| Linux kernel media framework |
| ============================ |
| |
| This document describes the Linux kernel media framework, its data structures, |
| functions and their usage. |
| |
| |
| Introduction |
| ------------ |
| |
| The media controller API is documented in DocBook format in |
| Documentation/DocBook/v4l/media-controller.xml. This document will focus on |
| the kernel-side implementation of the media framework. |
| |
| |
| Abstract media device model |
| --------------------------- |
| |
| Discovering a device internal topology, and configuring it at runtime, is one |
| of the goals of the media framework. To achieve this, hardware devices are |
| modeled as an oriented graph of building blocks called entities connected |
| through pads. |
| |
| An entity is a basic media hardware building block. It can correspond to |
| a large variety of logical blocks such as physical hardware devices |
| (CMOS sensor for instance), logical hardware devices (a building block |
| in a System-on-Chip image processing pipeline), DMA channels or physical |
| connectors. |
| |
| A pad is a connection endpoint through which an entity can interact with |
| other entities. Data (not restricted to video) produced by an entity |
| flows from the entity's output to one or more entity inputs. Pads should |
| not be confused with physical pins at chip boundaries. |
| |
| A link is a point-to-point oriented connection between two pads, either |
| on the same entity or on different entities. Data flows from a source |
| pad to a sink pad. |
| |
| |
| Media device |
| ------------ |
| |
| A media device is represented by a struct media_device instance, defined in |
| include/media/media-device.h. Allocation of the structure is handled by the |
| media device driver, usually by embedding the media_device instance in a |
| larger driver-specific structure. |
| |
| Drivers register media device instances by calling |
| |
| media_device_register(struct media_device *mdev); |
| |
| The caller is responsible for initializing the media_device structure before |
| registration. The following fields must be set: |
| |
| - dev must point to the parent device (usually a pci_dev, usb_interface or |
| platform_device instance). |
| |
| - model must be filled with the device model name as a NUL-terminated UTF-8 |
| string. The device/model revision must not be stored in this field. |
| |
| The following fields are optional: |
| |
| - serial is a unique serial number stored as a NUL-terminated ASCII string. |
| The field is big enough to store a GUID in text form. If the hardware |
| doesn't provide a unique serial number this field must be left empty. |
| |
| - bus_info represents the location of the device in the system as a |
| NUL-terminated ASCII string. For PCI/PCIe devices bus_info must be set to |
| "PCI:" (or "PCIe:") followed by the value of pci_name(). For USB devices, |
| the usb_make_path() function must be used. This field is used by |
| applications to distinguish between otherwise identical devices that don't |
| provide a serial number. |
| |
| - hw_revision is the hardware device revision in a driver-specific format. |
| When possible the revision should be formatted with the KERNEL_VERSION |
| macro. |
| |
| - driver_version is formatted with the KERNEL_VERSION macro. The version |
| minor must be incremented when new features are added to the userspace API |
| without breaking binary compatibility. The version major must be |
| incremented when binary compatibility is broken. |
| |
| Upon successful registration a character device named media[0-9]+ is created. |
| The device major and minor numbers are dynamic. The model name is exported as |
| a sysfs attribute. |
| |
| Drivers unregister media device instances by calling |
| |
| media_device_unregister(struct media_device *mdev); |
| |
| Unregistering a media device that hasn't been registered is *NOT* safe. |
| |
| |
| Entities, pads and links |
| ------------------------ |
| |
| - Entities |
| |
| Entities are represented by a struct media_entity instance, defined in |
| include/media/media-entity.h. The structure is usually embedded into a |
| higher-level structure, such as a v4l2_subdev or video_device instance, |
| although drivers can allocate entities directly. |
| |
| Drivers initialize entities by calling |
| |
| media_entity_init(struct media_entity *entity, u16 num_pads, |
| struct media_pad *pads, u16 extra_links); |
| |
| The media_entity name, type, flags, revision and group_id fields can be |
