From: "Martin Bugge (marbugge)" <marbugge@cisco.com>
To: "Daniel Glöckner" <daniel-gl@gmx.net>
Cc: Hans Verkuil <hans.verkuil@cisco.com>, linux-media@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: [RFC] HDMI-CEC proposal, ver 2
Date: Mon, 14 Mar 2011 09:08:11 +0100 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <4D7DCCEB.9090106@cisco.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20110312004247.GA1397@minime.bse>
Hi Daniel and thank you,
On 03/12/2011 01:42 AM, Daniel Glöckner wrote:
> Hi Martin,
>
> On Fri, Mar 11, 2011 at 12:36:09PM +0100, Martin Bugge (marbugge) wrote:
>
>> Not every tx status is applicable for all modes, see table 1.
>>
>> |-----------------------------------------------------|
>> | Av link Mode | CEC | 1 | 2 | 3 |
>> |-----------------------------------------------------|
>> | Status | | | | |
>> |-----------------------------------------------------|
>> | TX_OK | a | n/a | a | n/a |
>> |-----------------------------------------------------|
>> | TX_ARB_LOST | a | n/a | a | a |
>> |-----------------------------------------------------|
>> | TX_RETRY_TIMEOUT | a | n/a | a | a |
>> |-----------------------------------------------------|
>> | TX_BROADCAST_REJECT | a | n/a | a | n/a |
>> |-----------------------------------------------------|
>>
> TX_ARB_LOST is applicable to mode 1.
> Arbitration loss will also be caused by receivers detecting a bad pulse.
>
>
You are correct, a typo.
However, it looks like also TX_OK will be used for Mode 3.
And maybe also TX_BROADCAST_REJECT.
In particular with reference to your link in below.
>> * AV link mode 1:
>> In mode 1 the frame length is fixed to 21 bits (including the
>> start sequence).
>> Some of these bits (Qty 1 - 6) can be arbitrated by the
>> receiver to signal supported formats/standards.
>> conf:
>> enable: true/false
>> upstream_Qty: QTY bits 1-6
>> downstream_Qty: QTY bits 1-6
>> |------------------------------------------------|
>> | Bits: | 31 - 7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
>> |------------------------------------------------|
>> | Qty bits | x | x | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 |
>> |------------------------------------------------|
>> Qty bits 1-6 mapping (x: not used)
>>
> If the Linux system is a video source, it must stop arbitrating those
> Qty bits as soon as another video source wants to become active.
> As this includes the message where the new source announces itself,
> this can't be handled by reconfiguration after reception of the message.
>
> If the Linux system is a video sink, the announcement of a new source
> should not affect the Qty bits to arbitrate.
>
> And don't get me startet about systems capable of being a video source
> and sink at the same time, capturing their own signal until a new source
> becomes active...
>
>
I assume this must be handled by logic in the driver if it supports this
mode.
>> * AV link mode 1:
>> Frame received/transmitted:
>> head:
>> |-------------------------------------------------|
>> | Bits: | 31 - 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
>> |-------------------------------------------------|
>> | head bits: | x | DIR | /PAS | /NAS | /DES |
>> |-------------------------------------------------|
>> Qty: Quality bits 1 - 16;
>> |---------------------------------------|
>> | Bits: | 31 - 16 | 15 | 14 - 1 | 0 |
>> |---------------------------------------|
>> | Qty bits | x | 16 | 15 - 2 | 1 |
>> |---------------------------------------|
>> x: not used
>>
> Is Qty-1 or Qty-16 the bit sent after /DES?
>
>
Even though I find it a bit confusing in the standard, the plan
was to send Qty-1 just after the /DES bit.
It was an attempt to make the configuration and status the same.
Such that we could use the same bit masks.
>> In blocking mode only:
>> tx_status: tx status.
>> tx_status_Qty: which Qty bits 1 - 6 bits was arbitrated
>> during transmit.
>>
> It may be interesting to know what other devices did to the /PAS and
> /DES bits when they were sent as 1.
>
Maybe I should change this such that we actually send up the whole frame
as tx_status.
In that way we will avoid the confusion of the Qty bit orders also.
But then this should apply to the configuration as well.
>
>> * AV link mode 3: TBD. Chances are that nobody ever used this
>> len: length of message in bits, maximum 96 bits.
>> msg: the raw message received/transmitted. (without the start
>> sequence).
>> tx_status: tx status in blocking mode.
>>
> Google turned up this:
> http://fmt.cs.utwente.nl/publications/files/111_heerink.pdf
> It suggests that at least Philips' variant of AV.link mode 3 - EasyLink -
> is even closer to CEC than mode 2.
>
>
Yes I see that. However CEC don't have the start sequence (to
differenciate between mode 1 - 3),
and the application id.
In addition can't I see that mode 3 describe the ACK and EOM bits.
It might be difficult to "force" easylink into the mode 3 as it is.
If we could use the application id it might be possible for the driver to
change behaviour.
Or we will end up with
#define AV_LINK_CAP_MODE_EASY_LINK (1 << 4)
And so on, which might be ok also.
> Daniel
> --
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>
Martin
prev parent reply other threads:[~2011-03-14 8:08 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 3+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2011-03-11 11:36 [RFC] HDMI-CEC proposal, ver 2 Martin Bugge (marbugge)
2011-03-12 0:42 ` Daniel Glöckner
2011-03-14 8:08 ` Martin Bugge (marbugge) [this message]
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