NUM_PLANES]; |
| 249 | |
| 250 | memset(&buffer, 0, sizeof(buffer)); |
| 251 | buffer.type = reqbuf.type; |
| 252 | buffer.memory = V4L2_MEMORY_MMAP; |
| 253 | buffer.index = i; |
| 254 | /* length in struct v4l2_buffer in multi-planar API stores the size |
| 255 | * of planes array. */ |
| 256 | buffer.length = FMT_NUM_PLANES; |
| 257 | buffer.m.planes = planes; |
| 258 | |
| 259 | if (ioctl(fd, &VIDIOC-QUERYBUF;, &buffer) < 0) { |
| 260 | perror("VIDIOC_QUERYBUF"); |
| 261 | exit(EXIT_FAILURE); |
| 262 | } |
| 263 | |
| 264 | /* Every plane has to be mapped separately */ |
| 265 | for (j = 0; j < FMT_NUM_PLANES; j++) { |
| 266 | buffers[i].length[j] = buffer.m.planes[j].length; /* remember for munmap() */ |
| 267 | |
| 268 | buffers[i].start[j] = mmap(NULL, buffer.m.planes[j].length, |
| 269 | PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE, /* recommended */ |
| 270 | MAP_SHARED, /* recommended */ |
| 271 | fd, buffer.m.planes[j].m.offset); |
| 272 | |
| 273 | if (MAP_FAILED == buffers[i].start[j]) { |
| 274 | /* If you do not exit here you should unmap() and free() |
| 275 | the buffers and planes mapped so far. */ |
| 276 | perror("mmap"); |
| 277 | exit(EXIT_FAILURE); |
| 278 | } |
| 279 | } |
| 280 | } |
| 281 | |
| 282 | /* Cleanup. */ |
| 283 | |
| 284 | for (i = 0; i < reqbuf.count; i++) |
| 285 | for (j = 0; j < FMT_NUM_PLANES; j++) |
| 286 | munmap(buffers[i].start[j], buffers[i].length[j]); |
| 287 | </programlisting> |
| 288 | </example> |
| 289 | |
Mauro Carvalho Chehab | 8e080c2 | 2009-09-13 22:16:04 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 290 | <para>Conceptually streaming drivers maintain two buffer queues, an incoming |
| 291 | and an outgoing queue. They separate the synchronous capture or output |
| 292 | operation locked to a video clock from the application which is |
| 293 | subject to random disk or network delays and preemption by |
| 294 | other processes, thereby reducing the probability of data loss. |
| 295 | The queues are organized as FIFOs, buffers will be |
| 296 | output in the order enqueued in the incoming FIFO, and were |
| 297 | captured in the order dequeued from the outgoing FIFO.</para> |
| 298 | |
| 299 | <para>The driver may require a minimum number of buffers enqueued |
| 300 | at all times to function, apart of this no limit exists on the number |
| 301 | of buffers applications can enqueue in advance, or dequeue and |
| 302 | process. They can also enqueue in a different order than buffers have |
| 303 | been dequeued, and the driver can <emphasis>fill</emphasis> enqueued |
| 304 | <emphasis>empty</emphasis> buffers in any order. <footnote> |
| 305 | <para>Random enqueue order permits applications processing |
| 306 | images out of order (such as video codecs) to return buffers earlier, |
| 307 | reducing the probability of data loss. Random fill order allows |
| 308 | drivers to reuse buffers on a LIFO-basis, taking advantage of caches |
| 309 | holding scatter-gather lists and the like.</para> |
| 310 | </footnote> The index number of a buffer (&v4l2-buffer; |
| 311 | <structfield>index</structfield>) plays no role here, it only |
| 312 | identifies the buffer.</para> |
| 313 | |
| 314 | <para>Initially all mapped buffers are in dequeued state, |
| 315 | inaccessible by the driver. For capturing applications it is customary |
| 316 | to first enqueue all mapped buffers, then to start capturing and enter |
| 317 | the read loop. Here the application waits until a filled buffer can be |
| 318 | dequeued, and re-enqueues the buffer when the data is no longer |
| 319 | needed. Output applications fill and enqueue buffers, when enough |
| 320 | buffers are stacked up the output is started with |
| 321 | <constant>VIDIOC_STREAMON</constant>. In the write loop, when |
| 322 | the application runs out of free buffers, it must wait until an empty |
| 323 | buffer can be dequeued and reused.</para> |
| 324 | |
| 325 | <para>To enqueue and dequeue a buffer applications use the |
| 326 | &VIDIOC-QBUF; and &VIDIOC-DQBUF; ioctl. The status of a buffer being |
| 327 | mapped, enqueued, full or empty can be determined at any time using the |
| 328 | &VIDIOC-QUERYBUF; ioctl. Two methods exist to suspend execution of the |
| 329 | application until one or more buffers can be dequeued. By default |
| 330 | <constant>VIDIOC_DQBUF</constant> blocks when no buffer is in the |
| 331 | outgoing queue. When the <constant>O_NONBLOCK</constant> flag was |
| 332 | given to the &func-open; function, <constant>VIDIOC_DQBUF</constant> |
| 333 | returns immediately with an &EAGAIN; when no buffer is available. The |
| 334 | &func-select; or &func-poll; function are always available.</para> |
| 335 | |
| 336 | <para>To start and stop capturing or output applications call the |
| 337 | &VIDIOC-STREAMON; and &VIDIOC-STREAMOFF; ioctl. Note |
| 338 | <constant>VIDIOC_STREAMOFF</constant> removes all buffers from both |
| 339 | queues as a side effect. Since there is no notion of doing anything |
| 340 | "now" on a multitasking system, if an application needs to synchronize |
| 341 | with another event it should examine the &v4l2-buffer; |
| 342 | <structfield>timestamp</structfield> of captured buffers, or set the |
| 343 | field before enqueuing buffers for output.</para> |
| 344 | |
| 345 | <para>Drivers implementing memory mapping I/O must |
| 346 | support the <constant>VIDIOC_REQBUFS</constant>, |
| 347 | <constant>VIDIOC_QUERYBUF</constant>, |
| 348 | <constant>VIDIOC_QBUF</constant>, <constant>VIDIOC_DQBUF</constant>, |
| 349 | <constant>VIDIOC_STREAMON</constant> and |
| 350 | <constant>VIDIOC_STREAMOFF</constant> ioctl, the |
| 351 | <function>mmap()</function>, <function>munmap()</function>, |
| 352 | <function>select()</function> and <function>poll()</function> |
| 353 | function.<footnote> |
| 354 | <para>At the driver level <function>select()</function> and |
| 355 | <function>poll()</function> are the same, and |
| 356 | <function>select()</function> is too important to be optional. The |
| 357 | rest should be evident.</para> |
| 358 | </footnote></para> |
| 359 | |
| 360 | <para>[capture example]</para> |
| 361 | |
| 362 | </section> |
| 363 | |
| 364 | <section id="userp"> |
| 365 | <title>Streaming I/O (User Pointers)</title> |
| 366 | |
| 367 | <para>Input and output devices support this I/O method when the |
| 368 | <constant>V4L2_CAP_STREAMING</constant> flag in the |
| 369 | <structfield>capabilities</structfield> field of &v4l2-capability; |
