Using the V4L2 device kernel drivers - TC358743

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Hi All.

Apologies for what feels like such a newbie question, but I've failed to find useful information elsewhere.

I'm one of the ex-Broadcom developers who is still supporting Raspberry Pi, although I'm not employed by Pi Foundation or Trading. My aim is to open up that platform by exposing the CSI2 receiver block (and eventually parts of the ISP) via V4L2. The first use case would be for the Toshiba TC358743 HDMI to CSI2 converter, but it should be applicable to any of the other device drivers too. Sadly it probably won't be upstreamable as it will require the GPU to do most of the register poking to avoid potential IP issues (Broadcom not having released the docs for the relevant hardware blocks). In that regard it will be fairly similar to the existing V4L2 driver for the Pi camera.

There is now the driver for the TC358743 in mainline, but my stumbling block is finding a useful example of how to actually use it. The commit text by Mats Randgaard says it was "tested on our hardware and all the implemented features works as expected", but I don't know what that hardware was or how it was used.

The media controller API seems to be part of the answer, but that seems to be a large overhead for an application to have to connect together multiple sub-devices when it is only interested in images out the back. Is there something that sets up default connections that I'm missing? Somewhere within device tree?

I have looked at the OMAP4 ISS driver as a vaguely similar device, but that seemingly covers the image processing pipe only, not hooking in to the sensor drivers.

I've also got a slight challenge in that ideally I want the GPU to allocate the memory, and ARM map that memory (we already have a service to do that), but I can't see how that would fit in with the the existing videobuf modes. Any thoughts on how I might be able to support that? The existing V4L2 driver ends up doing a full copy of every buffer from GPU memory to ARM, which isn't great for performance. There may be an option to use contiguous memory and get the GPU to map that, but it's more involved as I don't believe the supporting code is on the Pi branch.

Any help much appreciated.

Thanks.
  Dave

PS If those involved in the TC358743 driver are reading, a couple of quick emails over the possibility of bringing the audio in over CSI2 rather than I2S would be appreciated. I can split out the relevant CSI2 ID stream, but have no idea how I would then feed that through the kernel to appear via ALSA.
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