Re: [PATCH v4 7/7] media: open.rst: add a notice about subdev-API on vdev-centric

From: Hans Verkuil
Date: Mon Aug 28 2017 - 06:55:17 EST


On 28/08/17 12:30, Mauro Carvalho Chehab wrote:
> Em Mon, 28 Aug 2017 12:05:06 +0200
> Hans Verkuil <hverkuil@xxxxxxxxx> escreveu:
>
>> On 26/08/17 13:53, Mauro Carvalho Chehab wrote:
>>> The documentation doesn't mention if vdev-centric hardware
>>> control would have subdev API or not.
>>>
>>> Add a notice about that, reflecting the current status, where
>>> three drivers use it, in order to support some subdev-specific
>>> controls.
>>
>> I posted a patch removing v4l-subdevX support for cobalt. It's only used
>> within Cisco, so this is safe to do and won't break any userspace support.
>
> OK.
>
>> atmel-isc is another driver that creates subdev nodes. Like cobalt, this
>> is unnecessary. There are no sensors that use private controls.
>
> The question is not if the driver has private controls. Private controls
> can be V4L2 device node oriented.
>
> The real question is if userspace applications use subdevs or not in
> order to set something specific to a subdev, on a pipeline where
> multiple subdevs could use the same control.
>
> E. g. even on a simple case where the driver would have something like:
>
> sensor -> processing -> DMA
>
> both "sensor" and "processing" could provide the same control
> (bright, contrast, gain, or whatever). Only by exposing such
> control via subdev is possible to pinpoint what part of the
> hardware pipeline would be affected when such control is changed.

In theory, yes. In practice this does not happen for any of the
V4L2-centric drivers. Including for the three drivers under discussion.

>
>> This driver is not referenced anywhere (dts or board file) in the kernel.
>> It is highly unlikely anyone would use v4l-subdevX nodes when there is no
>> need to do so. My suggestion is to add a kernel option for this driver
>> to enable v4l-subdevX support, but set it to 'default n'. Perhaps with
>> a note in the Kconfig description and a message in the kernel log that
>> this will be removed in the future.
>>
>> The final driver is rcar_drif that uses this to set the "I2S Enable"
>> private control of the max2175 driver.
>>
>> I remember that there was a long discussion over this control. I still
>> think that there is no need to mark this private.
>
> The problem with I2S is that a device may have multiple places
> where I2S could be used. I don't know how the rcar-drif driver uses
> it, but there are several vdev-centric boards that use I2S for audio.
>
> On several of the devices I worked with, the I2S can be enabled, in
> runtime, if the audio signal would be directed to some digital output,
> or it can be disabled if the audio signal would be directed to some
> analog output. Thankfully, on those devices, I2S can be indirectly
> controlled via either an ALSA mixer or via VIDIOC A/V routing
> ioctls. Also, there's just one I2S bus on them.
>
> However, on a device that have multiple I2S bus, userspace should
> be able to control each of them individually, as some parts of the
> pipeline may require it enabled while others may require it
> disabled. So, I strongly believe that this should be a subdev
> control on such hardware.
>
> That's said, I don't know how rcar_drif uses it. If it has just
> one I2S bus and it is used only for audio, then VIDIOC A/V routing
> ioctls and/or an ALSA mixer could replace it. If not, then
> it should be kept as-is and the driver would need to add support
> for MC, in order for applications to identify the right
> sub-devices that are associated with the pipelines where I2S
> will be controlled.

Ramesh, do applications using rcar_drif + max2175 have to manually
enable the i2s? Shouldn't this be part of the device tree description
instead?

Regards,

Hans