v4l2-controls.txt 24 KB

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  1. Introduction
  2. ============
  3. The V4L2 control API seems simple enough, but quickly becomes very hard to
  4. implement correctly in drivers. But much of the code needed to handle controls
  5. is actually not driver specific and can be moved to the V4L core framework.
  6. After all, the only part that a driver developer is interested in is:
  7. 1) How do I add a control?
  8. 2) How do I set the control's value? (i.e. s_ctrl)
  9. And occasionally:
  10. 3) How do I get the control's value? (i.e. g_volatile_ctrl)
  11. 4) How do I validate the user's proposed control value? (i.e. try_ctrl)
  12. All the rest is something that can be done centrally.
  13. The control framework was created in order to implement all the rules of the
  14. V4L2 specification with respect to controls in a central place. And to make
  15. life as easy as possible for the driver developer.
  16. Note that the control framework relies on the presence of a struct v4l2_device
  17. for V4L2 drivers and struct v4l2_subdev for sub-device drivers.
  18. Objects in the framework
  19. ========================
  20. There are two main objects:
  21. The v4l2_ctrl object describes the control properties and keeps track of the
  22. control's value (both the current value and the proposed new value).
  23. v4l2_ctrl_handler is the object that keeps track of controls. It maintains a
  24. list of v4l2_ctrl objects that it owns and another list of references to
  25. controls, possibly to controls owned by other handlers.
  26. Basic usage for V4L2 and sub-device drivers
  27. ===========================================
  28. 1) Prepare the driver:
  29. 1.1) Add the handler to your driver's top-level struct:
  30. struct foo_dev {
  31. ...
  32. struct v4l2_ctrl_handler ctrl_handler;
  33. ...
  34. };
  35. struct foo_dev *foo;
  36. 1.2) Initialize the handler:
  37. v4l2_ctrl_handler_init(&foo->ctrl_handler, nr_of_controls);
  38. The second argument is a hint telling the function how many controls this
  39. handler is expected to handle. It will allocate a hashtable based on this
  40. information. It is a hint only.
  41. 1.3) Hook the control handler into the driver:
  42. 1.3.1) For V4L2 drivers do this:
  43. struct foo_dev {
  44. ...
  45. struct v4l2_device v4l2_dev;
  46. ...
  47. struct v4l2_ctrl_handler ctrl_handler;
  48. ...
  49. };
  50. foo->v4l2_dev.ctrl_handler = &foo->ctrl_handler;
  51. Where foo->v4l2_dev is of type struct v4l2_device.
  52. Finally, remove all control functions from your v4l2_ioctl_ops:
  53. vidioc_queryctrl, vidioc_querymenu, vidioc_g_ctrl, vidioc_s_ctrl,
  54. vidioc_g_ext_ctrls, vidioc_try_ext_ctrls and vidioc_s_ext_ctrls.
  55. Those are now no longer needed.
  56. 1.3.2) For sub-device drivers do this:
  57. struct foo_dev {
  58. ...
  59. struct v4l2_subdev sd;
  60. ...
  61. struct v4l2_ctrl_handler ctrl_handler;
  62. ...
  63. };
  64. foo->sd.ctrl_handler = &foo->ctrl_handler;
  65. Where foo->sd is of type struct v4l2_subdev.
  66. And set all core control ops in your struct v4l2_subdev_core_ops to these
  67. helpers:
  68. .queryctrl = v4l2_subdev_queryctrl,
  69. .querymenu = v4l2_subdev_querymenu,
  70. .g_ctrl = v4l2_subdev_g_ctrl,
  71. .s_ctrl = v4l2_subdev_s_ctrl,
  72. .g_ext_ctrls = v4l2_subdev_g_ext_ctrls,
  73. .try_ext_ctrls = v4l2_subdev_try_ext_ctrls,
  74. .s_ext_ctrls = v4l2_subdev_s_ext_ctrls,
  75. Note: this is a temporary solution only. Once all V4L2 drivers that depend
  76. on subdev drivers are converted to the control framework these helpers will
  77. no longer be needed.
