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authorMauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab+huawei@kernel.org>2020-03-05 09:24:17 +0300
committerMauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab+huawei@kernel.org>2020-04-14 11:29:06 +0300
commit481025598f214eea371a2aa9cf2464ed786b7555 (patch)
treec34a9b967643a9a8ea63feb6678a176459d8371a /Documentation/media
parent8d562a0038da9977b6c2b83c2f1be499734f1253 (diff)
downloadlinux-481025598f214eea371a2aa9cf2464ed786b7555.tar.xz
media: docs: split development info from bttv.rst
This file contains both admin and development stuff. Split on two, as they're usually read by different audiences. Signed-off-by: Mauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab+huawei@kernel.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/media')
-rw-r--r--Documentation/media/v4l-drivers/bttv-devel.rst123
-rw-r--r--Documentation/media/v4l-drivers/bttv.rst120
-rw-r--r--Documentation/media/v4l-drivers/index.rst1
3 files changed, 124 insertions, 120 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/media/v4l-drivers/bttv-devel.rst b/Documentation/media/v4l-drivers/bttv-devel.rst
new file mode 100644
index 000000000000..396fad572c93
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/media/v4l-drivers/bttv-devel.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,123 @@
+.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
+
+The bttv driver
+===============
+
+bttv and sound mini howto
+-------------------------
+
+There are a lot of different bt848/849/878/879 based boards available.
+Making video work often is not a big deal, because this is handled
+completely by the bt8xx chip, which is common on all boards. But
+sound is handled in slightly different ways on each board.
+
+To handle the grabber boards correctly, there is a array tvcards[] in
+bttv-cards.c, which holds the information required for each board.
+Sound will work only, if the correct entry is used (for video it often
+makes no difference). The bttv driver prints a line to the kernel
+log, telling which card type is used. Like this one:
+
+.. code-block:: none
+
+ bttv0: model: BT848(Hauppauge old) [autodetected]
+
+You should verify this is correct. If it isn't, you have to pass the
+correct board type as insmod argument, "insmod bttv card=2" for
+example. The file CARDLIST has a list of valid arguments for card.
+If your card isn't listed there, you might check the source code for
+new entries which are not listed yet. If there isn't one for your
+card, you can check if one of the existing entries does work for you
+(just trial and error...).
+
+Some boards have an extra processor for sound to do stereo decoding
+and other nice features. The msp34xx chips are used by Hauppauge for
+example. If your board has one, you might have to load a helper
+module like msp3400.o to make sound work. If there isn't one for the
+chip used on your board: Bad luck. Start writing a new one. Well,
+you might want to check the video4linux mailing list archive first...
+
+Of course you need a correctly installed soundcard unless you have the
+speakers connected directly to the grabber board. Hint: check the
+mixer settings too. ALSA for example has everything muted by default.
+
+
+How sound works in detail
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+Still doesn't work? Looks like some driver hacking is required.
+Below is a do-it-yourself description for you.
+
+The bt8xx chips have 32 general purpose pins, and registers to control
+these pins. One register is the output enable register
+(BT848_GPIO_OUT_EN), it says which pins are actively driven by the
+bt848 chip. Another one is the data register (BT848_GPIO_DATA), where
+you can get/set the status if these pins. They can be used for input
+and output.
+
+Most grabber board vendors use these pins to control an external chip
+which does the sound routing. But every board is a little different.
+These pins are also used by some companies to drive remote control
+receiver chips. Some boards use the i2c bus instead of the gpio pins
+to connect the mux chip.
+
+As mentioned above, there is a array which holds the required
+information for each known board. You basically have to create a new
+line for your board. The important fields are these two:
+
+.. code-block:: c
+
+ struct tvcard
+ {
+ [ ... ]
+ u32 gpiomask;
+ u32 audiomux[6]; /* Tuner, Radio, external, internal, mute, stereo */
+ };
+
+gpiomask specifies which pins are used to control the audio mux chip.
+The corresponding bits in the output enable register
+(BT848_GPIO_OUT_EN) will be set as these pins must be driven by the
+bt848 chip.
+
+The audiomux\[\] array holds the data values for the different inputs
+(i.e. which pins must be high/low for tuner/mute/...). This will be
+written to the data register (BT848_GPIO_DATA) to switch the audio
+mux.
+
+
+What you have to do is figure out the correct values for gpiomask and
+the audiomux array. If you have Windows and the drivers four your
+card installed, you might to check out if you can read these registers
+values used by the windows driver. A tool to do this is available
+from ftp://telepresence.dmem.strath.ac.uk/pub/bt848/winutil, but it
+doesn't work with bt878 boards according to some reports I received.
+Another one with bt878 support is available from
+http://btwincap.sourceforge.net/Files/btspy2.00.zip
+
+You might also dig around in the \*.ini files of the Windows applications.
+You can have a look at the board to see which of the gpio pins are
+connected at all and then start trial-and-error ...
+
+
+Starting with release 0.7.41 bttv has a number of insmod options to
+make the gpio debugging easier:
+
+.. code-block:: none
+
+ bttv_gpio=0/1 enable/disable gpio debug messages
+ gpiomask=n set the gpiomask value
+ audiomux=i,j,... set the values of the audiomux array
+ audioall=a set the values of the audiomux array (one
+ value for all array elements, useful to check
+ out which effect the particular value has).