| 370 | returned by the &VIDIOC-QUERYCAP; ioctl is set. If the particular user |
| 371 | pointer method (not only memory mapping) is supported must be |
| 372 | determined by calling the &VIDIOC-REQBUFS; ioctl.</para> |
| 373 | |
| 374 | <para>This I/O method combines advantages of the read/write and |
Pawel Osciak | 53b5d57 | 2011-01-07 01:41:33 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 375 | memory mapping methods. Buffers (planes) are allocated by the application |
Mauro Carvalho Chehab | 8e080c2 | 2009-09-13 22:16:04 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 376 | itself, and can reside for example in virtual or shared memory. Only |
| 377 | pointers to data are exchanged, these pointers and meta-information |
Pawel Osciak | 53b5d57 | 2011-01-07 01:41:33 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 378 | are passed in &v4l2-buffer; (or in &v4l2-plane; in the multi-planar API case). |
| 379 | The driver must be switched into user pointer I/O mode by calling the |
| 380 | &VIDIOC-REQBUFS; with the desired buffer type. No buffers (planes) are allocated |
| 381 | beforehand, consequently they are not indexed and cannot be queried like mapped |
Mauro Carvalho Chehab | 8e080c2 | 2009-09-13 22:16:04 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 382 | buffers with the <constant>VIDIOC_QUERYBUF</constant> ioctl.</para> |
| 383 | |
| 384 | <example> |
| 385 | <title>Initiating streaming I/O with user pointers</title> |
| 386 | |
| 387 | <programlisting> |
| 388 | &v4l2-requestbuffers; reqbuf; |
| 389 | |
| 390 | memset (&reqbuf, 0, sizeof (reqbuf)); |
| 391 | reqbuf.type = V4L2_BUF_TYPE_VIDEO_CAPTURE; |
| 392 | reqbuf.memory = V4L2_MEMORY_USERPTR; |
| 393 | |
| 394 | if (ioctl (fd, &VIDIOC-REQBUFS;, &reqbuf) == -1) { |
| 395 | if (errno == EINVAL) |
| 396 | printf ("Video capturing or user pointer streaming is not supported\n"); |
| 397 | else |
| 398 | perror ("VIDIOC_REQBUFS"); |
| 399 | |
| 400 | exit (EXIT_FAILURE); |
| 401 | } |
| 402 | </programlisting> |
| 403 | </example> |
| 404 | |
Pawel Osciak | 53b5d57 | 2011-01-07 01:41:33 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 405 | <para>Buffer (plane) addresses and sizes are passed on the fly with the |
Mauro Carvalho Chehab | 8e080c2 | 2009-09-13 22:16:04 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 406 | &VIDIOC-QBUF; ioctl. Although buffers are commonly cycled, |
| 407 | applications can pass different addresses and sizes at each |
| 408 | <constant>VIDIOC_QBUF</constant> call. If required by the hardware the |
| 409 | driver swaps memory pages within physical memory to create a |
| 410 | continuous area of memory. This happens transparently to the |
| 411 | application in the virtual memory subsystem of the kernel. When buffer |
| 412 | pages have been swapped out to disk they are brought back and finally |
| 413 | locked in physical memory for DMA.<footnote> |
| 414 | <para>We expect that frequently used buffers are typically not |
| 415 | swapped out. Anyway, the process of swapping, locking or generating |
| 416 | scatter-gather lists may be time consuming. The delay can be masked by |
| 417 | the depth of the incoming buffer queue, and perhaps by maintaining |
| 418 | caches assuming a buffer will be soon enqueued again. On the other |
| 419 | hand, to optimize memory usage drivers can limit the number of buffers |
| 420 | locked in advance and recycle the most recently used buffers first. Of |
| 421 | course, the pages of empty buffers in the incoming queue need not be |
| 422 | saved to disk. Output buffers must be saved on the incoming and |
| 423 | outgoing queue because an application may share them with other |
| 424 | processes.</para> |
| 425 | </footnote></para> |
| 426 | |
| 427 | <para>Filled or displayed buffers are dequeued with the |
| 428 | &VIDIOC-DQBUF; ioctl. The driver can unlock the memory pages at any |
| 429 | time between the completion of the DMA and this ioctl. The memory is |
| 430 | also unlocked when &VIDIOC-STREAMOFF; is called, &VIDIOC-REQBUFS;, or |
| 431 | when the device is closed. Applications must take care not to free |
| 432 | buffers without dequeuing. For once, the buffers remain locked until |
| 433 | further, wasting physical memory. Second the driver will not be |
| 434 | notified when the memory is returned to the application's free list |
| 435 | and subsequently reused for other purposes, possibly completing the |
| 436 | requested DMA and overwriting valuable data.</para> |
| 437 | |
| 438 | <para>For capturing applications it is customary to enqueue a |
| 439 | number of empty buffers, to start capturing and enter the read loop. |
| 440 | Here the application waits until a filled buffer can be dequeued, and |
| 441 | re-enqueues the buffer when the data is no longer needed. Output |
| 442 | applications fill and enqueue buffers, when enough buffers are stacked |
| 443 | up output is started. In the write loop, when the application |
| 444 | runs out of free buffers it must wait until an empty buffer can be |
| 445 | dequeued and reused. Two methods exist to suspend execution of the |
| 446 | application until one or more buffers can be dequeued. By default |
| 447 | <constant>VIDIOC_DQBUF</constant> blocks when no buffer is in the |
| 448 | outgoing queue. When the <constant>O_NONBLOCK</constant> flag was |
| 449 | given to the &func-open; function, <constant>VIDIOC_DQBUF</constant> |
| 450 | returns immediately with an &EAGAIN; when no buffer is available. The |
| 451 | &func-select; or &func-poll; function are always available.</para> |
| 452 | |
| 453 | <para>To start and stop capturing or output applications call the |
| 454 | &VIDIOC-STREAMON; and &VIDIOC-STREAMOFF; ioctl. Note |
| 455 | <constant>VIDIOC_STREAMOFF</constant> removes all buffers from both |
| 456 | queues and unlocks all buffers as a side effect. Since there is no |
| 457 | notion of doing anything "now" on a multitasking system, if an |
| 458 | application needs to synchronize with another event it should examine |
| 459 | the &v4l2-buffer; <structfield>timestamp</structfield> of captured |
| 460 | buffers, or set the field before enqueuing buffers for output.</para> |
| 461 | |
| 462 | <para>Drivers implementing user pointer I/O must |
| 463 | support the <constant>VIDIOC_REQBUFS</constant>, |
| 464 | <constant>VIDIOC_QBUF</constant>, <constant>VIDIOC_DQBUF</constant>, |
| 465 | <constant>VIDIOC_STREAMON</constant> and |
| 466 | <constant>VIDIOC_STREAMOFF</constant> ioctl, the |
| 467 | <function>select()</function> and <function>poll()</function> function.<footnote> |