  78. 1.4) Clean up the handler at the end:
  79. v4l2_ctrl_handler_free(&foo->ctrl_handler);
  80. 2) Add controls:
  81. You add non-menu controls by calling v4l2_ctrl_new_std:
  82. struct v4l2_ctrl *v4l2_ctrl_new_std(struct v4l2_ctrl_handler *hdl,
  83. const struct v4l2_ctrl_ops *ops,
  84. u32 id, s32 min, s32 max, u32 step, s32 def);
  85. Menu controls are added by calling v4l2_ctrl_new_std_menu:
  86. struct v4l2_ctrl *v4l2_ctrl_new_std_menu(struct v4l2_ctrl_handler *hdl,
  87. const struct v4l2_ctrl_ops *ops,
  88. u32 id, s32 max, s32 skip_mask, s32 def);
  89. These functions are typically called right after the v4l2_ctrl_handler_init:
  90. v4l2_ctrl_handler_init(&foo->ctrl_handler, nr_of_controls);
  91. v4l2_ctrl_new_std(&foo->ctrl_handler, &foo_ctrl_ops,
  92. V4L2_CID_BRIGHTNESS, 0, 255, 1, 128);
  93. v4l2_ctrl_new_std(&foo->ctrl_handler, &foo_ctrl_ops,
  94. V4L2_CID_CONTRAST, 0, 255, 1, 128);
  95. v4l2_ctrl_new_std_menu(&foo->ctrl_handler, &foo_ctrl_ops,
  96. V4L2_CID_POWER_LINE_FREQUENCY,
  97. V4L2_CID_POWER_LINE_FREQUENCY_60HZ, 0,
  98. V4L2_CID_POWER_LINE_FREQUENCY_DISABLED);
  99. ...
  100. if (foo->ctrl_handler.error) {
  101. int err = foo->ctrl_handler.error;
  102. v4l2_ctrl_handler_free(&foo->ctrl_handler);
  103. return err;
  104. }
  105. The v4l2_ctrl_new_std function returns the v4l2_ctrl pointer to the new
  106. control, but if you do not need to access the pointer outside the control ops,
  107. then there is no need to store it.
  108. The v4l2_ctrl_new_std function will fill in most fields based on the control
  109. ID except for the min, max, step and default values. These are passed in the
  110. last four arguments. These values are driver specific while control attributes
  111. like type, name, flags are all global. The control's current value will be set
  112. to the default value.
  113. The v4l2_ctrl_new_std_menu function is very similar but it is used for menu
  114. controls. There is no min argument since that is always 0 for menu controls,
  115. and instead of a step there is a skip_mask argument: if bit X is 1, then menu
  116. item X is skipped.
  117. Note that if something fails, the function will return NULL or an error and
  118. set ctrl_handler->error to the error code. If ctrl_handler->error was already
  119. set, then it will just return and do nothing. This is also true for
  120. v4l2_ctrl_handler_init if it cannot allocate the internal data structure.
  121. This makes it easy to init the handler and just add all controls and only check
  122. the error code at the end. Saves a lot of repetitive error checking.
  123. It is recommended to add controls in ascending control ID order: it will be
  124. a bit faster that way.
  125. 3) Optionally force initial control setup:
  126. v4l2_ctrl_handler_setup(&foo->ctrl_handler);
  127. This will call s_ctrl for all controls unconditionally. Effectively this
  128. initializes the hardware to the default control values. It is recommended
  129. that you do this as this ensures that both the internal data structures and
  130. the hardware are in sync.
