1 .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 2 3 V4L2 sub-devices 4 ---------------- 5 6 Many drivers need to communicate with sub-devices. These devices can do all 7 sort of tasks, but most commonly they handle audio and/or video muxing, 8 encoding or decoding. For webcams common sub-devices are sensors and camera 9 controllers. 10 11 Usually these are I2C devices, but not necessarily. In order to provide the 12 driver with a consistent interface to these sub-devices the 13 :c:type:`v4l2_subdev` struct (v4l2-subdev.h) was created. 14 15 Each sub-device driver must have a :c:type:`v4l2_subdev` struct. This struct 16 can be stand-alone for simple sub-devices or it might be embedded in a larger 17 struct if more state information needs to be stored. Usually there is a 18 low-level device struct (e.g. ``i2c_client``) that contains the device data as 19 setup by the kernel. It is recommended to store that pointer in the private 20 data of :c:type:`v4l2_subdev` using :c:func:`v4l2_set_subdevdata`. That makes 21 it easy to go from a :c:type:`v4l2_subdev` to the actual low-level bus-specific 22 device data. 23 24 You also need a way to go from the low-level struct to :c:type:`v4l2_subdev`. 25 For the common i2c_client struct the i2c_set_clientdata() call is used to store 26 a :c:type:`v4l2_subdev` pointer, for other buses you may have to use other 27 methods. 28 29 Bridges might also need to store per-subdev private data, such as a pointer to 30 bridge-specific per-subdev private data. The :c:type:`v4l2_subdev` structure 31 provides host private data for that purpose that can be accessed with 32 :c:func:`v4l2_get_subdev_hostdata` and :c:func:`v4l2_set_subdev_hostdata`. 33 34 From the bridge driver perspective, you load the sub-device module and somehow 35 obtain the :c:type:`v4l2_subdev` pointer. For i2c devices this is easy: you call 36 ``i2c_get_clientdata()``. For other buses something similar needs to be done. 37 Helper functions exist for sub-devices on an I2C bus that do most of this 38 tricky work for you. 39 40 Each :c:type:`v4l2_subdev` contains function pointers that sub-device drivers 41 can implement (or leave ``NULL`` if it is not applicable). Since sub-devices can 42 do so many different things and you do not want to end up with a huge ops struct 43 of which only a handful of ops are commonly implemented, the function pointers 44 are sorted according to category and each category has its own ops struct. 45 46 The top-level ops struct contains pointers to the category ops structs, which 47 may be NULL if the subdev driver does not support anything from that category. 48 49 It looks like this: 50 51 .. code-block:: c 52 53 struct v4l2_subdev_core_ops { 54 int (*log_status)(struct v4l2_subdev *sd); 55 int (*init)(struct v4l2_subdev *sd, u32 val); 56 ... 57 }; 58 59 struct v4l2_subdev_tuner_ops { 60 ... 61 }; 62 63 struct v4l2_subdev_audio_ops { 64 ... 65 }; 66 67 struct v4l2_subdev_video_ops { 68 ... 69 }; 70 71 struct v4l2_subdev_pad_ops { 72 ... 73 }; 74 75 struct v4l2_subdev_ops { 76 const struct v4l2_subdev_core_ops *core; 77 const struct v4l2_subdev_tuner_ops *tuner; 78 const struct v4l2_subdev_audio_ops *audio; 79 const struct v4l2_subdev_video_ops *video; 80 const struct v4l2_subdev_pad_ops *video; 81 }; 82 83 The core ops are common to all subdevs, the other categories are implemented 84 depending on the sub-device. E.g. a video device is unlikely to support the 85 audio ops and vice versa. 86 87 This setup limits the number of function pointers while still making it easy 88 to add new ops and categories. 89 90 A sub-device driver initializes the :c:type:`v4l2_subdev` struct using: 91 92 :c:func:`v4l2_subdev_init <v4l2_subdev_init>` 93 (:c:type:`sd <v4l2_subdev>`, &\ :c:type:`ops <v4l2_subdev_ops>`). 94 95 96 Afterwards you need to initialize :c:type:`sd <v4l2_subdev>`->name with a 97 unique name and set the module owner. This is done for you if you use the 98 i2c helper functions. 99 100 If integration with the media framework is needed, you must initialize the 101 :c:type:`media_entity` struct embedded in the :c:type:`v4l2_subdev` struct 102 (entity field) by calling :c:func:`media_entity_pads_init`, if the entity has 103 pads: 104 105 .. code-block:: c 106 107 struct media_pad *pads = &my_sd->pads; 108 int err; 109 110 err = media_entity_pads_init(&sd->entity, npads, pads); 111 112 The pads array must have been previously initialized. There is no need to 113 manually set the struct media_entity function and name fields, but the 114 revision field must be initialized if needed. 