From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Return-path: Received: from smtp-vbr10.xs4all.nl ([194.109.24.30]:3317 "EHLO smtp-vbr10.xs4all.nl" rhost-flags-OK-OK-OK-OK) by vger.kernel.org with ESMTP id S932443Ab1GENU2 convert rfc822-to-8bit (ORCPT ); Tue, 5 Jul 2011 09:20:28 -0400 From: Hans Verkuil To: Mauro Carvalho Chehab Subject: Re: [RFC] DV timings spec fixes at V4L2 API - was: [PATCH 1/8] v4l: add macro for 1080p59_54 preset Date: Tue, 5 Jul 2011 15:20:17 +0200 Cc: Tomasz Stanislawski , linux-media@vger.kernel.org, m.szyprowski@samsung.com, kyungmin.park@samsung.com, laurent.pinchart@ideasonboard.com References: <1309351877-32444-1-git-send-email-t.stanislaws@samsung.com> <201107050926.38639.hverkuil@xs4all.nl> <4E12FEA3.6010500@redhat.com> In-Reply-To: <4E12FEA3.6010500@redhat.com> MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: Text/Plain; charset="utf-8" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8BIT Message-Id: <201107051520.17361.hverkuil@xs4all.nl> List-ID: Sender: On Tuesday, July 05, 2011 14:08:03 Mauro Carvalho Chehab wrote: > Em 05-07-2011 04:26, Hans Verkuil escreveu: > > On Monday, July 04, 2011 18:09:18 Mauro Carvalho Chehab wrote: > >> Em 29-06-2011 09:51, Tomasz Stanislawski escreveu: > >>> The 1080p59_94 is supported by latest Samsung SoC. > >>> > >>> Signed-off-by: Tomasz Stanislawski > >>> Signed-off-by: Kyungmin Park > >>> Reviewed-by: Hans Verkuil > >>> --- > >>> drivers/media/video/v4l2-common.c | 1 + > >>> include/linux/videodev2.h | 1 + > >>> 2 files changed, 2 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-) > >>> > >>> diff --git a/drivers/media/video/v4l2-common.c b/drivers/media/video/v4l2-common.c > >>> index 06b9f9f..003e648 100644 > >>> --- a/drivers/media/video/v4l2-common.c > >>> +++ b/drivers/media/video/v4l2-common.c > >>> @@ -582,6 +582,7 @@ int v4l_fill_dv_preset_info(u32 preset, struct v4l2_dv_enum_preset *info) > >>> { 1920, 1080, "1080p@30" }, /* V4L2_DV_1080P30 */ > >>> { 1920, 1080, "1080p@50" }, /* V4L2_DV_1080P50 */ > >>> { 1920, 1080, "1080p@60" }, /* V4L2_DV_1080P60 */ > >>> + { 1920, 1080, "1080p@59.94" }, /* V4L2_DV_1080P59_94 */ > >>> }; > >>> > >>> if (info == NULL || preset >= ARRAY_SIZE(dv_presets)) > >>> diff --git a/include/linux/videodev2.h b/include/linux/videodev2.h > >>> index 8a4c309..7c77c4e 100644 > >>> --- a/include/linux/videodev2.h > >>> +++ b/include/linux/videodev2.h > >>> @@ -872,6 +872,7 @@ struct v4l2_dv_enum_preset { > >>> #define V4L2_DV_1080P30 16 /* SMPTE 296M */ > >>> #define V4L2_DV_1080P50 17 /* BT.1120 */ > >>> #define V4L2_DV_1080P60 18 /* BT.1120 */ > >>> +#define V4L2_DV_1080P59_94 19 > >>> > >>> /* > >>> * D V B T T I M I N G S > >> > >> This patch deserves further discussions, as the specs that define the presets > >> are not so clear with respect to 60Hz and 60/1.001 Hz. > >> > >> Let me summarize the issue. > >> > >> > >> > >> 1) PRESET STANDARDS > >> ====== ========= > >> > >> There are 3 specs involved with DV presets: ITU-R BT 709 and BT 1120 and CEA 861. > >> > >> At ITU-R BT.709, both 60Hz and 60/1.001 Hz are equally called as "60 Hz". BT.1120 > >> follows the same logic, as it uses BT.709 as a reference for video timings. > >> > >> The CEA-861-E spec says at item 4, that: > >> > >> A video timing with a vertical frequency that is an integer multiple of 6.00 Hz (i.e. 24.00, 30.00, 60.00, > >> 120.00 or 240.00 Hz) is considered to be the same as a video timing with the equivalent detailed timing > >> information but where the vertical frequency is adjusted by a factor of 1000/1001 (i.e., 24/1.001, 30/1.001, > >> 60/1.001, 120/1.001 or 240/1.001). That is, they are considered two versions of the same video timing but > >> with slightly different pixel clock frequencies. Therefore, a DTV that declares it is capable of displaying a > >> video timing with a vertical frequency that is either an integer multiple of 6 Hz or an integer multiple of 6 > >> Hz adjusted by a factor of 1000/1001 shall be capable of displaying both versions of the video timing. > >> > >> At the same item, the table 2 describes several video parameters for each preset, associating the > >> Video Identification Codes (VIC) for each preset. > > > > No, *multiple VICs* are associated with each preset. VIC != preset. > > There are two VIC's for several presets, as it is also used at the spec to determine the aspect ratio, but, basically, > for one given VIC, there's just one timings preset at the table 2. Sigh. VIC != video timings. It just gives some additional information regarding aspect ration (duplicated information actually). The simple fact that you can't use it to determine the pixelclock and thus the vertical frequency means that it is *not* suitable as a way to determine the video timings. I've been working with HDMI receivers and transmitters for several years now, and it simply is not suitable. > > Also, the VICs do not differentiate between 60 and 59.94 Hz. > > Yes, but V4L2 DV timings also don't differentiate. ??? Yes, they do. There is a 720P60 and a 720P59_94. Also 1080I29_97 and 1080I30. The 1080P59_94 is simply missing because nobody needed it yet. > >> Table 4 associates each VIC with the supported formats. For example, VIC 16 means a resolution of > >> 1920x1080 at 59.94Hz/60Hz. The spec does explicitly allow that all vertical frequencies that are > >> multiple of 6 Hz to accept both 59.94 Hz and 60 Hz, as said at note 3 of table 2: > >> > >> 3. A video timing with a vertical frequency that is an integer multiple of 6.00 Hz (i.e. 24.00, 30.00, 60.00, 120.00 or > >> 240.00 Hz) is considered to be the same as a video timing with the equivalent detailed timing information but where > >> the vertical frequency is adjusted by a factor of 1000/1001 (i.e., 24/1.001, 30/1.001, 60/1.001, 120/1.001 or > >> 240/1.001). That is, they are considered two versions of the same video timing but with slightly different pixel clock > >> frequencies. The vertical frequencies of the 240p, 480p, and 480i video formats are typically adjusted by a factor of > >> exactly 1000/1001 for NTSC video compatibility, while the 576p, 576i, and the HDTV video formats are not. The > >> VESA DMT standard [65] specifies a ± 0.5% pixel clock frequency tolerance. Therefore, the nominally 25.175 MHz > >> pixel clock frequency value given for video identification code 1 may be adjusted to 25.2 MHz to obtain an exact 60 > >> Hz vertical frequency. > >> > >> In other words, the preset for 1920x1080p@60Hz can be used for both 60Hz and 59.94 Hz, > >> according with the above note, being 59.94 Hz the typical value (e. g. the value that > >> should be used on most places). > >> > >> However, there are some "60 Hz" vertical resolutions that have VIC's with > >> different framerates (like 59.94Hz, 60.054Hz, etc). Those seem to not be > >> covered by the "multiple of 6.00 Hz" rule. > > > > No. A preset identifies one specific modeline (to use the terminology from the > > GPU world). It defines the front/back porches, sync lengths, active area and > > pixelclock frequency. Any ambiguities as to the timings of a preset should be > > resolved by the documentation (which clearly needs a bit more work). > > As I pointed before, it is not just documentation. For all the 6.00 Hz multiple standard, > CEA defines that, using the same DV timings, it is possible to choose to shift the clock > by 1000/1001 to support the "59.94Hz". So, this applies to several VIC's for 60Hz, > 120 Hz and 240Hz. > > While it is possible to duplicate the DV timing line for all affected VICs, > We'll end by having a very messy API, as there will be two 60 Hz standards, one > with the