| 468 | <para>At the driver level <function>select()</function> and |
| 469 | <function>poll()</function> are the same, and |
| 470 | <function>select()</function> is too important to be optional. The |
| 471 | rest should be evident.</para> |
| 472 | </footnote></para> |
| 473 | </section> |
| 474 | |
| 475 | <section id="async"> |
| 476 | <title>Asynchronous I/O</title> |
| 477 | |
| 478 | <para>This method is not defined yet.</para> |
| 479 | </section> |
| 480 | |
| 481 | <section id="buffer"> |
| 482 | <title>Buffers</title> |
| 483 | |
| 484 | <para>A buffer contains data exchanged by application and |
Pawel Osciak | 53b5d57 | 2011-01-07 01:41:33 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 485 | driver using one of the Streaming I/O methods. In the multi-planar API, the |
| 486 | data is held in planes, while the buffer structure acts as a container |
| 487 | for the planes. Only pointers to buffers (planes) are exchanged, the data |
| 488 | itself is not copied. These pointers, together with meta-information like |
| 489 | timestamps or field parity, are stored in a struct |
| 490 | <structname>v4l2_buffer</structname>, argument to |
| 491 | the &VIDIOC-QUERYBUF;, &VIDIOC-QBUF; and &VIDIOC-DQBUF; ioctl. |
| 492 | In the multi-planar API, some plane-specific members of struct |
| 493 | <structname>v4l2_buffer</structname>, such as pointers and sizes for each |
| 494 | plane, are stored in struct <structname>v4l2_plane</structname> instead. |
| 495 | In that case, struct <structname>v4l2_buffer</structname> contains an array of |
| 496 | plane structures.</para> |
Mauro Carvalho Chehab | 8e080c2 | 2009-09-13 22:16:04 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 497 | |
| 498 | <para>Nominally timestamps refer to the first data byte transmitted. |
| 499 | In practice however the wide range of hardware covered by the V4L2 API |
| 500 | limits timestamp accuracy. Often an interrupt routine will |
| 501 | sample the system clock shortly after the field or frame was stored |
| 502 | completely in memory. So applications must expect a constant |
| 503 | difference up to one field or frame period plus a small (few scan |
| 504 | lines) random error. The delay and error can be much |
| 505 | larger due to compression or transmission over an external bus when |
| 506 | the frames are not properly stamped by the sender. This is frequently |
| 507 | the case with USB cameras. Here timestamps refer to the instant the |
| 508 | field or frame was received by the driver, not the capture time. These |
| 509 | devices identify by not enumerating any video standards, see <xref |
| 510 | linkend="standard" />.</para> |
| 511 | |
| 512 | <para>Similar limitations apply to output timestamps. Typically |
| 513 | the video hardware locks to a clock controlling the video timing, the |
| 514 | horizontal and vertical synchronization pulses. At some point in the |
| 515 | line sequence, possibly the vertical blanking, an interrupt routine |
| 516 | samples the system clock, compares against the timestamp and programs |
| 517 | the hardware to repeat the previous field or frame, or to display the |
| 518 | buffer contents.</para> |
| 519 | |
| 520 | <para>Apart of limitations of the video device and natural |
| 521 | inaccuracies of all clocks, it should be noted system time itself is |
| 522 | not perfectly stable. It can be affected by power saving cycles, |
| 523 | warped to insert leap seconds, or even turned back or forth by the |
| 524 | system administrator affecting long term measurements. <footnote> |
| 525 | <para>Since no other Linux multimedia |
| 526 | API supports unadjusted time it would be foolish to introduce here. We |
| 527 | must use a universally supported clock to synchronize different media, |
| 528 | hence time of day.</para> |
| 529 | </footnote></para> |
| 530 | |
| 531 | <table frame="none" pgwide="1" id="v4l2-buffer"> |
| 532 | <title>struct <structname>v4l2_buffer</structname></title> |
| 533 | <tgroup cols="4"> |
| 534 | &cs-ustr; |
| 535 | <tbody valign="top"> |
| 536 | <row> |
| 537 | <entry>__u32</entry> |
| 538 | <entry><structfield>index</structfield></entry> |
| 539 | <entry></entry> |
| 540 | <entry>Number of the buffer, set by the application. This |
| 541 | field is only used for <link linkend="mmap">memory mapping</link> I/O |
| 542 | and can range from zero to the number of buffers allocated |
| 543 | with the &VIDIOC-REQBUFS; ioctl (&v4l2-requestbuffers; <structfield>count</structfield>) minus one.</entry> |
| 544 | </row> |
| 545 | <row> |
| 546 | <entry>&v4l2-buf-type;</entry> |
| 547 | <entry><structfield>type</structfield></entry> |
| 548 | <entry></entry> |
| 549 | <entry>Type of the buffer, same as &v4l2-format; |
| 550 | <structfield>type</structfield> or &v4l2-requestbuffers; |
| 551 | <structfield>type</structfield>, set by the application.</entry> |
| 552 | </row> |
| 553 | <row> |
| 554 | <entry>__u32</entry> |
| 555 | <entry><structfield>bytesused</structfield></entry> |
| 556 | <entry></entry> |
| 557 | <entry>The number of bytes occupied by the data in the |
| 558 | buffer. It depends on the negotiated data format and may change with |
| 559 | each buffer for compressed variable size data like JPEG images. |
| 560 | Drivers must set this field when <structfield>type</structfield> |
| 561 | refers to an input stream, applications when an output stream.</entry> |
| 562 | </row> |
| 563 | <row> |
| 564 | <entry>__u32</entry> |
| 565 | <entry><structfield>flags</structfield></entry> |
| 566 | <entry></entry> |
| 567 | <entry>Flags set by the application or driver, see <xref |
| 568 | linkend="buffer-flags" />.</entry> |
| 569 | </row> |
| 570 | <row> |
| 571 | <entry>&v4l2-field;</entry> |
| 572 | <entry><structfield>field</structfield></entry> |
| 573 | <entry></entry> |
| 574 | <entry>Indicates the field order of the image in the |
| 575 | buffer, see <xref linkend="v4l2-field" />. This field is not used when |
| 576 | the buffer contains VBI data. Drivers must set it when |
| 577 | <structfield>type</structfield> refers to an input stream, |
| 578 | applications when an output stream.</entry> |
| 579 | </row> |
| 580 | <row> |
| 581 | <entry>struct timeval</entry> |
| 582 | <entry><structfield>timestamp</structfield></entry> |
| 583 | <entry></entry> |
| 584 | <entry><para>For input streams this is the |
| 585 | system time (as returned by the <function>gettimeofday()</function> |
| 586 | function) when the first data byte was captured. For output streams |
