| .. -*- coding: utf-8; mode: rst -*- |
| |
| .. _CEC_TRANSMIT: |
| .. _CEC_RECEIVE: |
| |
| *********************************** |
| ioctls CEC_RECEIVE and CEC_TRANSMIT |
| *********************************** |
| |
| Name |
| ==== |
| |
| CEC_RECEIVE, CEC_TRANSMIT - Receive or transmit a CEC message |
| |
| |
| Synopsis |
| ======== |
| |
| .. c:function:: int ioctl( int fd, CEC_RECEIVE, struct cec_msg *argp ) |
| :name: CEC_RECEIVE |
| |
| .. c:function:: int ioctl( int fd, CEC_TRANSMIT, struct cec_msg *argp ) |
| :name: CEC_TRANSMIT |
| |
| Arguments |
| ========= |
| |
| ``fd`` |
| File descriptor returned by :c:func:`open() <cec-open>`. |
| |
| ``argp`` |
| Pointer to struct cec_msg. |
| |
| Description |
| =========== |
| |
| To receive a CEC message the application has to fill in the |
| ``timeout`` field of struct :c:type:`cec_msg` and pass it to |
| :ref:`ioctl CEC_RECEIVE <CEC_RECEIVE>`. |
| If the file descriptor is in non-blocking mode and there are no received |
| messages pending, then it will return -1 and set errno to the ``EAGAIN`` |
| error code. If the file descriptor is in blocking mode and ``timeout`` |
| is non-zero and no message arrived within ``timeout`` milliseconds, then |
| it will return -1 and set errno to the ``ETIMEDOUT`` error code. |
| |
| A received message can be: |
| |
| 1. a message received from another CEC device (the ``sequence`` field will |
| be 0). |
| 2. the result of an earlier non-blocking transmit (the ``sequence`` field will |
| be non-zero). |
| |
| To send a CEC message the application has to fill in the struct |
| :c:type:`cec_msg` and pass it to :ref:`ioctl CEC_TRANSMIT <CEC_TRANSMIT>`. |
| The :ref:`ioctl CEC_TRANSMIT <CEC_TRANSMIT>` is only available if |
| ``CEC_CAP_TRANSMIT`` is set. If there is no more room in the transmit |
| queue, then it will return -1 and set errno to the ``EBUSY`` error code. |
| The transmit queue has enough room for 18 messages (about 1 second worth |
| of 2-byte messages). Note that the CEC kernel framework will also reply |
| to core messages (see :ref:`cec-core-processing`), so it is not a good |
| idea to fully fill up the transmit queue. |
| |
| If the file descriptor is in non-blocking mode then the transmit will |
| return 0 and the result of the transmit will be available via |
| :ref:`ioctl CEC_RECEIVE <CEC_RECEIVE>` once the transmit has finished |
| (including waiting for a reply, if requested). |
| |
| The ``sequence`` field is filled in for every transmit and this can be |
| checked against the received messages to find the corresponding transmit |
| result. |
| |
| Normally calling :ref:`ioctl CEC_TRANSMIT <CEC_TRANSMIT>` when the physical |
| address is invalid (due to e.g. a disconnect) will return ``ENONET``. |
| |
| However, the CEC specification allows sending messages from 'Unregistered' to |
| 'TV' when the physical address is invalid since some TVs pull the hotplug detect |
| pin of the HDMI connector low when they go into standby, or when switching to |
| another input. |
| |
| When the hotplug detect pin goes low the EDID disappears, and thus the |
| physical address, but the cable is still connected and CEC still works. |
| In order to detect/wake up the device it is allowed to send poll and 'Image/Text |
| View On' messages from initiator 0xf ('Unregistered') to destination 0 ('TV'). |
| |
| .. tabularcolumns:: |p{1.0cm}|p{3.5cm}|p{13.0cm}| |
| |
| .. c:type:: cec_msg |