shift and the other without, for the same CEA VIC, plus the CEA > standards that are defined for other vertical resolutions like 60.054 Hz, > 59.826 Hz, 119.88 Hz, 239.76 Hz and even 59.940 Hz. So? Different timings, different preset. BTW, as I mentioned earlier, most of the weirder resolution I never see in practice. Just 480, 576, 720 and 1080. Which is why I don't think it is useful to add them unless someone really needs them. > Part of the problem is the u32 "preset" var, at v4l2_dv_enum_preset. It > requires a namespace to identify the presets, but this can become very > confusing with time. How would you distinguish from a CEA-861 60.00 Hz standard > with a Vertical frequency shift of 1000/1001 and a CEA-861 59.94 Hz? The current All CEA-861 59.94 standards have identical timings as the 60 Hz standards, except for the different pixelclock (which is responsible for the frequency shift). So it's unambiguous. > namespace doesn't allow that, and creating a namespace to accommodate would be > weird and would easily be very confusing. > > > In general, > > though, all the currently defined presets refer to CEA-861. The standards > > mentioned in videodev2.h all refer to the same things, but CEA-861 is the standard > > where it all comes together. > > > > In practice there are four different standards that the preset API can use: > > > > CEA-861 for all things HDTV (HDMI) > > VESA DMT timings for DVI-D (PC) type timings (VGA, XVGA, etc.) > > VESA GTF timings (officially deprecated, but still quite common algorithm to > > calculate timings) > > VESA CVT timings (the newer algorithm to calculate timings) > > > > GTF and CVT pose there own problems and Cisco will be making a proposal for > > how to handle this some time this year. > > > > VESA DMT timings as easy to add since they are well-defined. We plan on doing > > that. > > Well, try to accomodate all those timings using the current namespace for > preset. I bet you'll end by having lots of duplicated names for distinct > timings. We have done that for DMT already. CVT and GTF are a separate issue since presets do not work there. Most likely the VIDIOC_G/S_DV_TIMINGS ioctls will need to be used there. > The API needs to be fixed, and it is better sooner than later. The API works perfectly well. CEA-861, VESA DMT, no problem at all. There are a few things that need to be added to v4l2_dv_enum_dv_presets such as framerate and interlaced vs progressive. Although I don't want to make changes there until I know how GTF/CVT are going to be handled. The whole preset API was made to 1) provide a simple way to use the common video formats and 2) handle receivers/transmitters that only provided a limited set of formats. There are quite a few of those that only support the 480/576/720/1080 lines formats. For more complex timings use VIDIOC_G/S_DV_TIMINGS. > > >> 2. V4L2 API > >> ==== === > >> > >> The V4L2 specs define a DV timing as having those fields: > >> > >> __u32 width Width of the active video in pixels > >> __u32 height Height of the active video in lines > >> __u32 interlaced Progressive (0) or interlaced (1) > >> __u32 polarities This is a bit mask that defines polarities of sync signals. > >> __u64 pixelclock Pixel clock in Hz. Ex. 74.25MHz->74250000 > >> __u32 hfrontporch Horizontal front porch in pixels > >> __u32 hsync Horizontal sync length in pixels > >> __u32 hbackporch Horizontal back porch in pixels > >> __u32 vfrontporch Vertical front porch in lines > >> __u32 vsync Vertical sync length in lines > >> __u32 vbackporch Vertical back porch in lines > >> __u32 il_vfrontporch Vertical front porch in lines for bottom field of interlaced field formats > >> __u32 il_vsync Vertical sync length in lines for bottom field of interlaced field formats > >> __u32 il_vbackporch Vertical back porch in lines for bottom