| 587 | the data will not be displayed before this time, secondary to the |
| 588 | nominal frame rate determined by the current video standard in |
| 589 | enqueued order. Applications can for example zero this field to |
| 590 | display frames as soon as possible. The driver stores the time at |
| 591 | which the first data byte was actually sent out in the |
| 592 | <structfield>timestamp</structfield> field. This permits |
| 593 | applications to monitor the drift between the video and system |
| 594 | clock.</para></entry> |
| 595 | </row> |
| 596 | <row> |
| 597 | <entry>&v4l2-timecode;</entry> |
| 598 | <entry><structfield>timecode</structfield></entry> |
| 599 | <entry></entry> |
| 600 | <entry>When <structfield>type</structfield> is |
| 601 | <constant>V4L2_BUF_TYPE_VIDEO_CAPTURE</constant> and the |
| 602 | <constant>V4L2_BUF_FLAG_TIMECODE</constant> flag is set in |
| 603 | <structfield>flags</structfield>, this structure contains a frame |
| 604 | timecode. In <link linkend="v4l2-field">V4L2_FIELD_ALTERNATE</link> |
| 605 | mode the top and bottom field contain the same timecode. |
| 606 | Timecodes are intended to help video editing and are typically recorded on |
| 607 | video tapes, but also embedded in compressed formats like MPEG. This |
| 608 | field is independent of the <structfield>timestamp</structfield> and |
| 609 | <structfield>sequence</structfield> fields.</entry> |
| 610 | </row> |
| 611 | <row> |
| 612 | <entry>__u32</entry> |
| 613 | <entry><structfield>sequence</structfield></entry> |
| 614 | <entry></entry> |
| 615 | <entry>Set by the driver, counting the frames in the |
| 616 | sequence.</entry> |
| 617 | </row> |
| 618 | <row> |
| 619 | <entry spanname="hspan"><para>In <link |
| 620 | linkend="v4l2-field">V4L2_FIELD_ALTERNATE</link> mode the top and |
| 621 | bottom field have the same sequence number. The count starts at zero |
| 622 | and includes dropped or repeated frames. A dropped frame was received |
| 623 | by an input device but could not be stored due to lack of free buffer |
| 624 | space. A repeated frame was displayed again by an output device |
| 625 | because the application did not pass new data in |
| 626 | time.</para><para>Note this may count the frames received |
| 627 | e.g. over USB, without taking into account the frames dropped by the |
| 628 | remote hardware due to limited compression throughput or bus |
| 629 | bandwidth. These devices identify by not enumerating any video |
| 630 | standards, see <xref linkend="standard" />.</para></entry> |
| 631 | </row> |
| 632 | <row> |
| 633 | <entry>&v4l2-memory;</entry> |
| 634 | <entry><structfield>memory</structfield></entry> |
| 635 | <entry></entry> |
| 636 | <entry>This field must be set by applications and/or drivers |
| 637 | in accordance with the selected I/O method.</entry> |
| 638 | </row> |
| 639 | <row> |
| 640 | <entry>union</entry> |
| 641 | <entry><structfield>m</structfield></entry> |
| 642 | </row> |
| 643 | <row> |
| 644 | <entry></entry> |
| 645 | <entry>__u32</entry> |
| 646 | <entry><structfield>offset</structfield></entry> |
Pawel Osciak | 53b5d57 | 2011-01-07 01:41:33 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 647 | <entry>For the single-planar API and when |
| 648 | <structfield>memory</structfield> is <constant>V4L2_MEMORY_MMAP</constant> this |
| 649 | is the offset of the buffer from the start of the device memory. The value is |
| 650 | returned by the driver and apart of serving as parameter to the &func-mmap; |
| 651 | function not useful for applications. See <xref linkend="mmap" /> for details |
| 652 | </entry> |
Mauro Carvalho Chehab | 8e080c2 | 2009-09-13 22:16:04 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 653 | </row> |
| 654 | <row> |
| 655 | <entry></entry> |
| 656 | <entry>unsigned long</entry> |
| 657 | <entry><structfield>userptr</structfield></entry> |
Pawel Osciak | 53b5d57 | 2011-01-07 01:41:33 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 658 | <entry>For the single-planar API and when |
| 659 | <structfield>memory</structfield> is <constant>V4L2_MEMORY_USERPTR</constant> |
| 660 | this is a pointer to the buffer (casted to unsigned long type) in virtual |
| 661 | memory, set by the application. See <xref linkend="userp" /> for details. |
| 662 | </entry> |
| 663 | </row> |
| 664 | <row> |
| 665 | <entry></entry> |
| 666 | <entry>struct v4l2_plane</entry> |
| 667 | <entry><structfield>*planes</structfield></entry> |
| 668 | <entry>When using the multi-planar API, contains a userspace pointer |
| 669 | to an array of &v4l2-plane;. The size of the array should be put |
| 670 | in the <structfield>length</structfield> field of this |
| 671 | <structname>v4l2_buffer</structname> structure.</entry> |
Mauro Carvalho Chehab | 8e080c2 | 2009-09-13 22:16:04 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 672 | </row> |
| 673 | <row> |
| 674 | <entry>__u32</entry> |
| 675 | <entry><structfield>length</structfield></entry> |
| 676 | <entry></entry> |
Pawel Osciak | 53b5d57 | 2011-01-07 01:41:33 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 677 | <entry>Size of the buffer (not the payload) in bytes for the |
| 678 | single-planar API. For the multi-planar API should contain the |
| 679 | number of elements in the <structfield>planes</structfield> array. |
| 680 | </entry> |
Mauro Carvalho Chehab | 8e080c2 | 2009-09-13 22:16:04 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 681 | </row> |
| 682 | <row> |
| 683 | <entry>__u32</entry> |
| 684 | <entry><structfield>input</structfield></entry> |
| 685 | <entry></entry> |
| 686 | <entry>Some video capture drivers support rapid and |
| 687 | synchronous video input changes, a function useful for example in |
| 688 | video surveillance applications. For this purpose applications set the |
| 689 | <constant>V4L2_BUF_FLAG_INPUT</constant> flag, and this field to the |
| 690 | number of a video input as in &v4l2-input; field |
| 691 | <structfield>index</structfield>.</entry> |
| 692 | </row> |
| 693 | <row> |
| 694 | <entry>__u32</entry> |
| 695 | <entry><structfield>reserved</structfield></entry> |
| 696 | <entry></entry> |
| 697 | <entry>A place holder for future extensions and custom |
| 698 | (driver defined) buffer types |
Hans Verkuil | 995f5fe | 2010-02-20 09:41:03 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 699 | <constant>V4L2_BUF_TYPE_PRIVATE</constant> and higher. Applications |
| 700 | should set this to 0.</entry> |