| |
| .. cssclass:: longtable |
| |
| .. flat-table:: struct cec_msg |
| :header-rows: 0 |
| :stub-columns: 0 |
| :widths: 1 1 16 |
| |
| * - __u64 |
| - ``tx_ts`` |
| - Timestamp in ns of when the last byte of the message was transmitted. |
| The timestamp has been taken from the ``CLOCK_MONOTONIC`` clock. To access |
| the same clock from userspace use :c:func:`clock_gettime`. |
| * - __u64 |
| - ``rx_ts`` |
| - Timestamp in ns of when the last byte of the message was received. |
| The timestamp has been taken from the ``CLOCK_MONOTONIC`` clock. To access |
| the same clock from userspace use :c:func:`clock_gettime`. |
| * - __u32 |
| - ``len`` |
| - The length of the message. For :ref:`ioctl CEC_TRANSMIT <CEC_TRANSMIT>` this is filled in |
| by the application. The driver will fill this in for |
| :ref:`ioctl CEC_RECEIVE <CEC_RECEIVE>`. For :ref:`ioctl CEC_TRANSMIT <CEC_TRANSMIT>` it will be |
| filled in by the driver with the length of the reply message if ``reply`` was set. |
| * - __u32 |
| - ``timeout`` |
| - The timeout in milliseconds. This is the time the device will wait |
| for a message to be received before timing out. If it is set to 0, |
| then it will wait indefinitely when it is called by :ref:`ioctl CEC_RECEIVE <CEC_RECEIVE>`. |
| If it is 0 and it is called by :ref:`ioctl CEC_TRANSMIT <CEC_TRANSMIT>`, |
| then it will be replaced by 1000 if the ``reply`` is non-zero or |
| ignored if ``reply`` is 0. |
| * - __u32 |
| - ``sequence`` |
| - A non-zero sequence number is automatically assigned by the CEC framework |
| for all transmitted messages. It is used by the CEC framework when it queues |
| the transmit result (when transmit was called in non-blocking mode). This |
| allows the application to associate the received message with the original |
| transmit. |
| * - __u32 |
| - ``flags`` |
| - Flags. See :ref:`cec-msg-flags` for a list of available flags. |
| * - __u8 |
| - ``tx_status`` |
| - The status bits of the transmitted message. See |
| :ref:`cec-tx-status` for the possible status values. It is 0 if |
| this messages was received, not transmitted. |
| * - __u8 |
| - ``msg[16]`` |
| - The message payload. For :ref:`ioctl CEC_TRANSMIT <CEC_TRANSMIT>` this is filled in by the |
| application. The driver will fill this in for :ref:`ioctl CEC_RECEIVE <CEC_RECEIVE>`. |
| For :ref:`ioctl CEC_TRANSMIT <CEC_TRANSMIT>` it will be filled in by the driver with |
| the payload of the reply message if ``timeout`` was set. |
| * - __u8 |
| - ``reply`` |
| - Wait until this message is replied. If ``reply`` is 0 and the |
| ``timeout`` is 0, then don't wait for a reply but return after |
| transmitting the message. Ignored by :ref:`ioctl CEC_RECEIVE <CEC_RECEIVE>`. |
| The case where ``reply`` is 0 (this is the opcode for the Feature Abort |
| message) and ``timeout`` is non-zero is specifically allowed to make it |
| possible to send a message and wait up to ``timeout`` milliseconds for a |
| Feature Abort reply. In this case ``rx_status`` will either be set |
| to :ref:`CEC_RX_STATUS_TIMEOUT <CEC-RX-STATUS-TIMEOUT>` or |
| :ref:`CEC_RX_STATUS_FEATURE_ABORT <CEC-RX-STATUS-FEATURE-ABORT>`. |
| |
| If the transmitter message is ``CEC_MSG_INITIATE_ARC`` then the ``reply`` |
| values ``CEC_MSG_REPORT_ARC_INITIATED`` and ``CEC_MSG_REPORT_ARC_TERMINATED`` |
| are processed differently: either value will match both possible replies. |
