On Thu, Nov 23, 2017 at 12:25 AM, Sakari Ailus sakari.ailus@iki.fi wrote:
On Wed, Nov 22, 2017 at 08:37:04PM -0800, Tim Harvey wrote:
On Tue, Nov 21, 2017 at 11:36 PM, Sakari Ailus sakari.ailus@iki.fi wrote:
Hi Tim,
On Thu, Nov 09, 2017 at 10:45:33AM -0800, Tim Harvey wrote:
Cc: Rob Herring robh@kernel.org Signed-off-by: Tim Harvey tharvey@gateworks.com
v3:
- fix typo
v2:
- add vendor prefix and remove _ from vidout-portcfg
- remove _ from labels
- remove max-pixel-rate property
- describe and provide example for single output port
- update to new audio port bindings
.../devicetree/bindings/media/i2c/tda1997x.txt | 179 +++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 179 insertions(+) create mode 100644 Documentation/devicetree/bindings/media/i2c/tda1997x.txt
diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/media/i2c/tda1997x.txt b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/media/i2c/tda1997x.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..dd37f14 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/media/i2c/tda1997x.txt @@ -0,0 +1,179 @@ +Device-Tree bindings for the NXP TDA1997x HDMI receiver
+The TDA19971/73 are HDMI video receivers.
+The TDA19971 Video port output pins can be used as follows:
- RGB 8bit per color (24 bits total): R[11:4] B[11:4] G[11:4]
- YUV444 8bit per color (24 bits total): Y[11:4] Cr[11:4] Cb[11:4]
- YUV422 semi-planar 8bit per component (16 bits total): Y[11:4] CbCr[11:4]
- YUV422 semi-planar 10bit per component (20 bits total): Y[11:2] CbCr[11:2]
- YUV422 semi-planar 12bit per component (24 bits total): - Y[11:0] CbCr[11:0]
- YUV422 BT656 8bit per component (8 bits total): YCbCr[11:4] (2-cycles)
- YUV422 BT656 10bit per component (10 bits total): YCbCr[11:2] (2-cycles)
- YUV422 BT656 12bit per component (12 bits total): YCbCr[11:0] (2-cycles)
+The TDA19973 Video port output pins can be used as follows:
- RGB 12bit per color (36 bits total): R[11:0] B[11:0] G[11:0]
- YUV444 12bit per color (36 bits total): Y[11:0] Cb[11:0] Cr[11:0]
- YUV422 semi-planar 12bit per component (24 bits total): Y[11:0] CbCr[11:0]
- YUV422 BT656 12bit per component (12 bits total): YCbCr[11:0] (2-cycles)
+The Video port output pins are mapped via 4-bit 'pin groups' allowing +for a variety of connection possibilities including swapping pin order within +pin groups. The video_portcfg device-tree property consists of register mapping +pairs which map a chip-specific VP output register to a 4-bit pin group. If +the pin group needs to be bit-swapped you can use the *_S pin-group defines.
+Required Properties:
- compatible :
- "nxp,tda19971" for the TDA19971
- "nxp,tda19973" for the TDA19973
- reg : I2C slave address
- interrupts : The interrupt number
- DOVDD-supply : Digital I/O supply
- DVDD-supply : Digital Core supply
- AVDD-supply : Analog supply
- nxp,vidout-portcfg : array of pairs mapping VP output pins to pin groups.
+Optional Properties:
- nxp,audout-format : DAI bus format: "i2s" or "spdif".
- nxp,audout-width : width of audio output data bus (1-4).
- nxp,audout-layout : data layout (0=AP0 used, 1=AP0/AP1/AP2/AP3 used).
- nxp,audout-mclk-fs : Multiplication factor between stream rate and codec
mclk.
+The device node must contain one 'port' child node for its digital output +video port, in accordance with the video interface bindings defined in +Documentation/devicetree/bindings/media/video-interfaces.txt.
Could you add that this port has one endpoint node as well? (Unless you support multiple, that is.)
Sure... will clarify as:
The device node must contain one endpoint 'port' child node for its digital output video port, in accordance with the video interface bindings defined in Documentation/devicetree/bindings/media/video-interfaces.txt.
I think it'd be clearer if you just add "The port node shall contain one endpoint child node".
ok
+Optional Endpoint Properties:
- The following three properties are defined in video-interfaces.txt and
- are valid for source endpoints only:
Transmitters? Don't you have an endpoint only in the port representing the transmitter?
I'm not usre what you mean.
The TDA1997x is an HDMI receiver meaning it receives HDMI and decodes it to a parallel video bus. HDMI transmitters are the opposite.
The parallel bus. If you mean that, then you could just say that. "Source endpoint" is a bit vague, or requires knowing V4L2.
agreed
Thanks,
Tim