field of interlaced field formats > >> > >> [1] http://linuxtv.org/downloads/v4l-dvb-apis/vidioc-g-dv-timings.html > >> > >> So, it basically allows adjusting the timings for each of the VIC's, but it seems that there > >> is one limitation at the current API: > >> > >> vblank is an integer value, for both frames 0 and 1. So, it doesn't allow to adjust vblanks > >> like 22.5. This prevents specifying presets like VICs 10/11. > > > > vblanks are never halflines. One field is one line longer than the other. As note 1 in table 2 > > says: "fractional values indicate that the number of blanking lines varies". It's why we have > > those il_ fields. > > OK. > > >> > >> The presets ioctl's [2] provide the following fields: > >> > >> __u32 index Number of the DV preset, set by the application. > >> __u32 preset This field identifies one of the DV preset values listed in Table A.15, “struct DV Presets”. > >> __u8 name[24] Name of the preset, a NUL-terminated ASCII string, for example: "720P-60", "1080I-60". This information is intended for the user. > >> __u32 width Width of the active video in pixels for the DV preset. > >> __u32 height Height of the active video in lines for the DV preset. > >> > >> [2] http://linuxtv.org/downloads/v4l-dvb-apis/vidioc-enum-dv-presets.html#v4l2-dv-presets-vals > >> > >> Where "preset" can mean: > >> > >> V4L2_DV_INVALID 0 Invalid preset value. > >> V4L2_DV_480P59_94 1 720x480 progressive video at 59.94 fps as per BT.1362. > >> V4L2_DV_576P50 2 720x576 progressive video at 50 fps as per BT.1362. > >> V4L2_DV_720P24 3 1280x720 progressive video at 24 fps as per SMPTE 296M. > >> V4L2_DV_720P25 4 1280x720 progressive video at 25 fps as per SMPTE 296M. > >> V4L2_DV_720P30 5 1280x720 progressive video at 30 fps as per SMPTE 296M. > >> V4L2_DV_720P50 6 1280x720 progressive video at 50 fps as per SMPTE 296M. > >> V4L2_DV_720P59_94 7 1280x720 progressive video at 59.94 fps as per SMPTE 274M. > >> V4L2_DV_720P60 8 1280x720 progressive video at 60 fps as per SMPTE 274M/296M. > >> V4L2_DV_1080I29_97 9 1920x1080 interlaced video at 29.97 fps as per BT.1120/SMPTE 274M. > >> V4L2_DV_1080I30 10 1920x1080 interlaced video at 30 fps as per BT.1120/SMPTE 274M. > >> V4L2_DV_1080I25 11 1920x1080 interlaced video at 25 fps as per BT.1120. > >> V4L2_DV_1080I50 12 1920x1080 interlaced video at 50 fps as per SMPTE 296M. > >> V4L2_DV_1080I60 13 1920x1080 interlaced video at 60 fps as per SMPTE 296M. > >> V4L2_DV_1080P24 14 1920x1080 progressive video at 24 fps as per SMPTE 296M. > >> V4L2_DV_1080P25 15 1920x1080 progressive video at 25 fps as per SMPTE 296M. > >> V4L2_DV_1080P30 16 1920x1080 progressive video at 30 fps as per SMPTE 296M. > >> V4L2_DV_1080P50 17 1920x1080 progressive video at 50 fps as per BT.1120. > >> V4L2_DV_1080P60 18 1920x1080 progressive video at 60 fps as per BT.1120. > > > > All these standards need to be replaced with CEA-861. > > Sorry, but I couldn't understand your proposal here. > > >> > >> > >> 3. ISSUES AT V4L2 API > >> ====== == ==== === > >> > >> There are some troubles at the way we currently define the presets: > >> > >> 3.1) The preset macros have the name of the active video lines, but this is also present at > >> the height field; > > > > ??? While a human can see that V4L2_DV_1080P60 refers to 1080 lines, a computer > > can't. The macro is a just a number, so you need to communicate the width and > > height explicitly. > > Yes, but the namespace is confusing, and developers might code it as: > > if (preset >= V4L2_DV_1080I29_97 || preset <= V4L2_DV_1080P60) > width = 1080; > > (or doing the same inside a switch, although I've seen several userspace applications > implementing things like above). > > The above would be valid, and the end result is that a duplicated information is provided. That's why we have the VIDIOC_DV_ENUM_PRESETS