On 03/11/2017 07:32 AM, Sakari Ailus wrote:
Hi Mauro and Hans, On Sat, Mar 11, 2017 at 10:14:08AM -0300, Mauro Carvalho Chehab wrote:Em Sat, 11 Mar 2017 12:32:43 +0100 Hans Verkuil <hverkuil@xxxxxxxxx> escreveu:On 10/03/17 16:09, Mauro Carvalho Chehab wrote:Em Fri, 10 Mar 2017 13:54:28 +0100 Hans Verkuil <hverkuil@xxxxxxxxx> escreveu:Devices that have complex pipeline that do essentially require using the Media controller interface to configure them are out of that scope.Way too much of how the MC devices should be used is in the minds of developers. There is a major lack for good detailed documentation, utilities, compliance test (really needed!) and libv4l plugins.Unfortunately, we merged an incomplete MC support at the Kernel. We knew all the problems with MC-based drivers and V4L2 applications by the time it was developed, and we requested Nokia developers (with was sponsoring MC develoment, on that time) to work on a solution to allow standard V4L2 applications to work with MC based boards. Unfortunately, we took the decision to merge MC without that, because Nokia was giving up on Linux development, and we didn't want to lose the 2 years of discussions and work around it, as Nokia employers were leaving the company. Also, on that time, there was already some patches floating around adding backward support via libv4l. Unfortunately, those patches were never finished. The net result is that MC was merged with some huge gaps, including the lack of a proper solution for a generic V4L2 program to work with V4L2 devices that use the subdev API. That was not that bad by then, as MC was used only on cell phones that run custom-made applications. The reallity changed, as now, we have lots of low cost SoC based boards, used for all sort of purposes. So, we need a quick solution for it. In other words, while that would be acceptable support special apps on really embedded systems, it is *not OK* for general purpose SoC harware[1]. [1] I'm calling "general purpose SoC harware" those ARM boards like Raspberry Pi that are shipped to the mass and used by a wide range of hobbyists and other people that just wants to run Linux on ARM. It is possible to buy such boards for a very cheap price, making them to be used not only on special projects, where a custom made application could be interesting, but also for a lot of users that just want to run Linux on a low cost ARM board, while keeping using standard V4L2 apps, like "camorama". That's perhaps one of the reasons why it took a long time for us to start receiving drivers upstream for such hardware: it is quite intimidating and not logical to require developers to implement on their drivers 2 complex APIs (MC, subdev) for those hardware that most users won't care. From user's perspective, being able to support generic applications like "camorama" and "zbar" is all they want. In summary, I'm pretty sure we need to support standard V4L2 applications on boards like Raspberry Pi and those low-cost SoC-based boards that are shipped to end users.Anyway, regarding this specific patch and for this MC-aware driver: no, you shouldn't inherit controls from subdevs. It defeats the purpose.Sorry, but I don't agree with that. The subdev API is an optional API (and even the MC API can be optional). I see the rationale for using MC and subdev APIs on cell phones, ISV and other embedded hardware, as it will allow fine-tuning the driver's support to allow providing the required quality for certain custom-made applications. but on general SoC hardware, supporting standard V4L2 applications is a need. Ok, perhaps supporting both subdev API and V4L2 API at the same time doesn't make much sense. We could disable one in favor of the other, either at compilation time or at runtime.Right. If the subdev API is disabled, then you have to inherit the subdev controls in the bridge driver (how else would you be able to access them?). And that's the usual case. If you do have the subdev API enabled, AND you use the MC, then the intention clearly is to give userspace full control and inheriting controls no longer makes any sense (and is highly confusing IMHO).I tend to agree with that.I agree as well. This is in line with how existing drivers behave, too.
Well, sounds like there is consensus on this topic. I guess I'll go ahead and remove the control inheritance support. I suppose having a control appear in two places (subdev and video nodes) can be confusing. As for the configurability vs. ease-of-use debate, I added the control inheritance to make it a little easier on the user, but, as the dot graphs below will show, the user already needs quite a lot of knowledge of the architecture already, in order to setup the different pipelines. So perhaps the control inheritance is rather pointless anyway.
This way, if the subdev API is disabled, the driver will be functional for V4L2-based applications that don't support neither MC or subdev APIs.I'm not sure if it makes sense for the i.MX driver to behave differently depending on whether the subdev API is enabled or disabled. I don't know enough of the hardware to tell if it would ever make sense to disable the subdev API.Yeah, I don't know enough about it either. The point is: this is something that the driver maintainer and driver users should decide if it either makes sense or not, based on the expected use cases.My understanding of the i.MX6 case is the hardware is configurable enough to warrant the use of the Media controller API. Some patches indicate there are choices to be made in data routing. Steve: could you enlighten us on the topic, by e.g. doing media-ctl --print-dot and sending the results to the list? What kind of different IP blocks are there and what do they do? A pointer to hardware documentation wouldn't hurt either (if it's available).
Wow, I didn't realize there was so little knowledge of the imx6 IPU capture architecture. Yes, the imx6 definitely warrants the need for MC, as the dot graphs will attest. The graphs follows very closely the actual hardware architecture ofthe IPU capture blocks. I.e., all the subdevs and links shown correspond to actual hardware connections and sub-blocks.
Russell just provided a link to the imx6 reference manual, and dot graph for the imx219 based platform. Also I've added quite a lot of detail to the media doc at Documentation/media/v4l-drivers/imx.rst.The dot graphs for SabreSD, SabreLite, and SabreAuto reference platforms are attached. This is generated from the most recent
(version 5) imx-media driver. Steve
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