On 03/13/2017 06:55 AM, Philipp Zabel wrote:
On Mon, 2017-03-13 at 13:27 +0000, Russell King - ARM Linux wrote:
On Mon, Mar 13, 2017 at 03:16:48PM +0200, Sakari Ailus wrote:
The vast majority of existing drivers do not implement them nor the user
space expects having to set them. Making that mandatory would break existing
user space.
In addition, that does not belong to link validation either: link validation
should only include static properties of the link that are required for
correct hardware operation. Frame rate is not such property: hardware that
supports the MC interface generally does not recognise such concept (with
the exception of some sensors). Additionally, it is dynamic: the frame rate
can change during streaming, making its validation at streamon time useless.
So how do we configure the CSI, which can do frame skipping?
With what you're proposing, it means it's possible to configure the
camera sensor source pad to do 50fps. Configure the CSI sink pad to
an arbitary value, such as 30fps, and configure the CSI source pad to
15fps.
What you actually get out of the CSI is 25fps, which bears very little
with the actual values used on the CSI source pad.
You could say "CSI should ask the camera sensor" - well, that's fine
if it's immediately downstream, but otherwise we'd need to go walking
down the graph to find something that resembles its source - there may
be mux and CSI2 interface subdev blocks in that path. Or we just accept
that frame rates are completely arbitary and bear no useful meaning what
so ever.
Which would include the frame interval returned by VIDIOC_G_PARM on the
connected video device, as that gets its information from the CSI output
pad's frame interval.
I'm kinda in the middle on this topic. I agree with Sakari that
frame rate can fluctuate, but that should only be temporary. If
the frame rate permanently shifts from what a subdev reports via
g_frame_interval, then that is a system problem. So I agree with
Phillip and Russell that a link validation of frame interval still
makes sense.
But I also have to agree with Sakari that a subdev that has no
control over frame rate has no business implementing those ops.
And then I agree with Russell that for subdevs that do have control
over frame rate, they would have to walk the graph to find the frame
rate source.
So we're stuck in a broken situation: either the subdevs have to walk
the graph to find the source of frame rate, or s_frame_interval
would have to be mandatory and validated between pads, same as set_fmt.
Steve
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