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authorMauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab@s-opensource.com>2017-09-22 13:35:45 -0400
committerMauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab@s-opensource.com>2017-12-18 10:35:46 -0500
commit66f1e6078e120d3503ce43de9715538f1122c304 (patch)
tree78765da6a01c88a0c230545ebf14e7c69e078631 /Documentation/media/kapi/v4l2-event.rst
parentbd945e47998a60a3d76b6dfc2fb929b3f4f9c90f (diff)
media: v4l2-event.rst: improve events description
Both v4l2-event.rst and v4l2-event.h have an overview of events, but there are some inconsistencies there: - at v4l2-event, the event's ring buffer is called kevent. Its name is, instead, v4l2_kevent; - Some things are mentioned on both places (with different words), others are either on one of the files. In order to cleanup this mess, put everything at v4l2-event.rst and improve it to be a little more coherent and to have cross references. Acked-by: Sakari Ailus <sakari.ailus@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Mauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab@s-opensource.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/media/kapi/v4l2-event.rst')
-rw-r--r--Documentation/media/kapi/v4l2-event.rst67
1 files changed, 54 insertions, 13 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/media/kapi/v4l2-event.rst b/Documentation/media/kapi/v4l2-event.rst
index 9938d21ef4d1..5c7e31224ddc 100644
--- a/Documentation/media/kapi/v4l2-event.rst
+++ b/Documentation/media/kapi/v4l2-event.rst
@@ -5,27 +5,68 @@ V4L2 events
The V4L2 events provide a generic way to pass events to user space.
The driver must use :c:type:`v4l2_fh` to be able to support V4L2 events.
-Events are defined by a type and an optional ID. The ID may refer to a V4L2
-object such as a control ID. If unused, then the ID is 0.
+Events are subscribed per-filehandle. An event specification consists of a
+``type`` and is optionally associated with an object identified through the
+``id`` field. If unused, then the ``id`` is 0. So an event is uniquely
+identified by the ``(type, id)`` tuple.
-When the user subscribes to an event the driver will allocate a number of
-kevent structs for that event. So every (type, ID) event tuple will have
-its own set of kevent structs. This guarantees that if a driver is generating
-lots of events of one type in a short time, then that will not overwrite
-events of another type.
+The :c:type:`v4l2_fh` struct has a list of subscribed events on its
+``subscribed`` field.
-But if you get more events of one type than the number of kevents that were
-reserved, then the oldest event will be dropped and the new one added.
+When the user subscribes to an event, a :c:type:`v4l2_subscribed_event`
+struct is added to :c:type:`v4l2_fh`\ ``.subscribed``, one for every
+subscribed event.
+
+Each :c:type:`v4l2_subscribed_event` struct ends with a
+:c:type:`v4l2_kevent` ringbuffer, with the size given by the caller
+of :c:func:`v4l2_event_subscribe`. This ringbuffer is used to store any events
+raised by the driver.
+
+So every ``(type, ID)`` event tuple will have its own
+:c:type:`v4l2_kevent` ringbuffer. This guarantees that if a driver is
+generating lots of events of one type in a short time, then that will
+not overwrite events of another type.
+
+But if you get more events of one type than the size of the
+:c:type:`v4l2_kevent` ringbuffer, then the oldest event will be dropped
+and the new one added.
+
+The :c:type:`v4l2_kevent` struct links into the ``available``
+list of the :c:type:`v4l2_fh` struct so :ref:`VIDIOC_DQEVENT` will
+know which event to dequeue first.
+
+Finally, if the event subscription is associated with a particular object
+such as a V4L2 control, then that object needs to know about that as well
+so that an event can be raised by that object. So the ``node`` field can
+be used to link the :c:type:`v4l2_subscribed_event` struct into a list of
+such objects.
+
+So to summarize:
+
+- struct :c:type:`v4l2_fh` has two lists: one of the ``subscribed`` events,
+ and one of the ``available`` events.
+
+- struct :c:type:`v4l2_subscribed_event` has a ringbuffer of raised
+ (pending) events of that particular type.
+
+- If struct :c:type:`v4l2_subscribed_event` is associated with a specific
+ object, then that object will have an internal list of
+ struct :c:type:`v4l2_subscribed_event` so it knows who subscribed an
+ event to that object.
Furthermore, the internal struct :c:type:`v4l2_subscribed_event` has
``merge()`` and ``replace()`` callbacks which drivers can set. These
callbacks are called when a new event is raised and there is no more room.
+
The ``replace()`` callback allows you to replace the payload of the old event
with that of the new event, merging any relevant data from the old payload
into the new payload that replaces it. It is called when this event type has
-only one kevent struct allocated. The ``merge()`` callback allows you to merge
-the oldest event payload into that of the second-oldest event payload. It is
-called when there are two or more kevent structs allocated.
+a ringbuffer with size is one, i.e. only one event can be stored in the
+ringbuffer.
+
+The ``merge()`` callback allows you to merge the oldest event payload into
+that of the second-oldest event payload. It is called when
+the ringbuffer has size is greater than one.
This way no status information is lost, just the intermediate steps leading
up to that state.
@@ -73,7 +114,7 @@ The ops argument allows the driver to specify a number of callbacks:
Callback Description
======== ==============================================================
add called when a new listener gets added (subscribing to the same
- event twice will only cause this callback to get called once)
+ event twice will only cause this callback to get called once)
del called when a listener stops listening
replace replace event 'old' with event 'new'.
merge merge event 'old' into event 'new'.