115 116 A reference to the entity will be automatically acquired/released when the 117 subdev device node (if any) is opened/closed. 118 119 Don't forget to cleanup the media entity before the sub-device is destroyed: 120 121 .. code-block:: c 122 123 media_entity_cleanup(&sd->entity); 124 125 If a sub-device driver implements sink pads, the subdev driver may set the 126 link_validate field in :c:type:`v4l2_subdev_pad_ops` to provide its own link 127 validation function. For every link in the pipeline, the link_validate pad 128 operation of the sink end of the link is called. In both cases the driver is 129 still responsible for validating the correctness of the format configuration 130 between sub-devices and video nodes. 131 132 If link_validate op is not set, the default function 133 :c:func:`v4l2_subdev_link_validate_default` is used instead. This function 134 ensures that width, height and the media bus pixel code are equal on both source 135 and sink of the link. Subdev drivers are also free to use this function to 136 perform the checks mentioned above in addition to their own checks. 137 138 Subdev registration 139 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 140 141 There are currently two ways to register subdevices with the V4L2 core. The 142 first (traditional) possibility is to have subdevices registered by bridge 143 drivers. This can be done when the bridge driver has the complete information 144 about subdevices connected to it and knows exactly when to register them. This 145 is typically the case for internal subdevices, like video data processing units 146 within SoCs or complex PCI(e) boards, camera sensors in USB cameras or connected 147 to SoCs, which pass information about them to bridge drivers, usually in their 148 platform data. 149 150 There are however also situations where subdevices have to be registered 151 asynchronously to bridge devices. An example of such a configuration is a Device 152 Tree based system where information about subdevices is made available to the 153 system independently from the bridge devices, e.g. when subdevices are defined 154 in DT as I2C device nodes. The API used in this second case is described further 155 below. 156 157 Using one or the other registration method only affects the probing process, the 158 run-time bridge-subdevice interaction is in both cases the same. 159 160 Registering synchronous sub-devices 161 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 162 163 In the **synchronous** case a device (bridge) driver needs to register the 164 :c:type:`v4l2_subdev` with the v4l2_device: 165 166 :c:func:`v4l2_device_register_subdev <v4l2_device_register_subdev>` 167 (:c:type:`v4l2_dev <v4l2_device>`, :c:type:`sd <v4l2_subdev>`). 168 169 This can fail if the subdev module disappeared before it could be registered. 170 After this function was called successfully the subdev->dev field points to 171 the :c:type:`v4l2_device`. 172 173 If the v4l2_device parent device has a non-NULL mdev field, the sub-device 174 entity will be automatically registered with the media device. 175 176 You can unregister a sub-device using: 177 178 :c:func:`v4l2_device_unregister_subdev <v4l2_device_unregister_subdev>` 179 (:c:type:`sd <v4l2_subdev>`). 180 181 Afterwards the subdev module can be unloaded and 182 :c:type:`sd <v4l2_subdev>`->dev == ``NULL``. 183 184 .. _media-registering-async-subdevs: 185 186 Registering asynchronous sub-devices 187 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 188 189 In the **asynchronous** case subdevice probing can be invoked independently of 190 the bridge driver availability. The subdevice driver then has to verify whether 191 all the requirements for a successful probing are satisfied. This can include a 192 check for a master clock availability. If any of the conditions aren't satisfied 193 the driver might decide to return ``-EPROBE_DEFER`` to request further reprobing 194 attempts. Once all conditions are met the subdevice shall be registered using 195 the :c:func:`v4l2_async_register_subdev` function. Unregistration is 196 performed using the :c:func:`v4l2_async_unregister_subdev` call. Subdevices 197 registered this way are stored in a global list of subdevices, ready to be 198 picked up by bridge drivers. 