that you can give the preset and get back WxH. How does this differ between v4l2_std_id and ENUMSTD? > I failed to see what information is provided by the "presets" name. If this were removed > from the ioctl, and fps would be added instead, the API would be clearer. The only > adjustment would be to use "index" as the preset selection key. Anyway, it is too late > for such change. We need to live with that. Adding the fps solves nothing. Because that still does not give you specific timings. You can have 1920x1080P60 that has quite different timings from the CEA-861 standard and that may not be supported by a TV. If you are working with HDMI, then you may want to filter all supported presets to those of the CEA standard. That's one thing that is missing at the moment: that presets belonging to a certain standard get their own range. Since we only do CEA861 right now it hasn't been an issue, but it will. > > > >> 3.2) The preset macros don't have the name of the active video columns; > > > > For the current set of macros the industry convention is used. 1080P50 always > > refers to 1920x1080. Anything else should be made explicit. > > > >> 3.3) If someone would want to add a preset for some CEA-861-E VICs, namespace conflicts will > >> happen. For example, a preset for 1440x576@50Hz would have the same name as a preset > >> for 2880x576p at 50 Hz. Both would be called as V4L2_DV_576P50. > > > > Obviously that would have to be called V4L2_DV_2880X576P50 (or something similar). > > So, the namespace will become messy, with will make developers very confused about what they > should use. As you've mentioned, there are currently 4 standards with timings that will > needed to be supported. So, at the end of the day, we'll have: > > V4L2_DV_576P50 > V4L2_DV_576P50_foo > V4L2_DV_576P50_bar > V4L2_DV_576P50_delta > V4L2_DV_2880X576P50 > V4L2_DV_2880X576P50_foo > V4L2_DV_2880X576P50_bar > V4L2_DV_2880X576P50_delta > ... > > where foo, bar, and delta would be some othe DV-timings based naming. It will become a nightmare > for developers to discover, from the above list, what are the timings from VESA DMT and what > are from CEA-861. > > The solution is to associate its name to the standards naming, like: > > V4L2_DV_CEA_861_VIC_35_36 > > For the timings associated with VICs 35 and 36. I've no problem with the CEA_861 prefix. Using VIC is not a good idea for the reasons outlined above. V4L2_DV_CEA_861_1920X1080P60 V4L2_DV_CEA_861_1920X1080P59_94 etc. is fine as far as I am concerned. It's a needed improvement, and the current names are perfectly acceptable as aliases. > > > > >> 3.4) It doesn't mind what DV timing is used, CEA-861-E and BT.709 allows to use the 60Hz > >> timings as either 60Hz or 59.94 Hz. That applies to all VIC format timings at table 2 > >> for 60 Hz, 120 Hz and 240 Hz. > > > > No, the pixelclock is part of the preset timings. So V4L2_DV_1080P60 and V4L2_DV_1080P59_94 > > are different presets with different timings. Just as they would be different modelines > > for your graphics card. I really don't see the problem here. > > Sorry, but the current way that this documented is not clear enough. Also, there's nothing > at VIDIOC_ENUM_DV_PRESETS that allows checking the fps, except for the preset name, which > is confusing enough. Improving the documentation is always useful. If it wasn't clear enough to you, then other will most likely have the same problem. Adding some way to determine the fps with ENUM_DV_PRESETS is needed as well. It just needs some careful thinking how this should be done. I don't know whether a v4l2_fract can represent all frequencies. I would need to experiment a bit. > >> 3.5) There are lots of format at CEA-861-E without a V4L2 preset. > > > > True. Frankly I have yet to encounter any of the weird ones (i.e. other than > > 640x480, 480p/i, 576p/i, 720p/i and 1080p/i with their various framerates). > > > >> > >> 4. PROPOSED SOLUTION > >> ======== ======== > >> > >> In order to fix the issue, we need change the API without breaking the current apps that > >> use the timings ioctls. Also, the vertical rate clock for 60Hz formats needs to allow > >> a fractional adjustment of either 1 or 1000/1001, in order to support the specs. > >> > >> 4.1) Preset renaming > >> --------------- > >> > >> To avoid having duplicated namespace conflicts, the better seems to rename the existing > >> presets to contain both width and height at their macro definitions, like: > >> > >> #define V4L2_DV_1920_1080P60 18 1920x1080 progressive video at 60 fps as per BT.1120 > >> > >> (for the sake of simplicity, I just took one value from the table. The same fix is needed > >> to be applied for the other macro definitions) > >> > >> To avoid breaking userspace, the old names need to be associated with the new ones, with: > >> > >> #define V4L2_DV_1080P60 V4L2_DV_1920_1080P60 > > > > I've no problem with that. 1080P60 is still a useful shorthand. > > As I said before, it will be better to change it to explicitly associate with the specs > that defined that video timing, with whatever ID code there. So, for CEA-861, it would > be, in this case: > > #define V4L2_DV_CEA_861_VIC_16 18 > > and the legacy compat macro: > #define V4L2_DV_1080P60 V4L2_DV_CEA_861_VIC_16 I agree with the standard, but not with the VIC part. > >> > >> This fixes issue 3.2 and 3.3. Unfortunately, fixing 3.1 is not possible anymore, so, > >> we have to keep the same information duplicated on two places (at the macro name and > >> at the width/height). > > > > As I mentioned above, for a program the macro name is useless. > > > >> The question that remains unsolved is what an userspace application would handle a driver > >> that might eventually provide inconsistent data at width/height and at the macro names? > > > > That's a driver bug. > > > >> 4.2) Framerate selection for 60Hz preset > >> ----------------------------------- > >> > >> As the spec allows using any format that it is multiple of 6.00 Hz multiplied by either > >> 1 or 1000/1001, the selection betweem them should be done via VIDIOC_G_PARM/VIDIOC_S_PARM. > >> So, V4L2 spec should say, at the "Digital Video (DV) Timings" section: > >> > >> Devices that implement DV timings shall implement VIDIOC_G_PARM/VIDIOC_S_PARM, > >> in order to allow controlling the vertical frame rate for the presets whose > >> vertical rate is multiple of 6.00 Hz, in order to allow setting the timing > >> between 60 Hz and 59.94 Hz. The default value, at device init, shall be 59.94 Hz. > > > > NACK. > > > > The pixel clock is part of the video timings and hence defined by the preset. > > > > VIDIOC_S_PARM is used when the desired framerate differs from the actual framerate > > and the driver can do frame repeating or frameskipping. > > NO. VIDIOC_S_PARM is used on all places where the user desires to specify a framerate. All > webcams use it to select the desired framerate. > > > At least that's what the V4L2 spec says. > > I'll prepare a patch fixing it. This is one of the parts of the API that got outdated with > time. > > > In practice it is used to set the framerate for sensors. I'm not sure > > if there is any driver that actually uses it for frameskipping. > > There are some video capture drivers that implement it, so I think that some use it for > frameskipping. G/S_PARM makes sense for sensors, but not for video receivers/transmitters. It simply makes no sense and makes it harder on drivers and applications alike. > > > To my knowledge it is not used at all for video output. > > In any case, selecting a DV timing preset with an specific fps is currently confusing, and > requires that the userspace