  131. 4) Finally: implement the v4l2_ctrl_ops
  132. static const struct v4l2_ctrl_ops foo_ctrl_ops = {
  133. .s_ctrl = foo_s_ctrl,
  134. };
  135. Usually all you need is s_ctrl:
  136. static int foo_s_ctrl(struct v4l2_ctrl *ctrl)
  137. {
  138. struct foo *state = container_of(ctrl->handler, struct foo, ctrl_handler);
  139. switch (ctrl->id) {
  140. case V4L2_CID_BRIGHTNESS:
  141. write_reg(0x123, ctrl->val);
  142. break;
  143. case V4L2_CID_CONTRAST:
  144. write_reg(0x456, ctrl->val);
  145. break;
  146. }
  147. return 0;
  148. }
  149. The control ops are called with the v4l2_ctrl pointer as argument.
  150. The new control value has already been validated, so all you need to do is
  151. to actually update the hardware registers.
  152. You're done! And this is sufficient for most of the drivers we have. No need
  153. to do any validation of control values, or implement QUERYCTRL/QUERYMENU. And
  154. G/S_CTRL as well as G/TRY/S_EXT_CTRLS are automatically supported.
  155. ==============================================================================
  156. The remainder of this document deals with more advanced topics and scenarios.
  157. In practice the basic usage as described above is sufficient for most drivers.
  158. ===============================================================================
  159. Inheriting Controls
  160. ===================
  161. When a sub-device is registered with a V4L2 driver by calling
  162. v4l2_device_register_subdev() and the ctrl_handler fields of both v4l2_subdev
  163. and v4l2_device are set, then the controls of the subdev will become
  164. automatically available in the V4L2 driver as well. If the subdev driver
  165. contains controls that already exist in the V4L2 driver, then those will be
  166. skipped (so a V4L2 driver can always override a subdev control).
  167. What happens here is that v4l2_device_register_subdev() calls
  168. v4l2_ctrl_add_handler() adding the controls of the subdev to the controls
  169. of v4l2_device.
  170. Accessing Control Values
  171. ========================
  172. The v4l2_ctrl struct contains these two unions:
  173. /* The current control value. */
  174. union {
  175. s32 val;
  176. s64 val64;
  177. char *string;
  178. } cur;
  179. /* The new control value. */
  180. union {
  181. s32 val;
  182. s64 val64;
  183. char *string;
  184. };
  185. Within the control ops you can freely use these. The val and val64 speak for
  186. themselves. The string pointers point to character buffers of length
  187. ctrl->maximum + 1, and are always 0-terminated.
  188. In most cases 'cur' contains the current cached control value. When you create
  189. a new control this value is made identical to the default value. After calling
  190. v4l2_ctrl_handler_setup() this value is passed to the hardware. It is generally
  191. a good idea to call this function.
  192. Whenever a new value is set that new value is automatically cached. This means
  193. that most drivers do not need to implement the g_volatile_ctrl() op. The
  194. exception is for controls that return a volatile register such as a signal
  195. strength read-out that changes continuously. In that case you will need to
  196. implement g_volatile_ctrl like this:
  197. static int foo_g_volatile_ctrl(struct v4l2_ctrl *ctrl)
  198. {
  199. switch (ctrl->id) {
  200. case V4L2_CID_BRIGHTNESS:
  201. ctrl->cur.val = read_reg(0x123);
  202. break;
  203. }
  204. }
  205. The 'new value' union is not used in g_volatile_ctrl. In general controls
  206. that need to implement g_volatile_ctrl are read-only controls.
  207. Note that if one or more controls in a control cluster are marked as volatile,
  208. then all the controls in the cluster are seen as volatile.
  209. To mark a control as volatile you have to set the is_volatile flag:
  210. ctrl = v4l2_ctrl_new_std(&sd->ctrl_handler, ...);
  211. if (ctrl)
  212. ctrl->is_volatile = 1;
  213. For try/s_ctrl the new values (i.e. as passed by the user) are filled in and
  214. you can modify them in try_ctrl or set them in s_ctrl. The 'cur' union
  215. contains the current value, which you can use (but not change!) as well.
  216. If s_ctrl returns 0 (OK), then the control framework will copy the new final
  217. values to the 'cur' union.