| The reason is that the ``CEC_MSG_INITIATE_ARC`` message is the only CEC |
| message that has two possible replies other than Feature Abort. The |
| ``reply`` field will be updated with the actual reply so that it is |
| synchronized with the contents of the received message. |
| * - __u8 |
| - ``rx_status`` |
| - The status bits of the received message. See |
| :ref:`cec-rx-status` for the possible status values. It is 0 if |
| this message was transmitted, not received, unless this is the |
| reply to a transmitted message. In that case both ``rx_status`` |
| and ``tx_status`` are set. |
| * - __u8 |
| - ``tx_status`` |
| - The status bits of the transmitted message. See |
| :ref:`cec-tx-status` for the possible status values. It is 0 if |
| this messages was received, not transmitted. |
| * - __u8 |
| - ``tx_arb_lost_cnt`` |
| - A counter of the number of transmit attempts that resulted in the |
| Arbitration Lost error. This is only set if the hardware supports |
| this, otherwise it is always 0. This counter is only valid if the |
| :ref:`CEC_TX_STATUS_ARB_LOST <CEC-TX-STATUS-ARB-LOST>` status bit is set. |
| * - __u8 |
| - ``tx_nack_cnt`` |
| - A counter of the number of transmit attempts that resulted in the |
| Not Acknowledged error. This is only set if the hardware supports |
| this, otherwise it is always 0. This counter is only valid if the |
| :ref:`CEC_TX_STATUS_NACK <CEC-TX-STATUS-NACK>` status bit is set. |
| * - __u8 |
| - ``tx_low_drive_cnt`` |
| - A counter of the number of transmit attempts that resulted in the |
| Arbitration Lost error. This is only set if the hardware supports |
| this, otherwise it is always 0. This counter is only valid if the |
| :ref:`CEC_TX_STATUS_LOW_DRIVE <CEC-TX-STATUS-LOW-DRIVE>` status bit is set. |
| * - __u8 |
| - ``tx_error_cnt`` |
| - A counter of the number of transmit errors other than Arbitration |
| Lost or Not Acknowledged. This is only set if the hardware |
| supports this, otherwise it is always 0. This counter is only |
| valid if the :ref:`CEC_TX_STATUS_ERROR <CEC-TX-STATUS-ERROR>` status bit is set. |
| |
| |
| .. _cec-msg-flags: |
| |
| .. flat-table:: Flags for struct cec_msg |
| :header-rows: 0 |
| :stub-columns: 0 |
| :widths: 3 1 4 |
| |
| * .. _`CEC-MSG-FL-REPLY-TO-FOLLOWERS`: |
| |
| - ``CEC_MSG_FL_REPLY_TO_FOLLOWERS`` |
| - 1 |
| - If a CEC transmit expects a reply, then by default that reply is only sent to |
| the filehandle that called :ref:`ioctl CEC_TRANSMIT <CEC_TRANSMIT>`. If this |
| flag is set, then the reply is also sent to all followers, if any. If the |
| filehandle that called :ref:`ioctl CEC_TRANSMIT <CEC_TRANSMIT>` is also a |
| follower, then that filehandle will receive the reply twice: once as the |
| result of the :ref:`ioctl CEC_TRANSMIT <CEC_TRANSMIT>`, and once via |
| :ref:`ioctl CEC_RECEIVE <CEC_RECEIVE>`. |
| |
| |
| .. tabularcolumns:: |p{5.6cm}|p{0.9cm}|p{11.0cm}| |
| |
| .. _cec-tx-status: |
| |
| .. flat-table:: CEC Transmit Status |
| :header-rows: 0 |
| :stub-columns: 0 |
| :widths: 3 1 16 |
| |
| * .. _`CEC-TX-STATUS-OK`: |
| |
| - ``CEC_TX_STATUS_OK`` |
| - 0x01 |
| - The message was transmitted successfully. This is mutually |
| exclusive with :ref:`CEC_TX_STATUS_MAX_RETRIES <CEC-TX-STATUS-MAX-RETRIES>`. Other bits can still |
| be set if earlier attempts met with failure before the transmit |
| was eventually successful. |
| * .. _`CEC-TX-STATUS-ARB-LOST`: |
| |