199 200 Drivers must complete all initialization of the sub-device before 201 registering it using :c:func:`v4l2_async_register_subdev`, including 202 enabling runtime PM. This is because the sub-device becomes accessible 203 as soon as it gets registered. 204 205 Asynchronous sub-device notifiers 206 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 207 208 Bridge drivers in turn have to register a notifier object. This is performed 209 using the :c:func:`v4l2_async_nf_register` call. To unregister the notifier the 210 driver has to call :c:func:`v4l2_async_nf_unregister`. Before releasing memory 211 of an unregister notifier, it must be cleaned up by calling 212 :c:func:`v4l2_async_nf_cleanup`. 213 214 Before registering the notifier, bridge drivers must do two things: first, the 215 notifier must be initialized using the :c:func:`v4l2_async_nf_init`. Second, 216 bridge drivers can then begin to form a list of async connection descriptors 217 that the bridge device needs for its 218 operation. :c:func:`v4l2_async_nf_add_fwnode`, 219 :c:func:`v4l2_async_nf_add_fwnode_remote` and :c:func:`v4l2_async_nf_add_i2c` 220 221 Async connection descriptors describe connections to external sub-devices the 222 drivers for which are not yet probed. Based on an async connection, a media data 223 or ancillary link may be created when the related sub-device becomes 224 available. There may be one or more async connections to a given sub-device but 225 this is not known at the time of adding the connections to the notifier. Async 226 connections are bound as matching async sub-devices are found, one by one. 227 228 Asynchronous sub-device notifier for sub-devices 229 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 230 231 A driver that registers an asynchronous sub-device may also register an 232 asynchronous notifier. This is called an asynchronous sub-device notifier and the 233 process is similar to that of a bridge driver apart from that the notifier is 234 initialised using :c:func:`v4l2_async_subdev_nf_init` instead. A sub-device 235 notifier may complete only after the V4L2 device becomes available, i.e. there's 236 a path via async sub-devices and notifiers to a notifier that is not an 237 asynchronous sub-device notifier. 238 239 Asynchronous sub-device registration helper for camera sensor drivers 240 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 241 242 :c:func:`v4l2_async_register_subdev_sensor` is a helper function for sensor 243 drivers registering their own async connection, but it also registers a notifier 244 and further registers async connections for lens and flash devices found in 245 firmware. The notifier for the sub-device is unregistered and cleaned up with 246 the async sub-device, using :c:func:`v4l2_async_unregister_subdev`. 247 248 Asynchronous sub-device notifier example 249 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 250 251 These functions allocate an async connection descriptor which is of type struct 252 :c:type:`v4l2_async_connection` embedded in a driver-specific struct. The &struct 253 :c:type:`v4l2_async_connection` shall be the first member of this struct: 254 255 .. code-block:: c 256 257 struct my_async_connection { 258 struct v4l2_async_connection asc; 259 ... 260 }; 261 262 struct my_async_connection *my_asc; 263 struct fwnode_handle *ep; 264 265 ... 266 267 my_asc = v4l2_async_nf_add_fwnode_remote(¬ifier, ep, 268 struct my_async_connection); 269 fwnode_handle_put(ep); 270 271 if (IS_ERR(my_asc)) 272 return PTR_ERR(my_asc); 273 274 Asynchronous sub-device notifier callbacks 275 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 276 277 The V4L2 core will then use these connection descriptors to match asynchronously 278 registered subdevices to them. If a match is detected the ``.bound()`` notifier 279 callback is called. After all connections have been bound the .complete() 280 callback is called. When a connection is removed from the system the 281 ``.unbind()`` method is called. All three callbacks are optional. 