  218. While in g_volatile/s/try_ctrl you can access the value of all controls owned
  219. by the same handler since the handler's lock is held. If you need to access
  220. the value of controls owned by other handlers, then you have to be very careful
  221. not to introduce deadlocks.
  222. Outside of the control ops you have to go through to helper functions to get
  223. or set a single control value safely in your driver:
  224. s32 v4l2_ctrl_g_ctrl(struct v4l2_ctrl *ctrl);
  225. int v4l2_ctrl_s_ctrl(struct v4l2_ctrl *ctrl, s32 val);
  226. These functions go through the control framework just as VIDIOC_G/S_CTRL ioctls
  227. do. Don't use these inside the control ops g_volatile/s/try_ctrl, though, that
  228. will result in a deadlock since these helpers lock the handler as well.
  229. You can also take the handler lock yourself:
  230. mutex_lock(&state->ctrl_handler.lock);
  231. printk(KERN_INFO "String value is '%s'\n", ctrl1->cur.string);
  232. printk(KERN_INFO "Integer value is '%s'\n", ctrl2->cur.val);
  233. mutex_unlock(&state->ctrl_handler.lock);
  234. Menu Controls
  235. =============
  236. The v4l2_ctrl struct contains this union:
  237. union {
  238. u32 step;
  239. u32 menu_skip_mask;
  240. };
  241. For menu controls menu_skip_mask is used. What it does is that it allows you
  242. to easily exclude certain menu items. This is used in the VIDIOC_QUERYMENU
  243. implementation where you can return -EINVAL if a certain menu item is not
  244. present. Note that VIDIOC_QUERYCTRL always returns a step value of 1 for
  245. menu controls.
  246. A good example is the MPEG Audio Layer II Bitrate menu control where the
  247. menu is a list of standardized possible bitrates. But in practice hardware
  248. implementations will only support a subset of those. By setting the skip
  249. mask you can tell the framework which menu items should be skipped. Setting
  250. it to 0 means that all menu items are supported.
  251. You set this mask either through the v4l2_ctrl_config struct for a custom
  252. control, or by calling v4l2_ctrl_new_std_menu().
  253. Custom Controls
  254. ===============
  255. Driver specific controls can be created using v4l2_ctrl_new_custom():
  256. static const struct v4l2_ctrl_config ctrl_filter = {
  257. .ops = &ctrl_custom_ops,
  258. .id = V4L2_CID_MPEG_CX2341X_VIDEO_SPATIAL_FILTER,
  259. .name = "Spatial Filter",
  260. .type = V4L2_CTRL_TYPE_INTEGER,
  261. .flags = V4L2_CTRL_FLAG_SLIDER,
  262. .max = 15,
  263. .step = 1,
  264. };
  265. ctrl = v4l2_ctrl_new_custom(&foo->ctrl_handler, &ctrl_filter, NULL);
  266. The last argument is the priv pointer which can be set to driver-specific
  267. private data.
  268. The v4l2_ctrl_config struct also has fields to set the is_private and is_volatile
  269. flags.
  270. If the name field is not set, then the framework will assume this is a standard
  271. control and will fill in the name, type and flags fields accordingly.
  272. Active and Grabbed Controls
  273. ===========================
  274. If you get more complex relationships between controls, then you may have to
  275. activate and deactivate controls. For example, if the Chroma AGC control is
  276. on, then the Chroma Gain control is inactive. That is, you may set it, but
  277. the value will not be used by the hardware as long as the automatic gain
  278. control is on. Typically user interfaces can disable such input fields.
  279. You can set the 'active' status using v4l2_ctrl_activate(). By default all
  280. controls are active. Note that the framework does not check for this flag.
  281. It is meant purely for GUIs. The function is typically called from within
  282. s_ctrl.
  283. The other flag is the 'grabbed' flag. A grabbed control means that you cannot
  284. change it because it is in use by some resource. Typical examples are MPEG
  285. bitrate controls that cannot be changed while capturing is in progress.