| initialized before or after calling media_entity_init. Entities embedded in |
| higher-level standard structures can have some of those fields set by the |
| higher-level framework. |
| |
| As the number of pads is known in advance, the pads array is not allocated |
| dynamically but is managed by the entity driver. Most drivers will embed the |
| pads array in a driver-specific structure, avoiding dynamic allocation. |
| |
| Drivers must set the direction of every pad in the pads array before calling |
| media_entity_init. The function will initialize the other pads fields. |
| |
| Unlike the number of pads, the total number of links isn't always known in |
| advance by the entity driver. As an initial estimate, media_entity_init |
| pre-allocates a number of links equal to the number of pads plus an optional |
| number of extra links. The links array will be reallocated if it grows beyond |
| the initial estimate. |
| |
| Drivers register entities with a media device by calling |
| |
| media_device_register_entity(struct media_device *mdev, |
| struct media_entity *entity); |
| |
| Entities are identified by a unique positive integer ID. Drivers can provide an |
| ID by filling the media_entity id field prior to registration, or request the |
| media controller framework to assign an ID automatically. Drivers that provide |
| IDs manually must ensure that all IDs are unique. IDs are not guaranteed to be |
| contiguous even when they are all assigned automatically by the framework. |
| |
| Drivers unregister entities by calling |
| |
| media_device_unregister_entity(struct media_entity *entity); |
| |
| Unregistering an entity will not change the IDs of the other entities, and the |
| ID will never be reused for a newly registered entity. |
| |
| When a media device is unregistered, all its entities are unregistered |
| automatically. No manual entities unregistration is then required. |
| |
| Drivers free resources associated with an entity by calling |
| |
| media_entity_cleanup(struct media_entity *entity); |
| |
| This function must be called during the cleanup phase after unregistering the |
| entity. Note that the media_entity instance itself must be freed explicitly by |
| the driver if required. |
| |
| Entities have flags that describe the entity capabilities and state. |
| |
| MEDIA_ENT_FL_DEFAULT indicates the default entity for a given type. |
| This can be used to report the default audio and video devices or the |
| default camera sensor. |
| |
| Logical entity groups can be defined by setting the group ID of all member |
| entities to the same non-zero value. An entity group serves no purpose in the |
| kernel, but is reported to userspace during entities enumeration. The group_id |
| field belongs to the media device driver and must not by touched by entity |
| drivers. |
| |
| Media device drivers should define groups if several entities are logically |
| bound together. Example usages include reporting |
| |
| - ALSA, VBI and video nodes that carry the same media stream |
| - lens and flash controllers associated with a sensor |
| |
| - Pads |
| |
| Pads are represented by a struct media_pad instance, defined in |
| include/media/media-entity.h. Each entity stores its pads in a pads array |
| managed by the entity driver. Drivers usually embed the array in a |
| driver-specific structure. |
| |
| Pads are identified by their entity and their 0-based index in the pads array. |
| Both information are stored in the media_pad structure, making the media_pad |
| pointer the canonical way to store and pass link references. |
| |
| Pads have flags that describe the pad capabilities and state. |
| |
| MEDIA_PAD_FL_SINK indicates that the pad supports sinking data. |
| MEDIA_PAD_FL_SOURCE indicates that the pad supports sourcing data. |
| |
| One and only one of MEDIA_PAD_FL_SINK and MEDIA_PAD_FL_SOURCE must be set for |
| each pad. |
| |
| - Links |
| |
| Links are represented by a struct media_link instance, defined in |
| include/media/media-entity.h. Each entity stores all links originating at or |
| targetting any of its pads in a links array. A given link is thus stored |
| twice, once in the source entity and once in the target entity. The array is |
| pre-allocated and grows dynamically as needed. |
| |
| Drivers create links by calling |
| |
| media_entity_create_link(struct media_entity *source, u16 source_pad, |
| struct media_entity *sink, u16 sink_pad, |
| u32 flags); |
| |