Mauro Carvalho Chehab | 8e080c2 | 2009-09-13 22:16:04 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 701 | </row> |
| 702 | </tbody> |
| 703 | </tgroup> |
| 704 | </table> |
| 705 | |
Pawel Osciak | 53b5d57 | 2011-01-07 01:41:33 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 706 | <table frame="none" pgwide="1" id="v4l2-plane"> |
| 707 | <title>struct <structname>v4l2_plane</structname></title> |
| 708 | <tgroup cols="4"> |
| 709 | &cs-ustr; |
| 710 | <tbody valign="top"> |
| 711 | <row> |
| 712 | <entry>__u32</entry> |
| 713 | <entry><structfield>bytesused</structfield></entry> |
| 714 | <entry></entry> |
| 715 | <entry>The number of bytes occupied by data in the plane |
| 716 | (its payload).</entry> |
| 717 | </row> |
| 718 | <row> |
| 719 | <entry>__u32</entry> |
| 720 | <entry><structfield>length</structfield></entry> |
| 721 | <entry></entry> |
| 722 | <entry>Size in bytes of the plane (not its payload).</entry> |
| 723 | </row> |
| 724 | <row> |
| 725 | <entry>union</entry> |
| 726 | <entry><structfield>m</structfield></entry> |
| 727 | <entry></entry> |
| 728 | <entry></entry> |
| 729 | </row> |
| 730 | <row> |
| 731 | <entry></entry> |
| 732 | <entry>__u32</entry> |
| 733 | <entry><structfield>mem_offset</structfield></entry> |
| 734 | <entry>When the memory type in the containing &v4l2-buffer; is |
| 735 | <constant>V4L2_MEMORY_MMAP</constant>, this is the value that |
| 736 | should be passed to &func-mmap;, similar to the |
| 737 | <structfield>offset</structfield> field in &v4l2-buffer;.</entry> |
| 738 | </row> |
| 739 | <row> |
| 740 | <entry></entry> |
| 741 | <entry>__unsigned long</entry> |
| 742 | <entry><structfield>userptr</structfield></entry> |
| 743 | <entry>When the memory type in the containing &v4l2-buffer; is |
| 744 | <constant>V4L2_MEMORY_USERPTR</constant>, this is a userspace |
| 745 | pointer to the memory allocated for this plane by an application. |
| 746 | </entry> |
| 747 | </row> |
| 748 | <row> |
| 749 | <entry>__u32</entry> |
| 750 | <entry><structfield>data_offset</structfield></entry> |
| 751 | <entry></entry> |
| 752 | <entry>Offset in bytes to video data in the plane, if applicable. |
| 753 | </entry> |
| 754 | </row> |
| 755 | <row> |
| 756 | <entry>__u32</entry> |
| 757 | <entry><structfield>reserved[11]</structfield></entry> |
| 758 | <entry></entry> |
| 759 | <entry>Reserved for future use. Should be zeroed by an |
| 760 | application.</entry> |
| 761 | </row> |
| 762 | </tbody> |
| 763 | </tgroup> |
| 764 | </table> |
| 765 | |
Mauro Carvalho Chehab | 8e080c2 | 2009-09-13 22:16:04 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 766 | <table frame="none" pgwide="1" id="v4l2-buf-type"> |
| 767 | <title>enum v4l2_buf_type</title> |
| 768 | <tgroup cols="3"> |
| 769 | &cs-def; |
| 770 | <tbody valign="top"> |
| 771 | <row> |
| 772 | <entry><constant>V4L2_BUF_TYPE_VIDEO_CAPTURE</constant></entry> |
| 773 | <entry>1</entry> |
Pawel Osciak | 53b5d57 | 2011-01-07 01:41:33 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 774 | <entry>Buffer of a single-planar video capture stream, see <xref |
| 775 | linkend="capture" />.</entry> |
| 776 | </row> |
| 777 | <row> |
| 778 | <entry><constant>V4L2_BUF_TYPE_VIDEO_CAPTURE_MPLANE</constant> |
| 779 | </entry> |
| 780 | <entry>9</entry> |
| 781 | <entry>Buffer of a multi-planar video capture stream, see <xref |
Mauro Carvalho Chehab | 8e080c2 | 2009-09-13 22:16:04 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 782 | linkend="capture" />.</entry> |
| 783 | </row> |
| 784 | <row> |
| 785 | <entry><constant>V4L2_BUF_TYPE_VIDEO_OUTPUT</constant></entry> |
| 786 | <entry>2</entry> |
Pawel Osciak | 53b5d57 | 2011-01-07 01:41:33 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 787 | <entry>Buffer of a single-planar video output stream, see <xref |
| 788 | linkend="output" />.</entry> |
| 789 | </row> |
| 790 | <row> |
| 791 | <entry><constant>V4L2_BUF_TYPE_VIDEO_OUTPUT_MPLANE</constant> |
| 792 | </entry> |
| 793 | <entry>10</entry> |
| 794 | <entry>Buffer of a multi-planar video output stream, see <xref |
Mauro Carvalho Chehab | 8e080c2 | 2009-09-13 22:16:04 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 795 | linkend="output" />.</entry> |
| 796 | </row> |
| 797 | <row> |
| 798 | <entry><constant>V4L2_BUF_TYPE_VIDEO_OVERLAY</constant></entry> |
| 799 | <entry>3</entry> |
| 800 | <entry>Buffer for video overlay, see <xref linkend="overlay" />.</entry> |
| 801 | </row> |
| 802 | <row> |
| 803 | <entry><constant>V4L2_BUF_TYPE_VBI_CAPTURE</constant></entry> |
| 804 | <entry>4</entry> |
| 805 | <entry>Buffer of a raw VBI capture stream, see <xref |
| 806 | linkend="raw-vbi" />.</entry> |
| 807 | </row> |
| 808 | <row> |
| 809 | <entry><constant>V4L2_BUF_TYPE_VBI_OUTPUT</constant></entry> |
| 810 | <entry>5</entry> |
| 811 | <entry>Buffer of a raw VBI output stream, see <xref |
| 812 | linkend="raw-vbi" />.</entry> |
| 813 | </row> |
| 814 | <row> |
| 815 | <entry><constant>V4L2_BUF_TYPE_SLICED_VBI_CAPTURE</constant></entry> |
| 816 | <entry>6</entry> |
| 817 | <entry>Buffer of a sliced VBI capture stream, see <xref |
| 818 | linkend="sliced" />.</entry> |
| 819 | </row> |
| 820 | <row> |
| 821 | <entry><constant>V4L2_BUF_TYPE_SLICED_VBI_OUTPUT</constant></entry> |
| 822 | <entry>7</entry> |
| 823 | <entry>Buffer of a sliced VBI output stream, see <xref |
| 824 | linkend="sliced" />.</entry> |
| 825 | </row> |
| 826 | <row> |
| 827 | <entry><constant>V4L2_BUF_TYPE_VIDEO_OUTPUT_OVERLAY</constant></entry> |
| 828 | <entry>8</entry> |
| 829 | <entry>Buffer for video output overlay (OSD), see <xref |
| 830 | linkend="osd" />. Status: <link |
| 831 | linkend="experimental">Experimental</link>.</entry> |
| 832 | </row> |
| 833 | <row> |
| 834 | <entry><constant>V4L2_BUF_TYPE_PRIVATE</constant></entry> |
| 835 | <entry>0x80</entry> |
| 836 | <entry>This and higher values are reserved for custom |
| 837 | (driver defined) buffer types.</entry> |
| 838 | </row> |
| 839 | </tbody> |
| 840 | </tgroup> |
| 841 | </table> |
| 842 | |
| 843 | <table frame="none" pgwide="1" id="buffer-flags"> |
| 844 | <title>Buffer Flags</title> |
| 845 | <tgroup cols="3"> |
| 846 | &cs-def; |
| 847 | <tbody valign="top"> |
| 848 | <row> |
| 849 | <entry><constant>V4L2_BUF_FLAG_MAPPED</constant></entry> |
| 850 | <entry>0x0001</entry> |
| 851 | <entry>The buffer resides in device memory and has been mapped |
| 852 | into the application's address space, see <xref linkend="mmap" /> for details. |
| 853 | Drivers set or clear this flag when the |
| 854 | <link linkend="vidioc-querybuf">VIDIOC_QUERYBUF</link>, <link |
