Message ID | 201107011821.33960.hverkuil@xs4all.nl (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
State | Not Applicable |
Headers | show |
Hi, <snip snip snip> Ok, thinking about this some more and reading Hans V's comments I think that the current code in Hans V's core8c branch is fine, and should go to 3.1 (rather then be delayed to 3.2). As for the fundamental question what to do with foo controls when autofoo goes from auto to manual, as discussed there are 2 options: 1) Restore the last known / previous manual setting 2) Keep foo at the current setting, iow the last setting configured by autofoo Although it would be great if we could standardize on one of these. I think that the answer here is to leave this decision to the driver: - In some cases this may not be under our control at all (ie with uvc devices), -in other cases the hardware in question may make it impossible to read the setting as configured by autofoo, thus forcing scenario 1 so that we are sure the actual value for foo being used by the device matches what we report to the user once autofoo is in manual mode That leaves Hans V's suggestion what to do with volatile controls wrt reporting this to userspace. Hans V. suggested splitting the control essentially in 2 controls, one r/w with the manual value and a read only one with the volatile value (*). I don't think this is a good idea, having 2 controls for one foo, will only clutter v4l2 control panels or applets. I think we should try to keep the controls we present to the user (and thus too userspace) to a minimum. I suggest that instead of creating 2 controls, we add a VOLATILE ctrl flag, which can then be set together with the INACTIVE flag to indicate to a v4l2 control panel that the value may change without it receiving change events. The v4l2 control panel can then decide how it wants to deal with this, ie poll to keep its display updated, ignore the flag, ... Regards, Hans *) Either through a special flag signalling give me the volatile value, or just outright making the 2 2 separate controls. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-media" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
On Saturday, July 02, 2011 12:28:35 Hans de Goede wrote: > Hi, > > <snip snip snip> > > Ok, thinking about this some more and reading Hans V's comments > I think that the current code in Hans V's core8c branch is fine, > and should go to 3.1 (rather then be delayed to 3.2). > > As for the fundamental question what to do with foo > controls when autofoo goes from auto to manual, as discussed > there are 2 options: > 1) Restore the last known / previous manual setting > 2) Keep foo at the current setting, iow the last setting > configured by autofoo Or option 3: Just don't report the automatic foo values at all. What possible purpose does it serve? It is my impression that drivers implement it 'just because they can', and not because it is meaningful. I'm not aware of any application that actually refreshes e.g. gain values when autogain is on, so end-users never see it anyway. Volatile makes a lot of sense for read-only controls, but for writable controls I really don't see why you would want it. > Although it would be great if we could standardize on > one of these. I think that the answer here is to leave > this decision to the driver: > - In some cases this may not be under our control at all > (ie with uvc devices), > -in other cases the hardware in question may make it > impossible to read the setting as configured by autofoo, > thus forcing scenario 1 so that we are sure the actual > value for foo being used by the device matches what we > report to the user once autofoo is in manual mode > > That leaves Hans V's suggestion what to do with volatile > controls wrt reporting this to userspace. Hans V. suggested > splitting the control essentially in 2 controls, one r/w > with the manual value and a read only one with the volatile > value (*). I don't think this is a good idea, having 2 > controls for one foo, will only clutter v4l2 control panels > or applets. I think we should try to keep the controls > we present to the user (and thus too userspace) to a minimum. I agree with that. > I suggest that instead of creating 2 controls, we add a > VOLATILE ctrl flag, which can then be set together with > the INACTIVE flag to indicate to a v4l2 control panel that > the value may change without it receiving change events. The > v4l2 control panel can then decide how it wants to deal with > this, ie poll to keep its display updated, ignore the flag, > ... A volatile flag is certainly useful for read-only controls. But I think we should stop supporting volatile writable controls. It makes no sense from the point of view of a