  286. If a control is set to 'grabbed' using v4l2_ctrl_grab(), then the framework
  287. will return -EBUSY if an attempt is made to set this control. The
  288. v4l2_ctrl_grab() function is typically called from the driver when it
  289. starts or stops streaming.
  290. Control Clusters
  291. ================
  292. By default all controls are independent from the others. But in more
  293. complex scenarios you can get dependencies from one control to another.
  294. In that case you need to 'cluster' them:
  295. struct foo {
  296. struct v4l2_ctrl_handler ctrl_handler;
  297. #define AUDIO_CL_VOLUME (0)
  298. #define AUDIO_CL_MUTE (1)
  299. struct v4l2_ctrl *audio_cluster[2];
  300. ...
  301. };
  302. state->audio_cluster[AUDIO_CL_VOLUME] =
  303. v4l2_ctrl_new_std(&state->ctrl_handler, ...);
  304. state->audio_cluster[AUDIO_CL_MUTE] =
  305. v4l2_ctrl_new_std(&state->ctrl_handler, ...);
  306. v4l2_ctrl_cluster(ARRAY_SIZE(state->audio_cluster), state->audio_cluster);
  307. From now on whenever one or more of the controls belonging to the same
  308. cluster is set (or 'gotten', or 'tried'), only the control ops of the first
  309. control ('volume' in this example) is called. You effectively create a new
  310. composite control. Similar to how a 'struct' works in C.
  311. So when s_ctrl is called with V4L2_CID_AUDIO_VOLUME as argument, you should set
  312. all two controls belonging to the audio_cluster:
  313. static int foo_s_ctrl(struct v4l2_ctrl *ctrl)
  314. {
  315. struct foo *state = container_of(ctrl->handler, struct foo, ctrl_handler);
  316. switch (ctrl->id) {
  317. case V4L2_CID_AUDIO_VOLUME: {
  318. struct v4l2_ctrl *mute = ctrl->cluster[AUDIO_CL_MUTE];
  319. write_reg(0x123, mute->val ? 0 : ctrl->val);
  320. break;
  321. }
  322. case V4L2_CID_CONTRAST:
  323. write_reg(0x456, ctrl->val);
  324. break;
  325. }
  326. return 0;
  327. }
  328. In the example above the following are equivalent for the VOLUME case:
  329. ctrl == ctrl->cluster[AUDIO_CL_VOLUME] == state->audio_cluster[AUDIO_CL_VOLUME]
  330. ctrl->cluster[AUDIO_CL_MUTE] == state->audio_cluster[AUDIO_CL_MUTE]
  331. Note that controls in a cluster may be NULL. For example, if for some
  332. reason mute was never added (because the hardware doesn't support that
  333. particular feature), then mute will be NULL. So in that case we have a
  334. cluster of 2 controls, of which only 1 is actually instantiated. The
  335. only restriction is that the first control of the cluster must always be
  336. present, since that is the 'master' control of the cluster. The master
  337. control is the one that identifies the cluster and that provides the
  338. pointer to the v4l2_ctrl_ops struct that is used for that cluster.
  339. Obviously, all controls in the cluster array must be initialized to either
  340. a valid control or to NULL.
  341. In rare cases you might want to know which controls of a cluster actually
  342. were set explicitly by the user. For this you can check the 'is_new' flag of
  343. each control. For example, in the case of a volume/mute cluster the 'is_new'
  344. flag of the mute control would be set if the user called VIDIOC_S_CTRL for
  345. mute only. If the user would call VIDIOC_S_EXT_CTRLS for both mute and volume
  346. controls, then the 'is_new' flag would be 1 for both controls.
  347. The 'is_new' flag is always 1 when called from v4l2_ctrl_handler_setup().
  348. VIDIOC_LOG_STATUS Support
  349. =========================
  350. This ioctl allow you to dump the current status of a driver to the kernel log.
  351. The v4l2_ctrl_handler_log_status(ctrl_handler, prefix) can be used to dump the
  352. value of the controls owned by the given handler to the log. You can supply a
  353. prefix as well. If the prefix didn't end with a space, then ': ' will be added
  354. for you.