| 855 | linkend="vidioc-qbuf">VIDIOC_QBUF</link> or <link |
| 856 | linkend="vidioc-qbuf">VIDIOC_DQBUF</link> ioctl is called. Set by the driver.</entry> |
| 857 | </row> |
| 858 | <row> |
| 859 | <entry><constant>V4L2_BUF_FLAG_QUEUED</constant></entry> |
| 860 | <entry>0x0002</entry> |
| 861 | <entry>Internally drivers maintain two buffer queues, an |
| 862 | incoming and outgoing queue. When this flag is set, the buffer is |
| 863 | currently on the incoming queue. It automatically moves to the |
| 864 | outgoing queue after the buffer has been filled (capture devices) or |
| 865 | displayed (output devices). Drivers set or clear this flag when the |
| 866 | <constant>VIDIOC_QUERYBUF</constant> ioctl is called. After |
| 867 | (successful) calling the <constant>VIDIOC_QBUF </constant>ioctl it is |
| 868 | always set and after <constant>VIDIOC_DQBUF</constant> always |
| 869 | cleared.</entry> |
| 870 | </row> |
| 871 | <row> |
| 872 | <entry><constant>V4L2_BUF_FLAG_DONE</constant></entry> |
| 873 | <entry>0x0004</entry> |
| 874 | <entry>When this flag is set, the buffer is currently on |
| 875 | the outgoing queue, ready to be dequeued from the driver. Drivers set |
| 876 | or clear this flag when the <constant>VIDIOC_QUERYBUF</constant> ioctl |
| 877 | is called. After calling the <constant>VIDIOC_QBUF</constant> or |
| 878 | <constant>VIDIOC_DQBUF</constant> it is always cleared. Of course a |
| 879 | buffer cannot be on both queues at the same time, the |
| 880 | <constant>V4L2_BUF_FLAG_QUEUED</constant> and |
| 881 | <constant>V4L2_BUF_FLAG_DONE</constant> flag are mutually exclusive. |
| 882 | They can be both cleared however, then the buffer is in "dequeued" |
| 883 | state, in the application domain to say so.</entry> |
| 884 | </row> |
| 885 | <row> |
Pawel Osciak | 2163636 | 2010-04-28 04:05:23 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 886 | <entry><constant>V4L2_BUF_FLAG_ERROR</constant></entry> |
| 887 | <entry>0x0040</entry> |
| 888 | <entry>When this flag is set, the buffer has been dequeued |
| 889 | successfully, although the data might have been corrupted. |
| 890 | This is recoverable, streaming may continue as normal and |
| 891 | the buffer may be reused normally. |
| 892 | Drivers set this flag when the <constant>VIDIOC_DQBUF</constant> |
| 893 | ioctl is called.</entry> |
| 894 | </row> |
| 895 | <row> |
Mauro Carvalho Chehab | 8e080c2 | 2009-09-13 22:16:04 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 896 | <entry><constant>V4L2_BUF_FLAG_KEYFRAME</constant></entry> |
| 897 | <entry>0x0008</entry> |
| 898 | <entry>Drivers set or clear this flag when calling the |
| 899 | <constant>VIDIOC_DQBUF</constant> ioctl. It may be set by video |
| 900 | capture devices when the buffer contains a compressed image which is a |
| 901 | key frame (or field), &ie; can be decompressed on its own.</entry> |
| 902 | </row> |
| 903 | <row> |
| 904 | <entry><constant>V4L2_BUF_FLAG_PFRAME</constant></entry> |
| 905 | <entry>0x0010</entry> |
| 906 | <entry>Similar to <constant>V4L2_BUF_FLAG_KEYFRAME</constant> |
| 907 | this flags predicted frames or fields which contain only differences to a |
| 908 | previous key frame.</entry> |
| 909 | </row> |
| 910 | <row> |
| 911 | <entry><constant>V4L2_BUF_FLAG_BFRAME</constant></entry> |
| 912 | <entry>0x0020</entry> |
| 913 | <entry>Similar to <constant>V4L2_BUF_FLAG_PFRAME</constant> |
| 914 | this is a bidirectional predicted frame or field. [ooc tbd]</entry> |
| 915 | </row> |
| 916 | <row> |
| 917 | <entry><constant>V4L2_BUF_FLAG_TIMECODE</constant></entry> |
| 918 | <entry>0x0100</entry> |
| 919 | <entry>The <structfield>timecode</structfield> field is valid. |
| 920 | Drivers set or clear this flag when the <constant>VIDIOC_DQBUF</constant> |
| 921 | ioctl is called.</entry> |
| 922 | </row> |
| 923 | <row> |
| 924 | <entry><constant>V4L2_BUF_FLAG_INPUT</constant></entry> |
| 925 | <entry>0x0200</entry> |
| 926 | <entry>The <structfield>input</structfield> field is valid. |
| 927 | Applications set or clear this flag before calling the |
| 928 | <constant>VIDIOC_QBUF</constant> ioctl.</entry> |
| 929 | </row> |
| 930 | </tbody> |
| 931 | </tgroup> |
| 932 | </table> |
| 933 | |
| 934 | <table pgwide="1" frame="none" id="v4l2-memory"> |
| 935 | <title>enum v4l2_memory</title> |
| 936 | <tgroup cols="3"> |
| 937 | &cs-def; |
| 938 | <tbody valign="top"> |
| 939 | <row> |
| 940 | <entry><constant>V4L2_MEMORY_MMAP</constant></entry> |
| 941 | <entry>1</entry> |
| 942 | <entry>The buffer is used for <link linkend="mmap">memory |
| 943 | mapping</link> I/O.</entry> |
| 944 | </row> |
| 945 | <row> |
| 946 | <entry><constant>V4L2_MEMORY_USERPTR</constant></entry> |
| 947 | <entry>2</entry> |
| 948 | <entry>The buffer is used for <link linkend="userp">user |
| 949 | pointer</link> I/O.</entry> |
| 950 | </row> |
| 951 | <row> |
| 952 | <entry><constant>V4L2_MEMORY_OVERLAY</constant></entry> |
| 953 | <entry>3</entry> |
| 954 | <entry>[to do]</entry> |
| 955 | </row> |
| 956 | </tbody> |
| 957 | </tgroup> |
| 958 | </table> |
| 959 | |
| 960 | <section> |
| 961 | <title>Timecodes</title> |
| 962 | |
| 963 | <para>The <structname>v4l2_timecode</structname> structure is |
| 964 | designed to hold a <xref linkend="smpte12m" /> or similar timecode. |
| 965 | (struct <structname>timeval</structname> timestamps are stored in |
| 966 | &v4l2-buffer; field <structfield>timestamp</structfield>.)</para> |
| 967 | |
| 968 | <table frame="none" pgwide="1" id="v4l2-timecode"> |
| 969 | <title>struct <structname>v4l2_timecode</structname></title> |
| 970 | <tgroup cols="3"> |
| 971 | &cs-str; |
| 972 | <tbody valign="top"> |
| 973 | <row> |
| 974 | <entry>__u32</entry> |
| 975 | <entry><structfield>type</structfield></entry> |
| 976 | <entry>Frame rate the timecodes are based on, see <xref |
| 977 | linkend="timecode-type" />.</entry> |
| 978 | </row> |
| 979 | <row> |
| 980 | <entry>__u32</entry> |
| 981 | <entry><structfield>flags</structfield></entry> |
| 982 | <entry>Timecode flags, see <xref linkend="timecode-flags" />.</entry> |
| 983 | </row> |
| 984 | <row> |
| 985 | <entry>__u8</entry> |
| 986 | <entry><structfield>frames</structfield></entry> |
| 987 | <entry>Frame count, 0 ... 23/24/29/49/59, depending on the |
| 988 | type of timecode.</entry> |
| 989 | </row> |
| 990 | <row> |
| 991 | <entry>__u8</entry> |
| 992 | <entry><structfield>seconds</structfield></entry> |
| 993 | <entry>Seconds count, 0 ... 59. This is a binary, not BCD number.</entry> |