| An entry in the link array of each entity is allocated and stores pointers |
| to source and sink pads. |
| |
| Links have flags that describe the link capabilities and state. |
| |
| MEDIA_LNK_FL_ENABLED indicates that the link is enabled and can be used |
| to transfer media data. When two or more links target a sink pad, only |
| one of them can be enabled at a time. |
| MEDIA_LNK_FL_IMMUTABLE indicates that the link enabled state can't be |
| modified at runtime. If MEDIA_LNK_FL_IMMUTABLE is set, then |
| MEDIA_LNK_FL_ENABLED must also be set since an immutable link is always |
| enabled. |
| |
| |
| Graph traversal |
| --------------- |
| |
| The media framework provides APIs to iterate over entities in a graph. |
| |
| To iterate over all entities belonging to a media device, drivers can use the |
| media_device_for_each_entity macro, defined in include/media/media-device.h. |
| |
| struct media_entity *entity; |
| |
| media_device_for_each_entity(entity, mdev) { |
| /* entity will point to each entity in turn */ |
| ... |
| } |
| |
| Drivers might also need to iterate over all entities in a graph that can be |
| reached only through enabled links starting at a given entity. The media |
| framework provides a depth-first graph traversal API for that purpose. |
| |
| Note that graphs with cycles (whether directed or undirected) are *NOT* |
| supported by the graph traversal API. To prevent infinite loops, the graph |
| traversal code limits the maximum depth to MEDIA_ENTITY_ENUM_MAX_DEPTH, |
| currently defined as 16. |
| |
| Drivers initiate a graph traversal by calling |
| |
| media_entity_graph_walk_start(struct media_entity_graph *graph, |
| struct media_entity *entity); |
| |
| The graph structure, provided by the caller, is initialized to start graph |
| traversal at the given entity. |
| |
| Drivers can then retrieve the next entity by calling |
| |
| media_entity_graph_walk_next(struct media_entity_graph *graph); |
| |
| When the graph traversal is complete the function will return NULL. |
| |
| Graph traversal can be interrupted at any moment. No cleanup function call is |
| required and the graph structure can be freed normally. |
| |
| Helper functions can be used to find a link between two given pads, or a pad |
| connected to another pad through an enabled link |
| |
| media_entity_find_link(struct media_pad *source, |
| struct media_pad *sink); |
| |
| media_entity_remote_source(struct media_pad *pad); |
| |
| Refer to the kerneldoc documentation for more information. |
| |
| |
| Use count and power handling |
| ---------------------------- |
| |
| Due to the wide differences between drivers regarding power management needs, |
| the media controller does not implement power management. However, the |
| media_entity structure includes a use_count field that media drivers can use to |
| track the number of users of every entity for power management needs. |
| |
| The use_count field is owned by media drivers and must not be touched by entity |
| drivers. Access to the field must be protected by the media device graph_mutex |
| lock. |
| |
| |
| Links setup |
| ----------- |
| |
| Link properties can be modified at runtime by calling |
| |
| media_entity_setup_link(struct media_link *link, u32 flags); |
| |
| The flags argument contains the requested new link flags. |
| |
| The only configurable property is the ENABLED link flag to enable/disable a |
| link. Links marked with the IMMUTABLE link flag can not be enabled or disabled. |
| |
| When a link is enabled or disabled, the media framework calls the |
| link_setup operation for the two entities at the source and sink of the link, |
| in that order. If the second link_setup call fails, another link_setup call is |
| made on the first entity to restore the original link flags. |
| |
| Media device drivers can be notified of link setup operations by setting the |
| media_device::link_notify pointer to a callback function. If provided, the |
| notification callback will be called before enabling and after disabling |
| links. |
| |
| Entity drivers must implement the link_setup operation if any of their links |
| is non-immutable. The operation must either configure the hardware or store |
| the configuration information to be applied later. |
| |
| Link configuration must not have any side effect on other links. If an enabled |
| link at a sink pad prevents another link at the same pad from being disabled, |
| the link_setup operation must return -EBUSY and can't implicitly disable the |
| first enabled link. |