282 283 Drivers can store any type of custom data in their driver-specific 284 :c:type:`v4l2_async_connection` wrapper. If any of that data requires special 285 handling when the structure is freed, drivers must implement the ``.destroy()`` 286 notifier callback. The framework will call it right before freeing the 287 :c:type:`v4l2_async_connection`. 288 289 Calling subdev operations 290 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 291 292 The advantage of using :c:type:`v4l2_subdev` is that it is a generic struct and 293 does not contain any knowledge about the underlying hardware. So a driver might 294 contain several subdevs that use an I2C bus, but also a subdev that is 295 controlled through GPIO pins. This distinction is only relevant when setting 296 up the device, but once the subdev is registered it is completely transparent. 297 298 Once the subdev has been registered you can call an ops function either 299 directly: 300 301 .. code-block:: c 302 303 err = sd->ops->core->g_std(sd, &norm); 304 305 but it is better and easier to use this macro: 306 307 .. code-block:: c 308 309 err = v4l2_subdev_call(sd, core, g_std, &norm); 310 311 The macro will do the right ``NULL`` pointer checks and returns ``-ENODEV`` 312 if :c:type:`sd <v4l2_subdev>` is ``NULL``, ``-ENOIOCTLCMD`` if either 313 :c:type:`sd <v4l2_subdev>`->core or :c:type:`sd <v4l2_subdev>`->core->g_std is ``NULL``, or the actual result of the 314 :c:type:`sd <v4l2_subdev>`->ops->core->g_std ops. 315 316 It is also possible to call all or a subset of the sub-devices: 317 318 .. code-block:: c 319 320 v4l2_device_call_all(v4l2_dev, 0, core, g_std, &norm); 321 322 Any subdev that does not support this ops is skipped and error results are 323 ignored. If you want to check for errors use this: 324 325 .. code-block:: c 326 327 err = v4l2_device_call_until_err(v4l2_dev, 0, core, g_std, &norm); 328 329 Any error except ``-ENOIOCTLCMD`` will exit the loop with that error. If no 330 errors (except ``-ENOIOCTLCMD``) occurred, then 0 is returned. 331 332 The second argument to both calls is a group ID. If 0, then all subdevs are 333 called. If non-zero, then only those whose group ID match that value will 334 be called. Before a bridge driver registers a subdev it can set 335 :c:type:`sd <v4l2_subdev>`->grp_id to whatever value it wants (it's 0 by 336 default). This value is owned by the bridge driver and the sub-device driver 337 will never modify or use it. 338 339 The group ID gives the bridge driver more control how callbacks are called. 340 For example, there may be multiple audio chips on a board, each capable of 341 changing the volume. But usually only one will actually be used when the 342 user want to change the volume. You can set the group ID for that subdev to 343 e.g. AUDIO_CONTROLLER and specify that as the group ID value when calling 344 ``v4l2_device_call_all()``. That ensures that it will only go to the subdev 345 that needs it. 346 347 If the sub-device needs to notify its v4l2_device parent of an event, then 348 it can call ``v4l2_subdev_notify(sd, notification, arg)``. This macro checks 349 whether there is a ``notify()`` callback defined and returns ``-ENODEV`` if not. 350 Otherwise the result of the ``notify()`` call is returned. 351 352 V4L2 sub-device userspace API 353 ----------------------------- 354 355 Bridge drivers traditionally expose one or multiple video nodes to userspace, 356 and control subdevices through the :c:type:`v4l2_subdev_ops` operations in 357 response to video node operations. This hides the complexity of the underlying 358 hardware from applications. For complex devices, finer-grained control of the 359 device than what the video nodes offer may be required. In those cases, bridge 360 drivers that implement :ref:`the media controller API <media_controller>` may 361 opt for making the subdevice operations directly accessible from userspace. 362 363 Device nodes named ``v4l-subdev``\ *X* can be created in ``/dev`` to access 364 sub-devices directly. If a sub-device supports direct userspace configuration 365 it must set the ``V4L2_SUBDEV_FL_HAS_DEVNODE`` flag before being registered. 