application to have a switch(v4l2_dv_enum_preset.preset) in order > to associate a preset macro name with a fps. This is a very bad idea. Again, that's not how it works. For transmitting the application will enumerate the supported presets and show it to the user who can select from it. For embedded apps it is more likely that the application will hardcode the presets. For receiving you call QUERY_DV_PRESET and then use it with S_DV_PRESET. You should never have to do a switch. And yes, I know that ENUM_DV_PRESETS needs to return the fps. It's on the TODO list. > I see only two practical solutions for that. The first one is to use S_PARAM. The other one > is to stop providing the frequency inside the macro name, and add a field for that at the > v4l2_dv_enum_preset struct: > > struct v4l2_dv_enum_preset { > __u32 index; > __u32 preset; > __u8 name[32]; /* Name of the preset timing */ > __u32 width; > __u32 height; > v4l2_fract fps; > __u32 reserved[2]; > }; > > So, for example, a driver that supports only CEA-861 VIC 16 will report 2 presets: > > struct v4l2_dv_enum_preset dv[] = { > { 0, V4L2_DV_CEA_861_VIC_16__60HZ, "CEA-861 1920x1080p 60Hz", 1920, 1080, {60, 1} }, > { 1, V4L2_DV_CEA_861_VIC_16__59_94HZ, "CEA-861 1920x1080p 59.94Hz", 1920, 1080, {60000, 1001} }, > }; > > Yet, we should be sure that this will also cover all current VESA standards. Well, yes, that's the plan. It just needs more research to determine whether v4l2_fract is the best way to specify the fps and how to handle CVT/GTF. > > >> 4.3) Add the missing CEA-861-E presets > >> --------------------------------- > >> > >> As those formats are part of the spec that is implemented by this V4L2 API, the better > >> would be to implement all the missing formats at the V4L2 spec. As a generic rule, we > >> don't add support at the Kernel without having a driver using it, but, in this specific > >> case, we want to be able to be compatible with the specs, so, it seems a good idea to > >> implement the remaining ones, or, at least reserve its namespace at the DocBook. This > >> solves issue 3.5. > > > > I'm not so sure. There are lots of weird resolutions in CEA-861 that I have never > > seen in use. A better approach IMHO is that whenever we add a resolution to the > > preset table, then we do that for all variants of that resolution. > > This works for me. > > >> 5) S5P-TV SUPPORT FOR 59.94 HZ > >> =========================== > >> > >> It is not clear, from this patch, if you're really wanting to implement support for VIC > >> 16 format @59.94 Hz, or something else. From CEA-861-E, it seems to be the case, as > >> this is the only 1920x1080p format for 60 Hz. If this is the case, according with my > >> proposal, the driver should be using the 60Hz format, instead, and implement S_PARM > >> to allow selecting between 60Hz and 59.94Hz. > > > > NACK. You need two presets: V4L2_DV_1080P60 and 1080P59_94. Just as is already there > > for 720P60 and 720P59_94. I really don't see the problem. > > NACK adding it as "V4L2_DV_1080P59_94". > > Let's fix the namespace and provide a way to specify/enumberate the fps first, and then > change the patch to follow whatever decided. So, after all this talk it boils down to: - Add a CEA_861 namespace - Add a way to specify the fps in VIDIOC_DV_ENUM_PRESETS I can work on the proposal this week for that. The only reason the fps hasn't been added yet is that I never had the time to do the research on how to represent the fps reliably for all CEA/VESA formats. Hmm, pixelclock / total_framesize should always work, of course. We can add a flags field as well (for interlaced vs progressive and perhaps others such as normal vs reduced blanking). That leaves the problem with GTF/CVT. I'll get back to that tomorrow. I have ideas, but I need to discuss it first. Regards, Hans