  355. Different Handlers for Different Video Nodes
  356. ============================================
  357. Usually the V4L2 driver has just one control handler that is global for
  358. all video nodes. But you can also specify different control handlers for
  359. different video nodes. You can do that by manually setting the ctrl_handler
  360. field of struct video_device.
  361. That is no problem if there are no subdevs involved but if there are, then
  362. you need to block the automatic merging of subdev controls to the global
  363. control handler. You do that by simply setting the ctrl_handler field in
  364. struct v4l2_device to NULL. Now v4l2_device_register_subdev() will no longer
  365. merge subdev controls.
  366. After each subdev was added, you will then have to call v4l2_ctrl_add_handler
  367. manually to add the subdev's control handler (sd->ctrl_handler) to the desired
  368. control handler. This control handler may be specific to the video_device or
  369. for a subset of video_device's. For example: the radio device nodes only have
  370. audio controls, while the video and vbi device nodes share the same control
  371. handler for the audio and video controls.
  372. If you want to have one handler (e.g. for a radio device node) have a subset
  373. of another handler (e.g. for a video device node), then you should first add
  374. the controls to the first handler, add the other controls to the second
  375. handler and finally add the first handler to the second. For example:
  376. v4l2_ctrl_new_std(&radio_ctrl_handler, &radio_ops, V4L2_CID_AUDIO_VOLUME, ...);
  377. v4l2_ctrl_new_std(&radio_ctrl_handler, &radio_ops, V4L2_CID_AUDIO_MUTE, ...);
  378. v4l2_ctrl_new_std(&video_ctrl_handler, &video_ops, V4L2_CID_BRIGHTNESS, ...);
  379. v4l2_ctrl_new_std(&video_ctrl_handler, &video_ops, V4L2_CID_CONTRAST, ...);
  380. v4l2_ctrl_add_handler(&video_ctrl_handler, &radio_ctrl_handler);
  381. Or you can add specific controls to a handler:
  382. volume = v4l2_ctrl_new_std(&video_ctrl_handler, &ops, V4L2_CID_AUDIO_VOLUME, ...);
  383. v4l2_ctrl_new_std(&video_ctrl_handler, &ops, V4L2_CID_BRIGHTNESS, ...);
  384. v4l2_ctrl_new_std(&video_ctrl_handler, &ops, V4L2_CID_CONTRAST, ...);
  385. v4l2_ctrl_add_ctrl(&radio_ctrl_handler, volume);
  386. What you should not do is make two identical controls for two handlers.
  387. For example:
  388. v4l2_ctrl_new_std(&radio_ctrl_handler, &radio_ops, V4L2_CID_AUDIO_MUTE, ...);
  389. v4l2_ctrl_new_std(&video_ctrl_handler, &video_ops, V4L2_CID_AUDIO_MUTE, ...);
  390. This would be bad since muting the radio would not change the video mute
  391. control. The rule is to have one control for each hardware 'knob' that you
  392. can twiddle.
  393. Finding Controls
  394. ================
  395. Normally you have created the controls yourself and you can store the struct
  396. v4l2_ctrl pointer into your own struct.
  397. But sometimes you need to find a control from another handler that you do
  398. not own. For example, if you have to find a volume control from a subdev.
  399. You can do that by calling v4l2_ctrl_find:
  400. struct v4l2_ctrl *volume;
  401. volume = v4l2_ctrl_find(sd->ctrl_handler, V4L2_CID_AUDIO_VOLUME);
  402. Since v4l2_ctrl_find will lock the handler you have to be careful where you
  403. use it. For example, this is not a good idea:
  404. struct v4l2_ctrl_handler ctrl_handler;
  405. v4l2_ctrl_new_std(&ctrl_handler, &video_ops, V4L2_CID_BRIGHTNESS, ...);
  406. v4l2_ctrl_new_std(&ctrl_handler, &video_ops, V4L2_CID_CONTRAST, ...);
  407. ...and in video_ops.s_ctrl:
  408. case V4L2_CID_BRIGHTNESS:
  409. contrast = v4l2_find_ctrl(&ctrl_handler, V4L2_CID_CONTRAST);
  410. ...