user. You won't see such behavior in TVs etc. either. In rare cases you might want to export it through the subdev API as a separate control so that advanced applications can get hold of that value. Does anyone know why you would want volatile writable controls? Regards, Hans > > Regards, > > Hans > > > *) Either through a special flag signalling give me the > volatile value, or just outright making the 2 2 separate > controls. > -- > To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-media" in > the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org > More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html > -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-media" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
On Saturday, July 02, 2011 16:31:47 Hans de Goede wrote: > Hi, > > On 07/02/2011 01:10 PM, Hans Verkuil wrote: > > On Saturday, July 02, 2011 12:28:35 Hans de Goede wrote: > >> Hi, > >> > >> <snip snip snip> > >> > >> Ok, thinking about this some more and reading Hans V's comments > >> I think that the current code in Hans V's core8c branch is fine, > >> and should go to 3.1 (rather then be delayed to 3.2). > >> > >> As for the fundamental question what to do with foo > >> controls when autofoo goes from auto to manual, as discussed > >> there are 2 options: > >> 1) Restore the last known / previous manual setting > >> 2) Keep foo at the current setting, iow the last setting > >> configured by autofoo > > > > Or option 3: > > > > Just don't report the automatic foo values at all. What possible purpose > > does it serve? > Reporting should be seen separate of what to do with the actual > setting of for example gain as in use by the device when autogain > gets turned off, that is what I'm talking about here, when autogain > gets turned off (iow gain gets set to manual) there are 2 and only > 2 options > > 1) leave the gain at the value last set by the devices > autogain function (this may not be supported on all hardware) > 2) restore the last known manual gain setting > > What we report or not report for gain while autogain is active > is irrelevant for this choice, when switching to manual we can > either leave gain as is, or we restore the last known setting. > Independent of any values we may have reported. It is relevant. Take an application that saves the current state of all controls and restores it the next time it is started. If you report the device's autogain value instead of the manual gain, then that manual gain value is lost. I consider this a major drawback. > > It is my impression that drivers implement it 'just because > > they can', and not because it is meaningful. > > Well it is drivers responsibility to export hardware functionality > (in a standardized manner), then it is up to applications whether > they use it or not. And it is actually quite meaning full, you > are very much thinking TV and not webcams here, being able to > see that the autofoo is actually doing something, and what > it is doing is very useful for webcams. For example maybe it is > choosing a low exposure (to get highframerate) high gain, which > leads to more noise in the picture then the user wants > > webcams are like photography, you've a shutter and a sensitivity > (iso) setting being able to see what a camera chooses in full > auto mode is quite useful. OK, but it is not useful that this means that you don't see the manual value anymore. > > I'm not aware of any application that actually refreshes e.g. gain values > > when autogain is on, so end-users never see it anyway. > > v4l2ucp has an option to update the ctrl readings every 1 / 2 / 5 > seconds. And I use this often to track what the autofoo is doing > and / or to verify that it doing anything at all. OK, good to know. > > But I think we should stop supporting volatile writable controls. > > NACK, and note that we already don't do that, what we do is switch > a control from volatile read only (inactive) to non volatile rw-mode > and back. The only question is what to do at the transition. No, the question is also what to return. How many 'autofoo' controls are there anyway? V4L2_CID_AUTO_WHITE_BALANCE V4L2_CID_AUTOGAIN V4L2_CID_EXPOSURE_AUTO V4L2_CID_AUTOBRIGHTNESS V4L2_CID_HUE_AUTO Those last two are used in only two drivers (gspca and uvc respectively). The first three would require four extra read-only volatile controls: V4L2_CID_AUTOWB_RED_BALANCE V4L2_CID_AUTOWB_BLUE_BALANCE V4L2_CID_AUTOGAIN_GAIN V4L2_CID_AUTOEXP_EXPOSURE Simple and straightforward. Applications can show the manual value and the autofoo value together so you can compare them easily. No unexpected transitions since turning off the autofoo will restore the manual foo value. And apps that save/restore