366 367 After registering sub-devices, the :c:type:`v4l2_device` driver can create 368 device nodes for all registered sub-devices marked with 369 ``V4L2_SUBDEV_FL_HAS_DEVNODE`` by calling 370 :c:func:`v4l2_device_register_subdev_nodes`. Those device nodes will be 371 automatically removed when sub-devices are unregistered. 372 373 The device node handles a subset of the V4L2 API. 374 375 ``VIDIOC_QUERYCTRL``, 376 ``VIDIOC_QUERYMENU``, 377 ``VIDIOC_G_CTRL``, 378 ``VIDIOC_S_CTRL``, 379 ``VIDIOC_G_EXT_CTRLS``, 380 ``VIDIOC_S_EXT_CTRLS`` and 381 ``VIDIOC_TRY_EXT_CTRLS``: 382 383 The controls ioctls are identical to the ones defined in V4L2. They 384 behave identically, with the only exception that they deal only with 385 controls implemented in the sub-device. Depending on the driver, those 386 controls can be also be accessed through one (or several) V4L2 device 387 nodes. 388 389 ``VIDIOC_DQEVENT``, 390 ``VIDIOC_SUBSCRIBE_EVENT`` and 391 ``VIDIOC_UNSUBSCRIBE_EVENT`` 392 393 The events ioctls are identical to the ones defined in V4L2. They 394 behave identically, with the only exception that they deal only with 395 events generated by the sub-device. Depending on the driver, those 396 events can also be reported by one (or several) V4L2 device nodes. 397 398 Sub-device drivers that want to use events need to set the 399 ``V4L2_SUBDEV_FL_HAS_EVENTS`` :c:type:`v4l2_subdev`.flags before registering 400 the sub-device. After registration events can be queued as usual on the 401 :c:type:`v4l2_subdev`.devnode device node. 402 403 To properly support events, the ``poll()`` file operation is also 404 implemented. 405 406 Private ioctls 407 408 All ioctls not in the above list are passed directly to the sub-device 409 driver through the core::ioctl operation. 410 411 Read-only sub-device userspace API 412 ---------------------------------- 413 414 Bridge drivers that control their connected subdevices through direct calls to 415 the kernel API realized by :c:type:`v4l2_subdev_ops` structure do not usually 416 want userspace to be able to change the same parameters through the subdevice 417 device node and thus do not usually register any. 418 419 It is sometimes useful to report to userspace the current subdevice 420 configuration through a read-only API, that does not permit applications to 421 change to the device parameters but allows interfacing to the subdevice device 422 node to inspect them. 423 424 For instance, to implement cameras based on computational photography, userspace 425 needs to know the detailed camera sensor configuration (in terms of skipping, 426 binning, cropping and scaling) for each supported output resolution. To support 427 such use cases, bridge drivers may expose the subdevice operations to userspace 428 through a read-only API. 429 430 To create a read-only device node for all the subdevices registered with the 431 ``V4L2_SUBDEV_FL_HAS_DEVNODE`` set, the :c:type:`v4l2_device` driver should call 432 :c:func:`v4l2_device_register_ro_subdev_nodes`. 433 434 Access to the following ioctls for userspace applications is restricted on 435 sub-device device nodes registered with 436 :c:func:`v4l2_device_register_ro_subdev_nodes`. 437 438 ``VIDIOC_SUBDEV_S_FMT``, 439 ``VIDIOC_SUBDEV_S_CROP``, 440 ``VIDIOC_SUBDEV_S_SELECTION``: 441 442 These ioctls are only allowed on a read-only subdevice device node 443 for the :ref:`V4L2_SUBDEV_FORMAT_TRY <v4l2-subdev-format-whence>` 444 formats and selection rectangles. 445 446 ``VIDIOC_SUBDEV_S_FRAME_INTERVAL``, 447 ``VIDIOC_SUBDEV_S_DV_TIMINGS``, 448 ``VIDIOC_SUBDEV_S_STD``: 449 450 These ioctls are not allowed on a read-only subdevice node. 451 452 In case the ioctl is not allowed, or the format to modify is set to 453 ``V4L2_SUBDEV_FORMAT_ACTIVE``, the core returns a negative error code and 454 the errno variable is set to ``-EPERM``. 455 456 I2C sub-device drivers 457 ---------------------- 458 459 Since these drivers are so common, special helper functions are available to 460 ease the use of these drivers (``v4l2-common.h``). 461 462 The recommended method of adding :c:type:`v4l2_subdev` support to an I2C driver 463 is to embed the :c:type:`v4l2_subdev` struct into the state struct that is 464 created for each I2C device instance. Very simple devices have no state 465 struct and in that case you can just create a :c:type:`v4l2_subdev` directly. 