+
+The messages printed with bttv_gpio=1 look like this:
+
+.. code-block:: none
+
+ bttv0: gpio: en=00000027, out=00000024 in=00ffffd8 [audio: off]
+
+ en = output _en_able register (BT848_GPIO_OUT_EN)
+ out = _out_put bits of the data register (BT848_GPIO_DATA),
+ i.e. BT848_GPIO_DATA & BT848_GPIO_OUT_EN
+ in = _in_put bits of the data register,
+ i.e. BT848_GPIO_DATA & ~BT848_GPIO_OUT_EN
diff --git a/Documentation/media/v4l-drivers/bttv.rst b/Documentation/media/v4l-drivers/bttv.rst
index f956ee264099..9b15a0cba283 100644
--- a/Documentation/media/v4l-drivers/bttv.rst
+++ b/Documentation/media/v4l-drivers/bttv.rst
@@ -438,126 +438,6 @@ parking, thus lowering arbitration performance. The Bt879 drivers must
query for these non-compliant devices, and set the EN_VSFX bit only if
required.
-bttv and sound mini howto
--------------------------
-
-There are a lot of different bt848/849/878/879 based boards available.
-Making video work often is not a big deal, because this is handled
-completely by the bt8xx chip, which is common on all boards. But
-sound is handled in slightly different ways on each board.
-
-To handle the grabber boards correctly, there is a array tvcards[] in
-bttv-cards.c, which holds the information required for each board.
-Sound will work only, if the correct entry is used (for video it often
-makes no difference). The bttv driver prints a line to the kernel
-log, telling which card type is used. Like this one:
-
-.. code-block:: none
-
- bttv0: model: BT848(Hauppauge old) [autodetected]
-
-You should verify this is correct. If it isn't, you have to pass the
-correct board type as insmod argument, "insmod bttv card=2" for
-example. The file CARDLIST has a list of valid arguments for card.
-If your card isn't listed there, you might check the source code for
-new entries which are not listed yet. If there isn't one for your
-card, you can check if one of the existing entries does work for you
-(just trial and error...).
-
-Some boards have an extra processor for sound to do stereo decoding
-and other nice features. The msp34xx chips are used by Hauppauge for
-example. If your board has one, you might have to load a helper
-module like msp3400.o to make sound work. If there isn't one for the
-chip used on your board: Bad luck. Start writing a new one. Well,
-you might want to check the video4linux mailing list archive first...
-
-Of course you need a correctly installed soundcard unless you have the
-speakers connected directly to the grabber board. Hint: check the
-mixer settings too. ALSA for example has everything muted by default.
-
-
-How sound works in detail
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-Still doesn't work? Looks like some driver hacking is required.
-Below is a do-it-yourself description for you.
-
-The bt8xx chips have 32 general purpose pins, and registers to control
-these pins. One register is the output enable register
-(BT848_GPIO_OUT_EN), it says which pins are actively driven by the
-bt848 chip. Another one is the data register (BT848_GPIO_DATA), where
-you can get/set the status if these pins. They can be used for input
-and output.
-
-Most grabber board vendors use these pins to control an external chip
-which does the sound routing. But every board is a little different.
-These pins are also used by some companies to drive remote control
-receiver chips. Some boards use the i2c bus instead of the gpio pins
-to connect the mux chip.
-
-As mentioned above, there is a array which holds the required
-information for each known board. You basically have to create a new
-line for your board. The important fields are these two:
-
-.. code-block:: c
-
- struct tvcard
- {
- [ ... ]
- u32 gpiomask;
- u32 audiomux[6]; /* Tuner, Radio, external, internal, mute, stereo */
- };
-
-gpiomask specifies which pins are used to control the audio mux chip.
-The corresponding bits in the output enable register
-(BT848_GPIO_OUT_EN) will be set as these pins must be driven by the
-bt848 chip.
-
-The audiomux\[\] array holds the data values for the different inputs
-(i.e. which pins must be high/low for tuner/mute/...). This will be
-written to the data register (BT848_GPIO_DATA) to switch the audio
-mux.
-
-
-What you have to do is figure out the correct values for gpiomask and
-the audiomux array. If you have Windows and the drivers four your
-card installed, you might to check out if you can read these registers
-values used by the windows driver. A tool to do this is available
-from ftp://telepresence.dmem.strath.ac.uk/pub/bt848/winutil, but it
-doesn't work with bt878 boards according to some reports I received.
-Another one with bt878 support is available from
-http://btwincap.sourceforge.net/Files/btspy2.00.zip
-
-You might also dig around in the \*.ini files of the Windows applications.
-You can have a look at the board to see which of the gpio pins are
-connected at all and then start trial-and-error ...
-
-
-Starting with release 0.7.41 bttv has a number of insmod options to
-make the gpio debugging easier:
-
-.. code-block:: none
-
- bttv_gpio=0/1 enable/disable gpio debug messages
- gpiomask=n set the gpiomask value
- audiomux=i,j,... set the values of the audiomux array
- audioall=a set the values of the audiomux array (one
- value for all array elements, useful to check
- out which effect the particular value has).
-
-The messages printed with bttv_gpio=1 look like this:
-
-.. code-block:: none
-
- bttv0: gpio: en=00000027, out=00000024 in=00ffffd8 [audio: off]
-
- en = output _en_able register (BT848_GPIO_OUT_EN)
- out = _out_put bits of the data register (BT848_GPIO_DATA),
- i.e. BT848_GPIO_DATA & BT848_GPIO_OUT_EN
- in = _in_put bits of the data register,
- i.e. BT848_GPIO_DATA & ~BT848_GPIO_OUT_EN
-
-
Other elements of the tvcards array
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
diff --git a/Documentation/media/v4l-drivers/index.rst b/Documentation/media/v4l-drivers/index.rst
index 2b8e2cbfff23..52d7c8d14ee7 100644
--- a/Documentation/media/v4l-drivers/index.rst
+++ b/Documentation/media/v4l-drivers/index.rst
@@ -66,6 +66,7 @@ For more details see the file COPYING in the source distribution of Linux.
vivid
zr364xx
+ bttv-devel
cpia2_devel
vimc-devel