controls will always get/set the proper manual foo values. The most difficult part will be to come up with a decent description of these controls: "Gain, Automatic Value" "Gain, Computed Value" "Gain, Current Value" "Gain, Current" Hmm, those last two aren't so bad since that would fit equally whether autogain is on or off. That suggests better CID naming as well: V4L2_CID_RED_BALANCE_CUR ("Red Balance, Current") V4L2_CID_BLUE_BALANCE_CUR ("Blue Balance, Current") V4L2_CID_GAIN_CUR ("Gain, Current") V4L2_CID_EXPOSURE_CUR ("Exposure, Current") Simple, straightforward, no confusion. Regards, Hans -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-media" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Hi, On 07/04/2011 11:43 AM, Hans Verkuil wrote: > On Saturday, July 02, 2011 16:31:47 Hans de Goede wrote: >> Hi, >> >> On 07/02/2011 01:10 PM, Hans Verkuil wrote: >>> On Saturday, July 02, 2011 12:28:35 Hans de Goede wrote: >>>> Hi, >>>> >>>> <snip snip snip> >>>> >>>> Ok, thinking about this some more and reading Hans V's comments >>>> I think that the current code in Hans V's core8c branch is fine, >>>> and should go to 3.1 (rather then be delayed to 3.2). >>>> >>>> As for the fundamental question what to do with foo >>>> controls when autofoo goes from auto to manual, as discussed >>>> there are 2 options: >>>> 1) Restore the last known / previous manual setting >>>> 2) Keep foo at the current setting, iow the last setting >>>> configured by autofoo >>> >>> Or option 3: >>> >>> Just don't report the automatic foo values at all. What possible purpose >>> does it serve? >> Reporting should be seen separate of what to do with the actual >> setting of for example gain as in use by the device when autogain >> gets turned off, that is what I'm talking about here, when autogain >> gets turned off (iow gain gets set to manual) there are 2 and only >> 2 options >> >> 1) leave the gain at the value last set by the devices >> autogain function (this may not be supported on all hardware) >> 2) restore the last known manual gain setting >> >> What we report or not report for gain while autogain is active >> is irrelevant for this choice, when switching to manual we can >> either leave gain as is, or we restore the last known setting. >> Independent of any values we may have reported. > > It is relevant. Take an application that saves the current state of all > controls and restores it the next time it is started. If you report the > device's autogain value instead of the manual gain, then that manual gain > value is lost. I consider this a major drawback. If autogain is on, then the gain is RO, so it should not be saved. Let alone restored. > >> > It is my impression that drivers implement it 'just because >> > they can', and not because it is meaningful. >> >> Well it is drivers responsibility to export hardware functionality >> (in a standardized manner), then it is up to applications whether >> they use it or not. And it is actually quite meaning full, you >> are very much thinking TV and not webcams here, being able to >> see that the autofoo is actually doing something, and what >> it is doing is very useful for webcams. For example maybe it is >> choosing a low exposure (to get highframerate) high gain, which >> leads to more noise in the picture then the user wants >> >> webcams are like photography, you've a shutter and a sensitivity >> (iso) setting being able to see what a camera chooses in full >> auto mode is quite useful. > > OK, but it is not useful that this means that you don't see the manual value > anymore. > In normal webcam use the lighting conditions are constantly changing, so the gain value manually set 5 minutes ago is of little value, as it is likely wrong for the current situation. >>> I'm not aware of any application that actually refreshes e.g. gain values >>> when autogain is on, so end-users never see it anyway. >> >> v4l2ucp has an option to update the ctrl readings every 1 / 2 / 5 >> seconds. And I use this often to track what the autofoo is doing >> and / or to verify that it doing anything at all. > > OK, good to know. > >>> But I think we should stop supporting volatile writable controls. >> >> NACK, and note that we already don't do that, what we do is switch >> a control from volatile read only (inactive) to non volatile rw-mode >> and back. The only question is what to do at the transition. > > No, the question is also what to return. What to return sort of follows from what you do when turning of autogain, if you keep the last autogain set gain, then it makes sense to return the autogain set value when reading gain, if you switch back to the last manually set gain, then it makes sense to just report the last manually set