466 467 A typical state struct would look like this (where 'chipname' is replaced by 468 the name of the chip): 469 470 .. code-block:: c 471 472 struct chipname_state { 473 struct v4l2_subdev sd; 474 ... /* additional state fields */ 475 }; 476 477 Initialize the :c:type:`v4l2_subdev` struct as follows: 478 479 .. code-block:: c 480 481 v4l2_i2c_subdev_init(&state->sd, client, subdev_ops); 482 483 This function will fill in all the fields of :c:type:`v4l2_subdev` ensure that 484 the :c:type:`v4l2_subdev` and i2c_client both point to one another. 485 486 You should also add a helper inline function to go from a :c:type:`v4l2_subdev` 487 pointer to a chipname_state struct: 488 489 .. code-block:: c 490 491 static inline struct chipname_state *to_state(struct v4l2_subdev *sd) 492 { 493 return container_of(sd, struct chipname_state, sd); 494 } 495 496 Use this to go from the :c:type:`v4l2_subdev` struct to the ``i2c_client`` 497 struct: 498 499 .. code-block:: c 500 501 struct i2c_client *client = v4l2_get_subdevdata(sd); 502 503 And this to go from an ``i2c_client`` to a :c:type:`v4l2_subdev` struct: 504 505 .. code-block:: c 506 507 struct v4l2_subdev *sd = i2c_get_clientdata(client); 508 509 Make sure to call 510 :c:func:`v4l2_device_unregister_subdev`\ (:c:type:`sd <v4l2_subdev>`) 511 when the ``remove()`` callback is called. This will unregister the sub-device 512 from the bridge driver. It is safe to call this even if the sub-device was 513 never registered. 514 515 You need to do this because when the bridge driver destroys the i2c adapter 516 the ``remove()`` callbacks are called of the i2c devices on that adapter. 517 After that the corresponding v4l2_subdev structures are invalid, so they 518 have to be unregistered first. Calling 519 :c:func:`v4l2_device_unregister_subdev`\ (:c:type:`sd <v4l2_subdev>`) 520 from the ``remove()`` callback ensures that this is always done correctly. 521 522 523 The bridge driver also has some helper functions it can use: 524 525 .. code-block:: c 526 527 struct v4l2_subdev *sd = v4l2_i2c_new_subdev(v4l2_dev, adapter, 528 "module_foo", "chipid", 0x36, NULL); 529 530 This loads the given module (can be ``NULL`` if no module needs to be loaded) 531 and calls :c:func:`i2c_new_client_device` with the given ``i2c_adapter`` and 532 chip/address arguments. If all goes well, then it registers the subdev with 533 the v4l2_device. 534 535 You can also use the last argument of :c:func:`v4l2_i2c_new_subdev` to pass 536 an array of possible I2C addresses that it should probe. These probe addresses 537 are only used if the previous argument is 0. A non-zero argument means that you 538 know the exact i2c address so in that case no probing will take place. 539 540 Both functions return ``NULL`` if something went wrong. 541 542 Note that the chipid you pass to :c:func:`v4l2_i2c_new_subdev` is usually 543 the same as the module name. It allows you to specify a chip variant, e.g. 544 "saa7114" or "saa7115". In general though the i2c driver autodetects this. 545 The use of chipid is something that needs to be looked at more closely at a 546 later date. It differs between i2c drivers and as such can be confusing. 547 To see which chip variants are supported you can look in the i2c driver code 548 for the i2c_device_id table. This lists all the possibilities. 549 550 There are one more helper function: 551 552 :c:func:`v4l2_i2c_new_subdev_board` uses an :c:type:`i2c_board_info` struct 553 which is passed to the i2c driver and replaces the irq, platform_data and addr 554 arguments. 555 556 If the subdev supports the s_config core ops, then that op is called with 557 the irq and platform_data arguments after the subdev was setup. 558 559 The :c:func:`v4l2_i2c_new_subdev` function will call 560 :c:func:`v4l2_i2c_new_subdev_board`, internally filling a 561 :c:type:`i2c_board_info` structure using the ``client_type`` and the 562 ``addr`` to fill it. 563 564 Centrally managed subdev active state 565 ------------------------------------- 566 567 Traditionally V4L2 subdev drivers maintained internal state for the active 568 device configuration. This is often implemented as e.g. an array of struct 569 v4l2_mbus_framefmt, one entry for each pad, and similarly for crop and compose 570 rectangles. 