| - ``CEC_TX_STATUS_ARB_LOST`` |
| - 0x02 |
| - CEC line arbitration was lost. |
| * .. _`CEC-TX-STATUS-NACK`: |
| |
| - ``CEC_TX_STATUS_NACK`` |
| - 0x04 |
| - Message was not acknowledged. |
| * .. _`CEC-TX-STATUS-LOW-DRIVE`: |
| |
| - ``CEC_TX_STATUS_LOW_DRIVE`` |
| - 0x08 |
| - Low drive was detected on the CEC bus. This indicates that a |
| follower detected an error on the bus and requests a |
| retransmission. |
| * .. _`CEC-TX-STATUS-ERROR`: |
| |
| - ``CEC_TX_STATUS_ERROR`` |
| - 0x10 |
| - Some error occurred. This is used for any errors that do not fit |
| the previous two, either because the hardware could not tell which |
| error occurred, or because the hardware tested for other |
| conditions besides those two. |
| * .. _`CEC-TX-STATUS-MAX-RETRIES`: |
| |
| - ``CEC_TX_STATUS_MAX_RETRIES`` |
| - 0x20 |
| - The transmit failed after one or more retries. This status bit is |
| mutually exclusive with :ref:`CEC_TX_STATUS_OK <CEC-TX-STATUS-OK>`. Other bits can still |
| be set to explain which failures were seen. |
| |
| |
| .. tabularcolumns:: |p{5.6cm}|p{0.9cm}|p{11.0cm}| |
| |
| .. _cec-rx-status: |
| |
| .. flat-table:: CEC Receive Status |
| :header-rows: 0 |
| :stub-columns: 0 |
| :widths: 3 1 16 |
| |
| * .. _`CEC-RX-STATUS-OK`: |
| |
| - ``CEC_RX_STATUS_OK`` |
| - 0x01 |
| - The message was received successfully. |
| * .. _`CEC-RX-STATUS-TIMEOUT`: |
| |
| - ``CEC_RX_STATUS_TIMEOUT`` |
| - 0x02 |
| - The reply to an earlier transmitted message timed out. |
| * .. _`CEC-RX-STATUS-FEATURE-ABORT`: |
| |
| - ``CEC_RX_STATUS_FEATURE_ABORT`` |
| - 0x04 |
| - The message was received successfully but the reply was |
| ``CEC_MSG_FEATURE_ABORT``. This status is only set if this message |
| was the reply to an earlier transmitted message. |
| |
| |
| |
| Return Value |
| ============ |
| |
| On success 0 is returned, on error -1 and the ``errno`` variable is set |
| appropriately. The generic error codes are described at the |
| :ref:`Generic Error Codes <gen-errors>` chapter. |
| |
| The :ref:`ioctl CEC_RECEIVE <CEC_RECEIVE>` can return the following |
| error codes: |
| |
| EAGAIN |
| No messages are in the receive queue, and the filehandle is in non-blocking mode. |
| |
| ETIMEDOUT |
| The ``timeout`` was reached while waiting for a message. |
| |
| ERESTARTSYS |
| The wait for a message was interrupted (e.g. by Ctrl-C). |
| |
| The :ref:`ioctl CEC_TRANSMIT <CEC_TRANSMIT>` can return the following |
| error codes: |
| |
| ENOTTY |
| The ``CEC_CAP_TRANSMIT`` capability wasn't set, so this ioctl is not supported. |
| |
| EPERM |
| The CEC adapter is not configured, i.e. :ref:`ioctl CEC_ADAP_S_LOG_ADDRS <CEC_ADAP_S_LOG_ADDRS>` |
| has never been called. |
| |
| ENONET |
| The CEC adapter is not configured, i.e. :ref:`ioctl CEC_ADAP_S_LOG_ADDRS <CEC_ADAP_S_LOG_ADDRS>` |
| was called, but the physical address is invalid so no logical address was claimed. |
| An exception is made in this case for transmits from initiator 0xf ('Unregistered') |
| to destination 0 ('TV'). In that case the transmit will proceed as usual. |
| |
| EBUSY |
| Another filehandle is in exclusive follower or initiator mode, or the filehandle |
| is in mode ``CEC_MODE_NO_INITIATOR``. This is also returned if the transmit |
| queue is full. |
| |
| EINVAL |
| The contents of struct :c:type:`cec_msg` is invalid. |
| |
| ERESTARTSYS |
| The wait for a successful transmit was interrupted (e.g. by Ctrl-C). |