gain as long as autogain is on. I still believe that everything boils down to 2 possible scenarios, and the rest follows from that. With the 2 scenarios being: 1) There is a manual setting which is constant until explicitly changed, when (ie) gain switches from auto mode to manual mode then the actual used gain is reset to this manual setting 2) There is a single gain setting / register, which is r/w when the control is in manual mode and ro when in auto mode. When auto mode gets switched off, the gain stays at the last value set by auto mode. 2) Is what most webcam sensors (and the pwc firmware) implement at the hardware level, and what to me also makes the most sense for webcams. To me this whole discussion centers around these 2 scenarios, with you being a proponent of 1), and I guess that for video capture boards 1 makes a lot of sense, and me being a proponent of 2. Proposal: lets agree that these 2 methods of handling autofoo controls both exist and both have merits in certain cases, this means letting it be up to the driver to choose which method to implement. If we can agree on this, then the next step would be to document both methods, as well as how the controls should behave in either scenario. I'm willing to write up a first draft for this. > How many 'autofoo' controls are there anyway? > > V4L2_CID_AUTO_WHITE_BALANCE > V4L2_CID_AUTOGAIN > V4L2_CID_EXPOSURE_AUTO > V4L2_CID_AUTOBRIGHTNESS > V4L2_CID_HUE_AUTO > > Those last two are used in only two drivers (gspca and uvc respectively). > > The first three would require four extra read-only volatile controls: > > V4L2_CID_AUTOWB_RED_BALANCE > V4L2_CID_AUTOWB_BLUE_BALANCE > V4L2_CID_AUTOGAIN_GAIN > V4L2_CID_AUTOEXP_EXPOSURE > I can see this making sense for drivers which choose to implement scenario 1, but I see no value for drivers which choose to implement scenario 2, it is just another control cluttering the control applet. > Simple and straightforward. Applications can show the manual value and the > autofoo value together so you can compare them easily. No unexpected > transitions since turning off the autofoo will restore the manual foo value. I would actually consider that an unexpected transition. Lets consider auto exposure, and the last manual exposure was set during daytime, iow with lots of daylight, so a low exposure setting. Now there is a stream active, and being recorded in the evening. The user is not completely happy with the autoexposure chosen value, and turns of autoexposure. The very low exposure from the day gets restored, which is much too low, the image turns black, and the recording is ruined, not good. Or the exposure stays at its last automatically set value, the user can make a small adjustment and all is well ... Note that this is exactly what most hardware does, to avoid the scenario above. We just seem to come at this from 2 completely different mindsets, to me going from the autofoo foo value to some manual value which may be completely unappropriate is an unexpected transition. IOW to me restoring the manual foo value is the unexpected thing to do. I think we need to agree that we disagree :) Regards, Hans -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-media" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
OK, I'm back to work after my vacation, so it's time to go through the backlog... On Tuesday, July 12, 2011 15:25:02 Hans de Goede wrote: > Hi, > > On 07/04/2011 11:43 AM, Hans Verkuil wrote: > > On Saturday, July 02, 2011 16:31:47 Hans de Goede wrote: > >> Hi, > >> > >> On 07/02/2011 01:10 PM, Hans Verkuil wrote: > >>> On Saturday, July 02, 2011 12:28:35 Hans de Goede wrote: > >>>> Hi, > >>>> > >>>> <snip snip snip> > >>>> > >>>> Ok, thinking about this some more and reading Hans V's comments > >>>> I think that the current code in Hans V's core8c branch is fine, > >>>> and should go to 3.1 (rather then be delayed to 3.2). > >>>> > >>>> As for the fundamental question what to do with foo > >>>> controls when autofoo goes from auto to manual, as discussed > >>>> there are 2 options: > >>>> 1) Restore the last known / previous manual setting > >>>> 2) Keep foo at the current setting, iow the last setting > >>>> configured by autofoo > >>> > >>> Or option 3: > >>> > >>> Just don't report the automatic foo values at all. What possible purpose > >>> does it serve? > >> Reporting should be seen separate of what to do with the actual > >> setting of for example gain as in use by the device when autogain > >> gets turned off, that is what I'm talking about here, when autogain > >> gets turned off (iow gain gets set to manual) there are 2 and only > >> 2 options > >> > >> 1) leave the gain at the value last set by the devices > >> autogain function (this