571 572 In addition to the active configuration, each subdev file handle has a struct 573 v4l2_subdev_state, managed by the V4L2 core, which contains the try 574 configuration. 575 576 To simplify the subdev drivers the V4L2 subdev API now optionally supports a 577 centrally managed active configuration represented by 578 :c:type:`v4l2_subdev_state`. One instance of state, which contains the active 579 device configuration, is stored in the sub-device itself as part of 580 the :c:type:`v4l2_subdev` structure, while the core associates a try state to 581 each open file handle, to store the try configuration related to that file 582 handle. 583 584 Sub-device drivers can opt-in and use state to manage their active configuration 585 by initializing the subdevice state with a call to v4l2_subdev_init_finalize() 586 before registering the sub-device. They must also call v4l2_subdev_cleanup() 587 to release all the allocated resources before unregistering the sub-device. 588 The core automatically allocates and initializes a state for each open file 589 handle to store the try configurations and frees it when closing the file 590 handle. 591 592 V4L2 sub-device operations that use both the :ref:`ACTIVE and TRY formats 593 <v4l2-subdev-format-whence>` receive the correct state to operate on through 594 the 'state' parameter. The state must be locked and unlocked by the 595 caller by calling :c:func:`v4l2_subdev_lock_state()` and 596 :c:func:`v4l2_subdev_unlock_state()`. The caller can do so by calling the subdev 597 operation through the :c:func:`v4l2_subdev_call_state_active()` macro. 598 599 Operations that do not receive a state parameter implicitly operate on the 600 subdevice active state, which drivers can exclusively access by 601 calling :c:func:`v4l2_subdev_lock_and_get_active_state()`. The sub-device active 602 state must equally be released by calling :c:func:`v4l2_subdev_unlock_state()`. 603 604 Drivers must never manually access the state stored in the :c:type:`v4l2_subdev` 605 or in the file handle without going through the designated helpers. 606 607 While the V4L2 core passes the correct try or active state to the subdevice 608 operations, many existing device drivers pass a NULL state when calling 609 operations with :c:func:`v4l2_subdev_call()`. This legacy construct causes 610 issues with subdevice drivers that let the V4L2 core manage the active state, 611 as they expect to receive the appropriate state as a parameter. To help the 612 conversion of subdevice drivers to a managed active state without having to 613 convert all callers at the same time, an additional wrapper layer has been 614 added to v4l2_subdev_call(), which handles the NULL case by getting and locking 615 the callee's active state with :c:func:`v4l2_subdev_lock_and_get_active_state()`, 616 and unlocking the state after the call. 617 618 The whole subdev state is in reality split into three parts: the 619 v4l2_subdev_state, subdev controls and subdev driver's internal state. In the 620 future these parts should be combined into a single state. For the time being 621 we need a way to handle the locking for these parts. This can be accomplished 622 by sharing a lock. The v4l2_ctrl_handler already supports this via its 'lock' 623 pointer and the same model is used with states. The driver can do the following 624 before calling v4l2_subdev_init_finalize(): 625 626 .. code-block:: c 627 628 sd->ctrl_handler->lock = &priv->mutex; 629 sd->state_lock = &priv->mutex; 630 631 This shares the driver's private mutex between the controls and the states. 632 633 Streams, multiplexed media pads and internal routing 634 ---------------------------------------------------- 635 636 A subdevice driver can implement support for multiplexed streams by setting 637 the V4L2_SUBDEV_FL_STREAMS subdev flag and implementing support for 638 centrally managed subdev active state, routing and stream based 639 configuration. 640 641 V4L2 sub-device functions and data structures 642 --------------------------------------------- 643 644 .. kernel-doc:: include/media/v4l2-subdev.h
Linux® is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds in the United States and other countries.
TOMOYO® is a registered trademark of NTT DATA CORPORATION.