| 994 | </row> |
| 995 | <row> |
| 996 | <entry>__u8</entry> |
| 997 | <entry><structfield>minutes</structfield></entry> |
| 998 | <entry>Minutes count, 0 ... 59. This is a binary, not BCD number.</entry> |
| 999 | </row> |
| 1000 | <row> |
| 1001 | <entry>__u8</entry> |
| 1002 | <entry><structfield>hours</structfield></entry> |
| 1003 | <entry>Hours count, 0 ... 29. This is a binary, not BCD number.</entry> |
| 1004 | </row> |
| 1005 | <row> |
| 1006 | <entry>__u8</entry> |
| 1007 | <entry><structfield>userbits</structfield>[4]</entry> |
| 1008 | <entry>The "user group" bits from the timecode.</entry> |
| 1009 | </row> |
| 1010 | </tbody> |
| 1011 | </tgroup> |
| 1012 | </table> |
| 1013 | |
| 1014 | <table frame="none" pgwide="1" id="timecode-type"> |
| 1015 | <title>Timecode Types</title> |
| 1016 | <tgroup cols="3"> |
| 1017 | &cs-def; |
| 1018 | <tbody valign="top"> |
| 1019 | <row> |
| 1020 | <entry><constant>V4L2_TC_TYPE_24FPS</constant></entry> |
| 1021 | <entry>1</entry> |
| 1022 | <entry>24 frames per second, i. e. film.</entry> |
| 1023 | </row> |
| 1024 | <row> |
| 1025 | <entry><constant>V4L2_TC_TYPE_25FPS</constant></entry> |
| 1026 | <entry>2</entry> |
| 1027 | <entry>25 frames per second, &ie; PAL or SECAM video.</entry> |
| 1028 | </row> |
| 1029 | <row> |
| 1030 | <entry><constant>V4L2_TC_TYPE_30FPS</constant></entry> |
| 1031 | <entry>3</entry> |
| 1032 | <entry>30 frames per second, &ie; NTSC video.</entry> |
| 1033 | </row> |
| 1034 | <row> |
| 1035 | <entry><constant>V4L2_TC_TYPE_50FPS</constant></entry> |
| 1036 | <entry>4</entry> |
| 1037 | <entry></entry> |
| 1038 | </row> |
| 1039 | <row> |
| 1040 | <entry><constant>V4L2_TC_TYPE_60FPS</constant></entry> |
| 1041 | <entry>5</entry> |
| 1042 | <entry></entry> |
| 1043 | </row> |
| 1044 | </tbody> |
| 1045 | </tgroup> |
| 1046 | </table> |
| 1047 | |
| 1048 | <table frame="none" pgwide="1" id="timecode-flags"> |
| 1049 | <title>Timecode Flags</title> |
| 1050 | <tgroup cols="3"> |
| 1051 | &cs-def; |
| 1052 | <tbody valign="top"> |
| 1053 | <row> |
| 1054 | <entry><constant>V4L2_TC_FLAG_DROPFRAME</constant></entry> |
| 1055 | <entry>0x0001</entry> |
| 1056 | <entry>Indicates "drop frame" semantics for counting frames |
| 1057 | in 29.97 fps material. When set, frame numbers 0 and 1 at the start of |
| 1058 | each minute, except minutes 0, 10, 20, 30, 40, 50 are omitted from the |
| 1059 | count.</entry> |
| 1060 | </row> |
| 1061 | <row> |
| 1062 | <entry><constant>V4L2_TC_FLAG_COLORFRAME</constant></entry> |
| 1063 | <entry>0x0002</entry> |
| 1064 | <entry>The "color frame" flag.</entry> |
| 1065 | </row> |
| 1066 | <row> |
| 1067 | <entry><constant>V4L2_TC_USERBITS_field</constant></entry> |
| 1068 | <entry>0x000C</entry> |
| 1069 | <entry>Field mask for the "binary group flags".</entry> |
| 1070 | </row> |
| 1071 | <row> |
| 1072 | <entry><constant>V4L2_TC_USERBITS_USERDEFINED</constant></entry> |
| 1073 | <entry>0x0000</entry> |
| 1074 | <entry>Unspecified format.</entry> |
| 1075 | </row> |
| 1076 | <row> |
| 1077 | <entry><constant>V4L2_TC_USERBITS_8BITCHARS</constant></entry> |
| 1078 | <entry>0x0008</entry> |
| 1079 | <entry>8-bit ISO characters.</entry> |
| 1080 | </row> |
| 1081 | </tbody> |
| 1082 | </tgroup> |
| 1083 | </table> |
| 1084 | </section> |
| 1085 | </section> |
| 1086 | |
| 1087 | <section id="field-order"> |
| 1088 | <title>Field Order</title> |
| 1089 | |
| 1090 | <para>We have to distinguish between progressive and interlaced |
| 1091 | video. Progressive video transmits all lines of a video image |
| 1092 | sequentially. Interlaced video divides an image into two fields, |
| 1093 | containing only the odd and even lines of the image, respectively. |
| 1094 | Alternating the so called odd and even field are transmitted, and due |
| 1095 | to a small delay between fields a cathode ray TV displays the lines |
| 1096 | interleaved, yielding the original frame. This curious technique was |
| 1097 | invented because at refresh rates similar to film the image would |
| 1098 | fade out too quickly. Transmitting fields reduces the flicker without |
| 1099 | the necessity of doubling the frame rate and with it the bandwidth |
| 1100 | required for each channel.</para> |
| 1101 | |
| 1102 | <para>It is important to understand a video camera does not expose |
| 1103 | one frame at a time, merely transmitting the frames separated into |
| 1104 | fields. The fields are in fact captured at two different instances in |
| 1105 | time. An object on screen may well move between one field and the |
| 1106 | next. For applications analysing motion it is of paramount importance |
| 1107 | to recognize which field of a frame is older, the <emphasis>temporal |
| 1108 | order</emphasis>.</para> |
| 1109 | |
| 1110 | <para>When the driver provides or accepts images field by field |
| 1111 | rather than interleaved, it is also important applications understand |
Hans Verkuil | 3708936 | 2010-03-27 14:10:37 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 1112 | how the fields combine to frames. We distinguish between top (aka odd) and |
| 1113 | bottom (aka even) fields, the <emphasis>spatial order</emphasis>: The first line |
Mauro Carvalho Chehab | 8e080c2 | 2009-09-13 22:16:04 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 1114 | of the top field is the first line of an interlaced frame, the first |
| 1115 | line of the bottom field is the second line of that frame.</para> |
| 1116 | |
| 1117 | <para>However because fields were captured one after the other, |
| 1118 | arguing whether a frame commences with the top or bottom field is |
| 1119 | pointless. Any two successive top and bottom, or bottom and top fields |
| 1120 | yield a valid frame. Only when the source was progressive to begin |
| 1121 | with, ⪚ when transferring film to video, two fields may come from |
| 1122 | the same frame, creating a natural order.</para> |
| 1123 | |
| 1124 | <para>Counter to intuition the top field is not necessarily the |
| 1125 | older field. Whether the older field contains the top or bottom lines |
| 1126 | is a convention determined by the video standard. Hence the |
| 1127 | distinction between temporal and spatial order of fields. The diagrams |
| 1128 | below should make this clearer.</para> |
| 1129 | |
| 1130 | <para>All video capture and output devices must report the current |
| 1131 | field order. Some drivers may permit the selection of a different |
| 1132 | order, to this end applications initialize the |
