Em 05-03-2011 20:23, Sylwester Nawrocki escreveu:
Hi Mauro,
On 03/05/2011 07:14 PM, Mauro Carvalho Chehab wrote:
Em 05-03-2011 11:29, Sylwester Nawrocki escreveu:
Hi David,
On 03/05/2011 02:04 PM, David Cohen wrote:
Hi Hans,
On Sat, Mar 5, 2011 at 1:52 PM, Hans Verkuilhverkuil@xs4all.nl wrote:
On Friday, March 04, 2011 21:10:05 Mauro Carvalho Chehab wrote:
Em 03-03-2011 07:25, Laurent Pinchart escreveu:
...
> v4l: Group media bus pixel codes by types and sort them alphabetically
The presence of those mediabus names against the traditional fourcc codes at the API adds some mess to the media controller. Not sure how to solve, but maybe the best way is to add a table at the V4L2 API associating each media bus format to the corresponding V4L2 fourcc codes.
You can't do that in general. Only for specific hardware platforms. If you could do it, then we would have never bothered creating these mediabus fourccs.
How a mediabus fourcc translates to a pixelcode (== memory format) depends entirely on the hardware capabilities (mostly that of the DMA engine).
May I ask you one question here? (not entirely related to this patch set). Why pixelcode != mediabus fourcc? e.g. OMAP2 camera driver talks to sensor through subdev interface and sets its own output pixelformat depending on sensor's mediabus fourcc. So it needs a translation table mbus_pixelcode -> pixelformat. Why can't it be pixelformat -> pixelformat ?
Let me try to explain, struct v4l2_mbus_framefmt::code (pixelcode) describes how data is transfered/sampled on the camera parallel or serial bus. It defines bus width, data alignment and how many data samples form a single pixel.
struct v4l2_pix_format::pixelformat (fourcc) on the other hand describes how the image data is stored in memory.
As Hans pointed out there is not always a 1:1 correspondence, e.g.
The relation may not be 1:1 but they are related.
It should be documented somehow how those are related, otherwise, the API will be obscure.
Yeah, I agree this is a good point now when the media bus formats have become public. Perhaps by a misunderstanding I just thought it is all more about some utility functions in the v4l core rather than the documentation.
Yes, now you got my point.
Of course, the output format may be different than the internal formats, since some bridges have format converters.
- Both V4L2_MBUS_FMT_YUYV8_1x16 and V4L2_MBUS_FMT_YUYV8_2x8 may being
translating to V4L2_PIX_FMT_YUYV fourcc,
Ok, so there is a relationship between them.
- Or the DMA engine in the camera host interface might be capable of
converting single V4L2_MBUS_FMT_RGB555 pixelcode to V4L2_PIX_FMT_RGB555 and V4L2_PIX_FMT_RGB565 fourcc's. So the user can choose any of them they seem most suitable and the hardware takes care of the conversion.
No. You can't create an additional bit. if V4L2_MBUS_FMT_RGB555 provides 5 bits for all color channels, the only corresponding format is V4L2_PIX_FMT_RGB555, as there's no way to get 6 bits for green, if the hardware sampled it with 5 bits. Ok, some bridge may fill with 0 an "extra" bit for green, but this is the bridge doing a format conversion.
In general, for all RGB formats, a mapping between MBUS_FMT_RGBxxx and the corresponding fourcc formats could be mapped on two formats only: V4L2_PIX_FMT_RGBxxx or V4L2_PIX_FMT_BGRxxx.
OK, that might not have been a good example, of one mbus pixel code to many fourccs relationship. There will be always conversion between media bus pixelcode and fourccs as they are in completely different domains. And the method of conversion from media bus formats may be an intrinsic property of a bridge, changing across various bridges, e.g. different endianness may be used.
So I think in general it is good to clearly specify the relationships in the API but we need to be aware of varying "correlation ratio" across the formats and that we should perhaps operate on ranges rather than single formats. Perhaps the API should provide guidelines of which formats should be used when to obtain best results.
It makes sense to operate in ranges are you're proposing.
A somewhat unrelated question that occurred to me today: what happens when a format change happens while streaming?
Considering that some formats need more bits than others, this could lead into buffer overflows, either internally at the device or externally, on bridges that just forward whatever it receives to the DMA buffers (there are some that just does that). I didn't see anything inside the mc code preventing such condition to happen, and probably implementing it won't be an easy job. So, one alternative would be to require some special CAPS if userspace tries to set the mbus format directly, or to recommend userspace to create media controller nodes with 0600 permission.
Comments?
Thanks, Mauro.