may not be supported on all hardware) > >> 2) restore the last known manual gain setting > >> > >> What we report or not report for gain while autogain is active > >> is irrelevant for this choice, when switching to manual we can > >> either leave gain as is, or we restore the last known setting. > >> Independent of any values we may have reported. > > > > It is relevant. Take an application that saves the current state of all > > controls and restores it the next time it is started. If you report the > > device's autogain value instead of the manual gain, then that manual gain > > value is lost. I consider this a major drawback. > > If autogain is on, then the gain is RO, so it should not be saved. Let alone > restored. Marking gain as inactive is fine, but marking it as read-only is not so clear. Currently the RO flag is static. This allows control panels to use e.g. a text field instead of an input field to show the value. I would like to keep that functionality. If we make the RO flag dynamic, then GUIs won't know whether to show it as a disabled input field or as a text field. Whereas with the inactive flag they will know that it has to be a disabled input field. When the inactive flag is set, it is still allowed to set the value. However, if we add a volatile flag as well, then we may want to have the combination 'inactive and volatile' return an error when an application attempts to set the value. Or is this too complex and should we just discard the value in a case like that? > > > >> > It is my impression that drivers implement it 'just because > >> > they can', and not because it is meaningful. > >> > >> Well it is drivers responsibility to export hardware functionality > >> (in a standardized manner), then it is up to applications whether > >> they use it or not. And it is actually quite meaning full, you > >> are very much thinking TV and not webcams here, being able to > >> see that the autofoo is actually doing something, and what > >> it is doing is very useful for webcams. For example maybe it is > >> choosing a low exposure (to get highframerate) high gain, which > >> leads to more noise in the picture then the user wants > >> > >> webcams are like photography, you've a shutter and a sensitivity > >> (iso) setting being able to see what a camera chooses in full > >> auto mode is quite useful. > > > > OK, but it is not useful that this means that you don't see the manual value > > anymore. > > > > In normal webcam use the lighting conditions are constantly changing, so > the gain value manually set 5 minutes ago is of little value, as it > is likely wrong for the current situation. True. > >>> I'm not aware of any application that actually refreshes e.g. gain values > >>> when autogain is on, so end-users never see it anyway. > >> > >> v4l2ucp has an option to update the ctrl readings every 1 / 2 / 5 > >> seconds. And I use this often to track what the autofoo is doing > >> and / or to verify that it doing anything at all. > > > > OK, good to know. > > > >>> But I think we should stop supporting volatile writable controls. > >> > >> NACK, and note that we already don't do that, what we do is switch > >> a control from volatile read only (inactive) to non volatile rw-mode > >> and back. The only question is what to do at the transition. > > > > No, the question is also what to return. > > What to return sort of follows from what you do when turning > of autogain, if you keep the last autogain set gain, then it > makes sense to return the autogain set value when reading gain, if > you switch back to the last manually set gain, then it > makes sense to just report the last manually set gain as long > as autogain is on. > > I still believe that everything boils down to 2 possible scenarios, > and the rest follows from that. With the 2 scenarios being: > > 1) There is a manual setting which is constant until explicitly > changed, when (ie) gain switches from auto mode to manual mode > then the actual used gain is reset to this manual setting > > 2) There is a single gain setting / register, which is r/w when the > control is in manual mode and ro when in auto mode. When auto mode > gets switched off, the gain stays at the last value set by auto mode. > > 2) Is what most webcam sensors (and the pwc firmware) implement at > the hardware level, and what to me also makes the most sense for webcams. > > To me this whole discussion centers around these 2 scenarios, with you > being a proponent of 1), and I guess that for video capture boards 1 makes > a lot of sense, and me being a proponent of 2. > > Proposal: lets agree that these 2 methods of handling autofoo controls > both exist and both have merits in certain cases, this means letting > it be up