| 1133 | <structfield>field</structfield> field of &v4l2-pix-format; before |
| 1134 | calling the &VIDIOC-S-FMT; ioctl. If this is not desired it should |
| 1135 | have the value <constant>V4L2_FIELD_ANY</constant> (0).</para> |
| 1136 | |
| 1137 | <table frame="none" pgwide="1" id="v4l2-field"> |
| 1138 | <title>enum v4l2_field</title> |
| 1139 | <tgroup cols="3"> |
| 1140 | &cs-def; |
| 1141 | <tbody valign="top"> |
| 1142 | <row> |
| 1143 | <entry><constant>V4L2_FIELD_ANY</constant></entry> |
| 1144 | <entry>0</entry> |
| 1145 | <entry>Applications request this field order when any |
| 1146 | one of the <constant>V4L2_FIELD_NONE</constant>, |
| 1147 | <constant>V4L2_FIELD_TOP</constant>, |
| 1148 | <constant>V4L2_FIELD_BOTTOM</constant>, or |
| 1149 | <constant>V4L2_FIELD_INTERLACED</constant> formats is acceptable. |
| 1150 | Drivers choose depending on hardware capabilities or e. g. the |
| 1151 | requested image size, and return the actual field order. &v4l2-buffer; |
| 1152 | <structfield>field</structfield> can never be |
| 1153 | <constant>V4L2_FIELD_ANY</constant>.</entry> |
| 1154 | </row> |
| 1155 | <row> |
| 1156 | <entry><constant>V4L2_FIELD_NONE</constant></entry> |
| 1157 | <entry>1</entry> |
| 1158 | <entry>Images are in progressive format, not interlaced. |
| 1159 | The driver may also indicate this order when it cannot distinguish |
| 1160 | between <constant>V4L2_FIELD_TOP</constant> and |
| 1161 | <constant>V4L2_FIELD_BOTTOM</constant>.</entry> |
| 1162 | </row> |
| 1163 | <row> |
| 1164 | <entry><constant>V4L2_FIELD_TOP</constant></entry> |
| 1165 | <entry>2</entry> |
Hans Verkuil | 3708936 | 2010-03-27 14:10:37 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 1166 | <entry>Images consist of the top (aka odd) field only.</entry> |
Mauro Carvalho Chehab | 8e080c2 | 2009-09-13 22:16:04 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 1167 | </row> |
| 1168 | <row> |
| 1169 | <entry><constant>V4L2_FIELD_BOTTOM</constant></entry> |
| 1170 | <entry>3</entry> |
Hans Verkuil | 3708936 | 2010-03-27 14:10:37 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 1171 | <entry>Images consist of the bottom (aka even) field only. |
Mauro Carvalho Chehab | 8e080c2 | 2009-09-13 22:16:04 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 1172 | Applications may wish to prevent a device from capturing interlaced |
| 1173 | images because they will have "comb" or "feathering" artefacts around |
| 1174 | moving objects.</entry> |
| 1175 | </row> |
| 1176 | <row> |
| 1177 | <entry><constant>V4L2_FIELD_INTERLACED</constant></entry> |
| 1178 | <entry>4</entry> |
| 1179 | <entry>Images contain both fields, interleaved line by |
| 1180 | line. The temporal order of the fields (whether the top or bottom |
| 1181 | field is first transmitted) depends on the current video standard. |
| 1182 | M/NTSC transmits the bottom field first, all other standards the top |
| 1183 | field first.</entry> |
| 1184 | </row> |
| 1185 | <row> |
| 1186 | <entry><constant>V4L2_FIELD_SEQ_TB</constant></entry> |
| 1187 | <entry>5</entry> |
| 1188 | <entry>Images contain both fields, the top field lines |
| 1189 | are stored first in memory, immediately followed by the bottom field |
| 1190 | lines. Fields are always stored in temporal order, the older one first |
| 1191 | in memory. Image sizes refer to the frame, not fields.</entry> |
| 1192 | </row> |
| 1193 | <row> |
| 1194 | <entry><constant>V4L2_FIELD_SEQ_BT</constant></entry> |
| 1195 | <entry>6</entry> |
| 1196 | <entry>Images contain both fields, the bottom field |
| 1197 | lines are stored first in memory, immediately followed by the top |
| 1198 | field lines. Fields are always stored in temporal order, the older one |
| 1199 | first in memory. Image sizes refer to the frame, not fields.</entry> |
| 1200 | </row> |
| 1201 | <row> |
| 1202 | <entry><constant>V4L2_FIELD_ALTERNATE</constant></entry> |
| 1203 | <entry>7</entry> |
| 1204 | <entry>The two fields of a frame are passed in separate |
| 1205 | buffers, in temporal order, &ie; the older one first. To indicate the field |
| 1206 | parity (whether the current field is a top or bottom field) the driver |
| 1207 | or application, depending on data direction, must set &v4l2-buffer; |
| 1208 | <structfield>field</structfield> to |
| 1209 | <constant>V4L2_FIELD_TOP</constant> or |
| 1210 | <constant>V4L2_FIELD_BOTTOM</constant>. Any two successive fields pair |
| 1211 | to build a frame. If fields are successive, without any dropped fields |
| 1212 | between them (fields can drop individually), can be determined from |
| 1213 | the &v4l2-buffer; <structfield>sequence</structfield> field. Image |
| 1214 | sizes refer to the frame, not fields. This format cannot be selected |
| 1215 | when using the read/write I/O method.<!-- Where it's indistinguishable |
| 1216 | from V4L2_FIELD_SEQ_*. --></entry> |
| 1217 | </row> |
| 1218 | <row> |
| 1219 | <entry><constant>V4L2_FIELD_INTERLACED_TB</constant></entry> |
| 1220 | <entry>8</entry> |
| 1221 | <entry>Images contain both fields, interleaved line by |
| 1222 | line, top field first. The top field is transmitted first.</entry> |
| 1223 | </row> |
| 1224 | <row> |
| 1225 | <entry><constant>V4L2_FIELD_INTERLACED_BT</constant></entry> |
| 1226 | <entry>9</entry> |
| 1227 | <entry>Images contain both fields, interleaved line by |
| 1228 | line, top field first. The bottom field is transmitted first.</entry> |
| 1229 | </row> |
| 1230 | </tbody> |
| 1231 | </tgroup> |
| 1232 | </table> |
| 1233 | |
| 1234 | <figure id="fieldseq-tb"> |
| 1235 | <title>Field Order, Top Field First Transmitted</title> |
| 1236 | <mediaobject> |
| 1237 | <imageobject> |
| 1238 | <imagedata fileref="fieldseq_tb.pdf" format="PS" /> |
| 1239 | </imageobject> |
| 1240 | <imageobject> |
| 1241 | <imagedata fileref="fieldseq_tb.gif" format="GIF" /> |
| 1242 | </imageobject> |
| 1243 | </mediaobject> |
| 1244 | </figure> |
| 1245 | |
| 1246 | <figure id="fieldseq-bt"> |
| 1247 | <title>Field Order, Bottom Field First Transmitted</title> |
| 1248 | <mediaobject> |
| 1249 | <imageobject> |
| 1250 | <imagedata fileref="fieldseq_bt.pdf" format="PS" /> |
| 1251 | </imageobject> |
| 1252 | <imageobject> |
| 1253 | <imagedata fileref="fieldseq_bt.gif" format="GIF" /> |
| 1254 | </imageobject> |
| 1255 | </mediaobject> |
| 1256 | </figure> |
| 1257 | </section> |
| 1258 | |
| 1259 | <!-- |
| 1260 | Local Variables: |
| 1261 | mode: sgml |
| 1262 | sgml-parent-document: "v4l2.sgml" |
| 1263 | indent-tabs-mode: nil |
| 1264 | End: |
| 1265 | --> |