Joerg-Cyril.Hoehle@t-systems.com wrote:
- When a parameter is set or restricted using a snd_pcm_hw_params_set*
- function, all of the other ranges will be updated to exclude as many
- impossible configurations as possible. Attempting to set a parameter
- outside of its acceptable range will result in the function failing
- and an error code being returned.
I'd like to check whether that's exactly what's happening.
- Consider the following scenario:
set_hw_params_period_near([in,out]10ms,[out]dir) yields 16ms and direction=0 <=> "exact match"
set_hw_params_buffer_size(X) set_hw_params()
So far, I thought that if ALSA replied with direction=0, then that corner stone of the configuration space was fixed.
This has nothing to do with the dir parameter.
The period_time parameter is fixed when the set(_near) function returns successfully.
The dir parameter tells whether the value is an exact integer, or if it's smaller or larger (such as 15.9 or 16.667).
OTOH, if constraint resolutions occurs at the time of set_hw_params() *again and finally*,
Indeed this occurs again because not all parameters might have been reduced to a single value yet.
ALSA may realize that the particularly large or small buffer size X is not reachable with the 16ms period, whereas a 50ms or 5ms period may allow buffer size X.
So what is the outcome? b) revised 5 or 50ms period with buffer size X, because 5 or 50ms is a near period?
Setting a parameter always happens in the context of the values of any other parameters that have been set, and all rules and restrictions implied by that.
Once a parameter has been reduced to a single value (or just to a smaller interval), it cannot be changed back.
c) 16ms period, error from set_buffer_size and success from set_hw_params as ALSA chooses an arbitrary buffer size (typically 4-8 periods)?
Yes.
The documentation may lead one to believe b) happens.
How so?
- Attempting to set a parameter
- outside of its acceptable range will result in the function failing
- and an error code being returned.
That does not seem to apply to the set_*_near() functions.
set_hw_params_period_time(2ms) may fail because it's too small for the device at hand, whereas set_hw_params_period_time_near(2ms) causes the smallest supported period to be chosen. Does this need clarification or is using *_near not "attempting to set a parameter"?
set_*_near() searches for the nearest value in the acceptable range, which it then attempts to set.
*_min and *_max appear to behave likewise: they set lower and upper bounds without checking whether these are reachable.
They do not 'set' the value, they just restrict the acceptable range; a limit that is outside the previously acceptable range is not an error because this does not result in an 'impossible' configuration. For example, assume that a device supports period times from 10 ms to 100 ms. Calling set_period_time_min(2ms) means "I accept anything in the range from 2 ms to infinity", so the resulting period time is the interval from 10 ms to 100 ms (i.e., unchanged). This is correct because all values in this interval indeed are >= 2 ms.
set_period_time_min(2ms) would fail if the maximum period time is already less than 2 ms, because then there wouldn't be any valid period time value left.
Regards, Clemens