to the driver to choose which method to implement. OK. > If we can agree on this, then the next step would be to document both > methods, as well as how the controls should behave in either scenario. > I'm willing to write up a first draft for this. I can do that as well, see below. > > > How many 'autofoo' controls are there anyway? > > > > V4L2_CID_AUTO_WHITE_BALANCE > > V4L2_CID_AUTOGAIN > > V4L2_CID_EXPOSURE_AUTO > > V4L2_CID_AUTOBRIGHTNESS > > V4L2_CID_HUE_AUTO > > > > Those last two are used in only two drivers (gspca and uvc respectively). > > > > The first three would require four extra read-only volatile controls: > > > > V4L2_CID_AUTOWB_RED_BALANCE > > V4L2_CID_AUTOWB_BLUE_BALANCE > > V4L2_CID_AUTOGAIN_GAIN > > V4L2_CID_AUTOEXP_EXPOSURE > > > > I can see this making sense for drivers which choose to implement > scenario 1, but I see no value for drivers which choose to implement > scenario 2, it is just another control cluttering the control applet. I agree with that. > > Simple and straightforward. Applications can show the manual value and the > > autofoo value together so you can compare them easily. No unexpected > > transitions since turning off the autofoo will restore the manual foo value. > > I would actually consider that an unexpected transition. Lets consider > auto exposure, and the last manual exposure was set during daytime, iow with > lots of daylight, so a low exposure setting. Now there is a stream active, > and being recorded in the evening. The user is not completely happy with the > autoexposure chosen value, and turns of autoexposure. The very low exposure > from the day gets restored, which is much too low, the image turns black, > and the recording is ruined, not good. > > Or the exposure stays at its last automatically set value, the user can make > a small adjustment and all is well ... Note that this is exactly what most > hardware does, to avoid the scenario above. This is certainly valid for webcams. For video capture, however, I think scenario 1 is more likely. But I agree, this is something to leave to drivers. > We just seem to come at this from 2 completely different mindsets, to me > going from the autofoo foo value to some manual value which may be completely > unappropriate is an unexpected transition. IOW to me restoring the manual > foo value is the unexpected thing to do. > > I think we need to agree that we disagree :) Actually, I agree with much of what you wrote :-) OK, so we have two scenarios: 1) There is a manual setting which is constant until explicitly changed, when e.g. gain switches from auto mode to manual mode then the actual used gain is reset to this manual setting. In this case the e.g. gain control is *not* marked volatile, but just inactive. If the hardware can return the gain as set by the autogain circuit, then that has to be exported as a separate read-only control (e.g. 'Current Gain'). 2) There is a single gain setting / register, which is active when the control is in manual mode and inactive and volatile when in auto mode. When auto mode gets switched off, the gain stays at the last value set by auto mode. This scenario is only possible, of course, if you can obtain the gain value as set by the autogain circuitry. An open question is whether writing to an inactive and volatile control should return an error or not. Webcams should follow scenario 2 (if possible). It is less obvious what to recommend for video capture devices. I'd leave it up to the driver for now. Regards, Hans -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-media" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Hi, On 07/26/2011 11:26 AM, Hans Verkuil wrote: > OK, I'm back to work after my vacation, so it's time to go through the > backlog... > Welcome back :) > On Tuesday, July 12, 2011 15:25:02 Hans de Goede wrote: >> Hi, >> >> On 07/04/2011 11:43 AM, Hans Verkuil wrote: <snip snip> >>> It is relevant. Take an application that saves the current state of all >>> controls and restores it the next time it is started. If you report the >>> device's autogain value instead of the manual gain, then that manual gain >>> value is lost. I consider this a major drawback. >> >> If autogain is on, then the gain is RO, so it should not be saved. Let alone >> restored. > > Marking gain as inactive is fine, but marking it as read-only is not so clear. > Currently the RO flag is static. This allows control panels to use e.g. a text > field instead of an input field to show the value. > > I would like to keep that functionality. If we make the RO flag dynamic, then > GUIs won't know whether to show it as a disabled input field or as a text field. > > Whereas with the inactive flag they will know that it has to be a disabled > input field. > Agreed, where I wrote read only I meant inactive, which does make it less clear that the control should not be saved / restored by a save / restore app. > When the inactive flag is set, it is still allowed to set the value. However, > if we add a volatile flag as well, then we may want to have the combination > 'inactive and volatile' return an error when an application attempts to set the > value. I think that is a good solution to indicate dynamic-readonly ness (more or less), and thus to indicate that the control should not be written (and thus not saved/ restored). > Or is this too complex and should we just discard the value in a case like that? I would prefer returning an error, so that things don't silently fail, also unless we actually return an error many apps are likely to get this wrong. <snip snip> >> I still believe that everything boils down to 2 possible scenarios, >> and the rest follows from that. With the 2 scenarios being: >> >> 1) There is a manual setting which is constant until explicitly >> changed, when (ie) gain switches from auto mode to manual mode >> then the actual used gain is reset to this manual setting >> >> 2) There is a single gain setting / register, which is r/w when the >> control is in manual mode and ro when in auto mode. When auto mode >> gets switched off, the gain stays at the last value set by auto mode. >> >> 2) Is what most webcam sensors (and the pwc firmware) implement at >> the hardware level, and what to me also makes the most sense for webcams. >> >> To me this whole discussion centers around these 2 scenarios, with you >> being a proponent of 1), and I guess that for video capture boards 1 makes >> a lot of sense, and me being a proponent of 2. >> >> Proposal: lets agree that these 2 methods of handling autofoo controls >> both exist and both have merits in certain cases, this means letting >> it be up to the driver to choose which method to implement. > > OK. > >> If we can agree on this, then the next step would be to document both >> methods, as well as how the controls should behave in either scenario. >> I'm willing to write up a first draft for this. > > I can do that as well, see below. Ah great, you just saved me some work I always like it when people save me work :) <snip snip> >> I think we need to agree that we disagree :) > > Actually, I agree with much of what you wrote :-) > Good :) > OK, so we have two scenarios: > > 1) There is a manual setting which is constant until explicitly changed, when e.g. > gain switches from auto mode to manual mode then the actual used gain is reset to > this manual setting. > > In this case the e.g. gain control is *not* marked volatile, but just inactive. > If the hardware can return the gain as set by the autogain circuit, then that has > to be exported as a separate read-only control (e.g. 'Current Gain'). > > > 2) There is a single gain setting / register, which is active when the control is in > manual mode and inactive and volatile when in auto mode. When auto mode gets switched > off, the gain stays at the last value set by auto mode. > > This scenario is only possible, of course, if you can obtain the gain value as set > by the autogain circuitry. > I fully agree with the above, +1 > An open question is whether writing to an inactive and volatile control should return > an error or not. I would prefer an error return. > Webcams should follow scenario 2 (if possible). > > It is less obvious what to recommend for video capture devices. I'd leave it up to > the driver for now. Sounds good to me. Regards, Hans -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-media" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
On Tuesday, July 26, 2011 15:51:58 Hans de Goede wrote: <snip> > > OK, so we have two scenarios: > > > > 1) There is a manual setting which is constant until explicitly changed, when e.g. > > gain switches from auto mode to manual mode then the actual used gain is reset to > > this manual setting. > > > > In this case the e.g. gain control is *not* marked volatile, but just inactive. > > If the hardware can return the gain as set by the autogain circuit, then that has > > to be exported as a separate read-only control (e.g. 