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docs/faq.rst
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Frequently Asked Questions
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==========================
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What is libmegapixels?
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This is a library for accessing V4L2 cameras on modern ARM platforms that
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use the media-request pipeline to do routing of cameras to the SoC hardware
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to process the pixels in various ways. It's intended to be called instead of
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opening the plain V4L2 device so it can configure the hardware to a specific
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mode and then it hands over the V4L2 handles to let your application do the
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normal Linux camera procedures.
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What is the correct way to display the name 'libmegapixels'?
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Just follow the correct grammar rules for your language. Being difficult
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about the capitalisation of project names is just a massive waste of time.
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How is libmegapixels different from using V4L2
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Libmegapixels is just a glue layer on top of V4L2 to make writing
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applications that use the new media request pipeline a lot easier. Once the
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pipeline has been configured libmegapixels will just hand over a file
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descriptor for a regular V4L2 device to get the frames from.
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Does this mean the camera stack is completely open?
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Yes, libmegapixels does not support the Android mess that is closed-source
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userspace sensor drivers and also provides an open source AAA algorithm.
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Using closed modules in libmegapixels is prohibited, but it's only a
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library for accessing V4L2 so whatever happens in the applications is up to
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the applications.
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@@ -12,4 +12,7 @@ media graph interface in Linux for ARM platforms with cameras.
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.. toctree::
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:maxdepth: 2
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:caption: Contents:
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:caption: Contents:
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overview
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faq
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docs/overview.rst
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Overview
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========
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Libmegapixels is a library for accessing V4L2 cameras in Linux. It's the camera
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set-up code originally written for Megapixels but split off and improved as a
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library to make it easier to debug and integrate.
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The way you'd normally open a webcam in Linux and capture frames is roughly:
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- Open a :code:`/dev/video*` file descriptor
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- Run the :code:`VIDIOC_QUERYCAP` ioctl to check the device has the :code:`V4L2_CAP_VIDEO_CAPTURE` flag and check which methods of capturing frames are valid.
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- Run the :code:`VIDIOC_S_FMT` and :code:`VIDIOC_G_FMT` ioctls a few times to narrow down a format to use.
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- Set-up mmapped video capture on the device and run :code:`VIDIOC_STREAMON` to start the capture
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- Get frames from the kernel
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This works for UVC webcams you usually encounter on Linux devices since these are
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relatively simple devices.
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If you try to use the camera on a modern phone the whole workflow is completely different.
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Instead of dealing with just a video device you also have to deal with
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a :code:`/dev/media*` device for setting up hardware pipelines and then deal with
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various :code:`/dev/v4l-subdev*` devices to configure all the nodes in that media pipeline.
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One (or more) of the nodes in that media pipeline will be the regular old :code:`/dev/video*`
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device again that will provide your application with the frames, but due to the way
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the pipelines work a lot of the normal auto-configuration things applications do no longer work.
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In the new pipelines the video device only deals with getting the video frames into
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userspace. Due to this the video device does not actually know what formats and
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resolutions are valid so using the old ioctls to query this information is useless.
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One of the v4l-subdev devices will be representing the sensor in the device, this does know what
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modes are available but to know that mode will work you need to make sure all the nodes in the
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pipeline can run at that mode and all these nodes need to be manually configured. But in
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reality it's even more complicated becaues this only describes what resolutions and modes
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the drivers for these components support and it does not account for limitations in
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the actual hardware like not all the MIPI lanes being connected between the sensor
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and the SoC limiting the possible bandwidth, or even more basic bandwidth limitations
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due to the length of PCB traces.
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Using libmegapixels
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-------------------
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The solution for this mess in Megapixels which is now transferred to a library
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is using config files that provide the pipeline information. This hardcodes a
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series of known working modes and also provides the metadata for producing
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high quality pictuers from the data coming from the pipeline.
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The general use of libmegapixels is this:
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.. code-block:: c
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#include <libmegapixels.h>
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// Create the empty device config object
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libmegapixels_devconfig *config = {0};
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libmegapixels_init(&config);
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// Find the config file path for this device
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char configpath[PATH_MAX];
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int ret = libmegapixels_find_config(configpath);
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// Load the config
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libmegapixels_load_file(config, configpath);
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// Additionally load UVC cameras with autodetection
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libmegapixels_load_uvc(config);
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printf("Found %d cameras\n", config->count);
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// Open the first camera
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libmegapixels_camera *camera = config->cameras[camera_id];
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libmegapixels_open(camera);
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printf("Camera has %d modes\n", camera->num_modes);
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// Select the first mode
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libmegapixels_mode *mode = camera->modes[mode_idx];
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struct v4l2_format format = {0};
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libmegapixels_select_mode(camera, mode, &format);
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// Now you can do regular V4L2 things on the camera with the
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// supplied FDs. video_fd for the /dev/video device.
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ioctl(camera->video_fd, VIDIOC_QUERYCAP, &cap)
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Libmegapixels replaces most of the original V4L2 setup code and provides a
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filled in :code:`struct v4l2_format` to get all the exact mode information.
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To pick a camera and mode you'd iterate over the found cameras and then over
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the mode structs to find something that matches the needs of the application.
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The camera struct provides the FDs for the various devices you might need:
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- The :code:`video_fd` field has the FD for :code:`/dev/video*` for actually
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getting the frames.
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- The :code:`sensor_fd` field is for the :code:`/dev/v4l-subdev*` device that
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represents the sensor. This is for setting camera V4L2 controls while capturing.
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- The :code:`media_fd` field is for the :code:`/dev/media*` device that has the
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pipeline for the current camera. This is mostly for the libmegapixels internals.
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The config files
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----------------
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The libmegapixels library ships with configuration files for some devices. The
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device configuration can be stored in multiple locations so it can be overridden
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by packagers and end users.
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/usr/share/megapixels/config/%model.conf
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This is the location where the config files from packages are stored. This is
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also where the build script from libmegapixels will place the internal config
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files here.
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/etc/megapixels/config/%model.conf
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This is the place for extra and/or override config files
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$cwd/config/%model.conf
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The config is loaded from the current working directory to make testing and
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debugging the code easier and to run it from the root of the git repository.
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The %model argument in the path is referring to the device-tree compatible names
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of the device. This can be found in :code:`/proc/device-tree/compatible`. This
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stores the name of the hardware seperated by null-bytes in decreasing specificity
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order. Libmegapixels will check all of them in order for every location above.
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