  411. When s_ctrl is called by the framework the ctrl_handler.lock is already taken, so
  412. attempting to find another control from the same handler will deadlock.
  413. It is recommended not to use this function from inside the control ops.
  414. Inheriting Controls
  415. ===================
  416. When one control handler is added to another using v4l2_ctrl_add_handler, then
  417. by default all controls from one are merged to the other. But a subdev might
  418. have low-level controls that make sense for some advanced embedded system, but
  419. not when it is used in consumer-level hardware. In that case you want to keep
  420. those low-level controls local to the subdev. You can do this by simply
  421. setting the 'is_private' flag of the control to 1:
  422. static const struct v4l2_ctrl_config ctrl_private = {
  423. .ops = &ctrl_custom_ops,
  424. .id = V4L2_CID_...,
  425. .name = "Some Private Control",
  426. .type = V4L2_CTRL_TYPE_INTEGER,
  427. .max = 15,
  428. .step = 1,
  429. .is_private = 1,
  430. };
  431. ctrl = v4l2_ctrl_new_custom(&foo->ctrl_handler, &ctrl_private, NULL);
  432. These controls will now be skipped when v4l2_ctrl_add_handler is called.
  433. V4L2_CTRL_TYPE_CTRL_CLASS Controls
  434. ==================================
  435. Controls of this type can be used by GUIs to get the name of the control class.
  436. A fully featured GUI can make a dialog with multiple tabs with each tab
  437. containing the controls belonging to a particular control class. The name of
  438. each tab can be found by querying a special control with ID <control class | 1>.
  439. Drivers do not have to care about this. The framework will automatically add
  440. a control of this type whenever the first control belonging to a new control
  441. class is added.
  442. Differences from the Spec
  443. =========================
  444. There are a few places where the framework acts slightly differently from the
  445. V4L2 Specification. Those differences are described in this section. We will
  446. have to see whether we need to adjust the spec or not.
  447. 1) It is no longer required to have all controls contained in a
  448. v4l2_ext_control array be from the same control class. The framework will be
  449. able to handle any type of control in the array. You need to set ctrl_class
  450. to 0 in order to enable this. If ctrl_class is non-zero, then it will still
  451. check that all controls belong to that control class.
  452. If you set ctrl_class to 0 and count to 0, then it will only return an error
  453. if there are no controls at all.
  454. 2) Clarified the way error_idx works. For get and set it will be equal to
  455. count if nothing was done yet. If it is less than count then only the controls
  456. up to error_idx-1 were successfully applied.
  457. 3) When attempting to read a button control the framework will return -EACCES
  458. instead of -EINVAL as stated in the spec. It seems to make more sense since
  459. button controls are write-only controls.
  460. 4) Attempting to write to a read-only control will return -EACCES instead of
  461. -EINVAL as the spec says.
  462. 5) The spec does not mention what should happen when you try to set/get a
  463. control class controls. ivtv currently returns -EINVAL (indicating that the
  464. control ID does not exist) while the framework will return -EACCES, which
  465. makes more sense.
  466. Proposals for Extensions
  467. ========================
  468. Some ideas for future extensions to the spec:
  469. 1) Add a V4L2_CTRL_FLAG_HEX to have values shown as hexadecimal instead of
  470. decimal. Useful for e.g. video_mute_yuv.
  471. 2) It is possible to mark in the controls array which controls have been
  472. successfully written and which failed by for example adding a bit to the
  473. control ID. Not sure if it is worth the effort, though.
  474. 3) Trying to set volatile inactive controls should result in -EACCESS.
  475. 4) Add a new flag to mark volatile controls. Any application that wants
  476. to store the state of the controls can then skip volatile inactive controls.
  477. Currently it is not possible to detect such controls.