'Current Gain'). > > > > > > 2) There is a single gain setting / register, which is active when the control is in > > manual mode and inactive and volatile when in auto mode. When auto mode gets switched > > off, the gain stays at the last value set by auto mode. > > > > This scenario is only possible, of course, if you can obtain the gain value as set > > by the autogain circuitry. > > > > I fully agree with the above, +1 > > > An open question is whether writing to an inactive and volatile control should return > > an error or not. > > I would prefer an error return. I am worried about backwards compatibility, though. Right now inactive controls can be written safely. Suddenly you add the volatile flag and doing the same thing causes an error. Also, a program that saves control values will have to skip any control that: 1) Is read or write only 2) Is inactive and volatile The first is obvious, but the second not so much. Another reason for not returning an error is that it makes v4l2-ctrls.c more complex: if autogain is on and I call VIDIOC_S_EXT_CTRLS to set autogain to off and gain to a new manual value, then it is quite difficult to detect that in this case setting gain is OK (since autogain is turned off at the same time). The more I think about it, the more I think this should just be allowed. The value disappears into a black hole, but at least it won't break any apps. Regards, Hans > > > Webcams should follow scenario 2 (if possible). > > > > It is less obvious what to recommend for video capture devices. I'd leave it up to > > the driver for now. > > Sounds good to me. > > Regards, > > Hans > -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-media" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Hi, On 07/26/2011 04:19 PM, Hans Verkuil wrote: > On Tuesday, July 26, 2011 15:51:58 Hans de Goede wrote: > <snip> >>> An open question is whether writing to an inactive and volatile control should return >>> an error or not. >> >> I would prefer an error return. > > I am worried about backwards compatibility, though. Right now inactive controls > can be written safely. Suddenly you add the volatile flag and doing the same thing > causes an error. > > Also, a program that saves control values will have to skip any control that: > > 1) Is read or write only > 2) Is inactive and volatile > > The first is obvious, but the second not so much. > > Another reason for not returning an error is that it makes v4l2-ctrls.c more complex: if > autogain is on and I call VIDIOC_S_EXT_CTRLS to set autogain to off and gain to a new > manual value, then it is quite difficult to detect that in this case setting gain is OK > (since autogain is turned off at the same time). > > The more I think about it, the more I think this should just be allowed. The value > disappears into a black hole, but at least it won't break any apps. Ok disappear into a black hole it is :) Regards, Hans -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-media" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
On Tuesday, July 26, 2011 16:38:19 Hans de Goede wrote: > Hi, > > On 07/26/2011 04:19 PM, Hans Verkuil wrote: > > On Tuesday, July 26, 2011 15:51:58 Hans de Goede wrote: > > > > <snip> > > >>> An open question is whether writing to an inactive and volatile control should return > >>> an error or not. > >> > >> I would prefer an error return. > > > > I am worried about backwards compatibility, though. Right now inactive controls > > can be written safely. Suddenly you add the volatile flag and doing the same thing > > causes an error. > > > > Also, a program that saves control values will have to skip any control that: > > > > 1) Is read or write only > > 2) Is inactive and volatile > > > > The first is obvious, but the second not so much. > > > > Another reason for not returning an error is that it makes v4l2-ctrls.c more complex: if > > autogain is on and I call VIDIOC_S_EXT_CTRLS to set autogain to off and gain to a new > > manual value, then it is quite difficult to detect that in this case setting gain is OK > > (since autogain is turned off at the same time). > > > > The more I think about it, the more I think this should just be allowed. The value > > disappears into a black hole, but at least it won't break any apps. > > Ok disappear into a black hole it is :) Good. Then I'll try to work on this this week. Regards, Hans -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-media" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
diff --git a/drivers/media/video/v4l2-ctrls.c b/drivers/media/video/v4l2-ctrls.c index 37a50e5..65d9be7 100644 --- a/drivers/media/video/v4l2-ctrls.c +++ b/drivers/media/video/v4l2-ctrls.c @@ -1915,6 +1915,15 @@ static int try_set_ext_ctrls(struct v4l2_fh *fh, struct v4l2_ctrl_handler *hdl, if (master->cluster[j]) master->cluster[j]->is_new = 0; + if (has_op(master, g_volatile_ctrl) && !is_cur_manual(master)) { + for (j = 0; j < master->ncontrols; j++) + cur_to_new(master->cluster[j]); + if (!call_op(master, g_volatile_ctrl)) + for (j = 1; j < master->ncontrols; j++) + if (master->cluster[j]->is_volatile) + master->cluster[j]->is_new = 1; + } + /* Copy the new caller-supplied control values. user_to_new() sets 'is_new' to 1. */ do {