Commit 99bb078e authored by Laurent Pinchart's avatar Laurent Pinchart Committed by Mauro Carvalho Chehab

[media] v4l: Clearly document interactions between formats, controls and buffers

V4L2 exposes parameters that influence buffers sizes through the format
ioctls (VIDIOC_G_FMT, VIDIOC_TRY_FMT, VIDIOC_S_FMT, and possibly
VIDIOC_G_SELECTION and VIDIOC_S_SELECTION). Other parameters not part of
the format structure may also influence buffer sizes or buffer layout in
general. One existing such parameter is rotation, which is implemented
by the V4L2_CID_ROTATE control and thus exposed through the V4L2 control
ioctls.

The interaction between those parameters and buffers is currently only
partially specified by the V4L2 API. In particular interactions between
controls and buffers isn't specified at all. The behaviour of the
VIDIOC_S_FMT and VIDIOC_S_SELECTION ioctls when buffers are allocated is
also not fully specified.

This patch clearly defines and documents the interactions between
formats, selections, controls and buffers.

The preparatory discussions for the documentation change considered
completely disallowing controls that change the buffer size or layout,
in favour of extending the format API with a new ioctl that would bundle
those controls with format information. The idea has been rejected, as
this would essentially be a restricted version of the upcoming request
API that wouldn't bring any additional value.

Another option we have considered was to mandate the use of the request
API to modify controls that influence buffer size or layout. This has
also been rejected on the grounds that requiring the request API to
change rotation even when streaming is stopped would significantly
complicate implementation of drivers and usage of the V4L2 API for
applications.

Applications will however be required to use the upcoming request API to
change at runtime formats or controls that influence the buffer size or
layout, because of the need to synchronize buffers with the formats and
controls. Otherwise there would be no way to interpret the content of a
buffer correctly.
Signed-off-by: default avatarLaurent Pinchart <laurent.pinchart+renesas@ideasonboard.com>
Acked-by: default avatarSakari Ailus <sakari.ailus@linux.intel.com>
Acked-by: default avatarHans Verkuil <hans.verkuil@cisco.com>
Signed-off-by: default avatarMauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab@s-opensource.com>
parent aa23c053
......@@ -34,6 +34,116 @@ flags are copied from the OUTPUT video buffer to the CAPTURE video
buffer.
Interactions between formats, controls and buffers
==================================================
V4L2 exposes parameters that influence the buffer size, or the way data is
laid out in the buffer. Those parameters are exposed through both formats and
controls. One example of such a control is the ``V4L2_CID_ROTATE`` control
that modifies the direction in which pixels are stored in the buffer, as well
as the buffer size when the selected format includes padding at the end of
lines.
The set of information needed to interpret the content of a buffer (e.g. the
pixel format, the line stride, the tiling orientation or the rotation) is
collectively referred to in the rest of this section as the buffer layout.
Modifying formats or controls that influence the buffer size or layout require
the stream to be stopped. Any attempt at such a modification while the stream
is active shall cause the ioctl setting the format or the control to return
the ``EBUSY`` error code.
.. note::
The :c:func:`VIDIOC_S_SELECTION` ioctl can, depending on the hardware (for
instance if the device doesn't include a scaler), modify the format in
addition to the selection rectangle. Similarly, the
:c:func:`VIDIOC_S_INPUT`, :c:func:`VIDIOC_S_OUTPUT`, :c:func:`VIDIOC_S_STD`
and :c:func:`VIDIOC_S_DV_TIMINGS` ioctls can also modify the format and
selection rectangles. When those ioctls result in a buffer size or layout
change, drivers shall handle that condition as they would handle it in the
:c:func:`VIDIOC_S_FMT` ioctl in all cases described in this section.
Controls that only influence the buffer layout can be modified at any time
when the stream is stopped. As they don't influence the buffer size, no
special handling is needed to synchronize those controls with buffer
allocation.
Formats and controls that influence the buffer size interact with buffer
allocation. The simplest way to handle this is for drivers to always require
buffers to be reallocated in order to change those formats or controls. In
that case, to perform such changes, userspace applications shall first stop
the video stream with the :c:func:`VIDIOC_STREAMOFF` ioctl if it is running
and free all buffers with the :c:func:`VIDIOC_REQBUFS` ioctl if they are
allocated. The format or controls can then be modified, and buffers shall then
be reallocated and the stream restarted. A typical ioctl sequence is
#. VIDIOC_STREAMOFF
#. VIDIOC_REQBUFS(0)
#. VIDIOC_S_EXT_CTRLS
#. VIDIOC_S_FMT
#. VIDIOC_REQBUFS(n)
#. VIDIOC_QBUF
#. VIDIOC_STREAMON
The second :c:func:`VIDIOC_REQBUFS` call will take the new format and control
value into account to compute the buffer size to allocate. Applications can
also retrieve the size by calling the :c:func:`VIDIOC_G_FMT` ioctl if needed.
.. note::
The API doesn't mandate the above order for control (3.) and format (4.)
changes. Format and controls can be set in a different order, or even
interleaved, depending on the device and use case. For instance some
controls might behave differently for different pixel formats, in which
case the format might need to be set first.
When reallocation is required, any attempt to modify format or controls that
influences the buffer size while buffers are allocated shall cause the format
or control set ioctl to return the ``EBUSY`` error. Any attempt to queue a
buffer too small for the current format or controls shall cause the
:c:func:`VIDIOC_QBUF` ioctl to return a ``EINVAL`` error.
Buffer reallocation is an expensive operation. To avoid that cost, drivers can
(and are encouraged to) allow format or controls that influence the buffer
size to be changed with buffers allocated. In that case, a typical ioctl
sequence to modify format and controls is
#. VIDIOC_STREAMOFF
#. VIDIOC_S_EXT_CTRLS
#. VIDIOC_S_FMT
#. VIDIOC_QBUF
#. VIDIOC_STREAMON
For this sequence to operate correctly, queued buffers need to be large enough
for the new format or controls. Drivers shall return a ``ENOSPC`` error in
response to format change (:c:func:`VIDIOC_S_FMT`) or control changes
(:c:func:`VIDIOC_S_CTRL` or :c:func:`VIDIOC_S_EXT_CTRLS`) if buffers too small
for the new format are currently queued. As a simplification, drivers are
allowed to return a ``EBUSY`` error from these ioctls if any buffer is
currently queued, without checking the queued buffers sizes.
Additionally, drivers shall return a ``EINVAL`` error from the
:c:func:`VIDIOC_QBUF` ioctl if the buffer being queued is too small for the
current format or controls. Together, these requirements ensure that queued
buffers will always be large enough for the configured format and controls.
Userspace applications can query the buffer size required for a given format
and controls by first setting the desired control values and then trying the
desired format. The :c:func:`VIDIOC_TRY_FMT` ioctl will return the required
buffer size.
#. VIDIOC_S_EXT_CTRLS(x)
#. VIDIOC_TRY_FMT()
#. VIDIOC_S_EXT_CTRLS(y)
#. VIDIOC_TRY_FMT()
The :c:func:`VIDIOC_CREATE_BUFS` ioctl can then be used to allocate buffers
based on the queried sizes (for instance by allocating a set of buffers large
enough for all the desired formats and controls, or by allocating separate set
of appropriately sized buffers for each use case).
.. c:type:: v4l2_buffer
struct v4l2_buffer
......
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