Hi,
On 07/07/2009 04:35 PM, Mauro Carvalho Chehab wrote:
Em Tue, 7 Jul 2009 15:55:59 +0200
Erik Andrén<erik.andren@xxxxxxxxx> escreveu:
2009/7/7 Hans de Goede<hdegoede@xxxxxxxxxx>:
Hi All,
So recently I've hit 2 issues where kernel side fixes need
to go hand in hand with libv4l updates to not cause regressions.
First lets discuss the 2 cases:
1) The pac207 driver currently limits the framerate (and thus
the minimum exposure time) because at higher framerate the
cam starts using a higher compression and we could not
decompress this. Thanks to Bertrik Sikken we can now handle
the higher decompression.
So no I really want to enable the higher framerates as those
are needed to make the cam work properly in full daylight.
But if I do this, things will regress for people with an
older libv4l, as that won't be able to decompress the frames
2) Several zc3xxx cams have a timing issue between the bridge and
the sensor (the windows drivers have the same issue) which
makes them do only 320x236 instead of 320x240. Currently
we report their resolution to userspace as 320x240, leading to
a bar of noise at the bottom of the screen.
The fix here obviously is to report the real effective resoltion
to userspace, but this will cause regressions for apps which blindly
assume 320x240 is available (such as skype). The latest libv4l will
make the apps happy again by giving them 320x240 by adding small
black borders.
Now I see 2 solutions here:
a) Just make the changes, seen from the kernel side these are most
certainly bugfixes. I tend towards this for case 2)
b) Come up with an API to tell the libv4l version to the kernel and
make these changes in the drivers conditional on the libv4l version
Solution b) sounds messy and will probably lead to a lot of error
prone glue code in the kernel.
Fast-forward a couple of libv4l releases and you will have a nightmare
maintainability scenario.
If people run an old libv4l with a new kernel and run into problem,
just tell them to upgrade their libv4l version.
(b) seems a very bad hack, IMO. Between the two, I choose (a).
Ok,
So (a) it is then, I'll do a libv4l-0.6.0 release today. And put the changes
depend upon libv4l-0.6.0 in my tree then as time permits, they will then go
into 2.6.32 eventually which should put enough time between the libv4l release
and the kernel release for most people to have the newer libv4l.
Regards,
Hans
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