Hi, I own an Elgato Cam Link 4K which is a very popular USB HDMI capture device (number one capture card by click rates on Geizhals [1]). The problem is that the video feed is distorted when using the /dev/videoX device in the browser (tested on Firefox and Chromium) for video conferencing (tested with Jitsi Meet and Google Meet). The same distortion is present when opening `v4l2:///dev/video0` with VLC. The Elgato Cam Link 4K reports to have three different pixel formats: ``` $ v4l2-ctl -d /dev/video0 --list-formats-ext ioctl: VIDIOC_ENUM_FMT Type: Video Capture [0]: 'NV12' (Y/CbCr 4:2:0) Size: Discrete 3840x2160 Interval: Discrete 0.040s (25.000 fps) [1]: 'NV12' (Y/CbCr 4:2:0) Size: Discrete 3840x2160 Interval: Discrete 0.040s (25.000 fps) [2]: 'YU12' (Planar YUV 4:2:0) Size: Discrete 3840x2160 Interval: Discrete 0.040s (25.000 fps) ``` When specifying the video format 'YU12' to VLC, the video is distorted the same way as using the default video format. When specifying 'NV12' to VLC, the video feed is displayed correctly: ``` vlc v4l2:///dev/video0 --v4l2-chroma=NV12 ``` In OBS, the video feed is always displayed correctly. All video formats 'Y/CbCr 4:2:0', 'Planar YUV 4:2:0', 'BGR3 (Emulated)', and 'YV12 (Emulated)' combined with the color ranges 'Default', 'Partial', and 'Full' produce the same correct output. With Linux >= 5.9 this behavior in OBS changes: The video format 'Y/CbCr 4:2:0' displays the video correctly. Switching to 'Planar YUV 4:2:0', 'BGR3 (Emulated)', or 'YV12 (Emulated)' shows the video distorted and OBS shows this error message: ``` info: v4l2-input: Pixelformat: NV12 [...] libv4l2: error set_fmt gave us a different result than try_fmt! info: v4l2-input: Resolution: 3840x2160 info: v4l2-input: Pixelformat: NV12 ``` Changing the video format back does not have an effect until I also change the color range (does seem to be relevant what to select there). Workaround ---------- You can create a v4l2loopback device and use ffmpeg to stream from the Cam Link 4K to the loopback device: ``` ffmpeg -f v4l2 -input_format yuv420p -video_size 3840x2160 \ -i "$camlink" -codec copy -f v4l2 "$loopdev" ``` This workaround works, but is cumbersome and burns CPU cycles. Other reports ------------- Searching the web for "Cam Link 4K Linux" reveals many similar reports like this. Noteworthy is blog post [3] from Mike Walters who patched the Cam Link 4K firmware to report the correct video format. I am willing to debug this issue and do test, but I don't want to flash the firmware to not break the warrenty (bisides I lack the hardware for flashing). Environment ----------- This problem is present in Ubuntu 20.04 with linux 5.4.0-54.60 and Ubuntu 20.10 with linux 5.8.0-29.31. I also tested the mainline kernels builds 5.9.8-050908.202011101634 and 5.10.0-051000rc4.202011152030 from Ubuntu [2]. The Cam Link 4K shows follow entries in dmesg: ``` [ 1.575753] usb 2-3: new SuperSpeed Gen 1 USB device number 2 using xhci_hcd [ 1.596664] usb 2-3: LPM exit latency is zeroed, disabling LPM. [ 1.598557] usb 2-3: New USB device found, idVendor=0fd9, idProduct=0066, bcdDevice= 0.00 [ 1.598558] usb 2-3: New USB device strings: Mfr=1, Product=2, SerialNumber=4 [ 1.598559] usb 2-3: Product: Cam Link 4K [ 1.598560] usb 2-3: Manufacturer: Elgato ``` I have another problems with 5.9.8-050908.202011101634 and 5.10.0- 051000rc4.202011152030: Chromium fail to access the video device of Cam Link 4K and the notebook integrated webcam has a too low brightness. [1] https://geizhals.de/?cat=vidext [2] https://kernel.ubuntu.com/~kernel-ppa/mainline/ [3] https://assortedhackery.com/patching-cam-link-to-play-nicer-on-linux/ -- Benjamin Drung Debian & Ubuntu Developer