This section describes the DVB version 5 extension of the DVB-API, also called "S2API", as this API were added to provide support for DVB-S2. It was designed to be able to replace the old frontend API. Yet, the DISEQC and the capability ioctls weren't implemented yet via the new way.
The typical usage for the FE_GET_PROPERTY/FE_SET_PROPERTY
API is to replace the ioctl's were the
struct dvb_frontend_parameters
were used.
struct dtv_stats { __u8 scale; /* enum fecap_scale_params type */ union { __u64 uvalue; /* for counters and relative scales */ __s64 svalue; /* for 1/1000 dB measures */ }; } __packed;
#define MAX_DTV_STATS 4 struct dtv_fe_stats { __u8 len; struct dtv_stats stat[MAX_DTV_STATS]; } __packed;
/* Reserved fields should be set to 0 */ struct dtv_property { __u32 cmd; __u32 reserved[3]; union { __u32 data; struct dtv_fe_stats st; struct { __u8 data[32]; __u32 len; __u32 reserved1[3]; void *reserved2; } buffer; } u; int result; } __attribute__ ((packed)); /* num of properties cannot exceed DTV_IOCTL_MAX_MSGS per ioctl */ #define DTV_IOCTL_MAX_MSGS 64
DESCRIPTION
This ioctl call returns one or more frontend properties. This call only requires read-only access to the device. |
SYNOPSIS
int ioctl(int fd, int request = FE_GET_PROPERTY, dtv_properties ⋆props); |
PARAMETERS
int fd |
File descriptor returned by a previous call to open(). |
int num |
Equals FE_GET_PROPERTY for this command. |
struct dtv_property *props |
Points to the location where the front-end property commands are stored. |
RETURN VALUE
On success 0 is returned, on error -1 and the errno
variable is set appropriately. The generic error codes are described at the Generic Error Codes chapter.
EOPNOTSUPP | Property type not supported. |
DESCRIPTION
This ioctl call sets one or more frontend properties. This call requires read/write access to the device. |
SYNOPSIS
int ioctl(int fd, int request = FE_SET_PROPERTY, dtv_properties ⋆props); |
PARAMETERS
int fd |
File descriptor returned by a previous call to open(). |
int num |
Equals FE_SET_PROPERTY for this command. |
struct dtv_property *props |
Points to the location where the front-end property commands are stored. |
RETURN VALUE
On success 0 is returned, on error -1 and the errno
variable is set appropriately. The generic error codes are described at the Generic Error Codes chapter.
EOPNOTSUPP | Property type not supported. |
On FE_GET_PROPERTY/FE_SET_PROPERTY, the actual action is determined by the dtv_property cmd/data pairs. With one single ioctl, is possible to get/set up to 64 properties. The actual meaning of each property is described on the next sections.
The available frontend property types are shown on the next section.
DTV_UNDEFINED
DTV_TUNE
DTV_CLEAR
DTV_FREQUENCY
DTV_MODULATION
DTV_BANDWIDTH_HZ
DTV_INVERSION
DTV_DISEQC_MASTER
DTV_SYMBOL_RATE
DTV_INNER_FEC
DTV_VOLTAGE
DTV_TONE
DTV_PILOT
DTV_ROLLOFF
DTV_DISEQC_SLAVE_REPLY
DTV_FE_CAPABILITY_COUNT
DTV_FE_CAPABILITY
DTV_DELIVERY_SYSTEM
DTV_ISDBT_PARTIAL_RECEPTION
DTV_ISDBT_SOUND_BROADCASTING
DTV_ISDBT_SB_SUBCHANNEL_ID
DTV_ISDBT_SB_SEGMENT_IDX
DTV_ISDBT_SB_SEGMENT_COUNT
DTV-ISDBT-LAYER*
parametersDTV_API_VERSION
DTV_CODE_RATE_HP
DTV_CODE_RATE_LP
DTV_GUARD_INTERVAL
DTV_TRANSMISSION_MODE
DTV_HIERARCHY
DTV_STREAM_ID
DTV_DVBT2_PLP_ID_LEGACY
DTV_ENUM_DELSYS
DTV_INTERLEAVING
DTV_LNA
Interpret the cache of data, build either a traditional frontend tunerequest so we can pass validation in the FE_SET_FRONTEND
ioctl.
Central frequency of the channel.
Notes:
1)For satellital delivery systems, it is measured in kHz. For the other ones, it is measured in Hz.
2)For ISDB-T, the channels are usually transmitted with an offset of 143kHz. E.g. a valid frequency could be 474143 kHz. The stepping is bound to the bandwidth of the channel which is 6MHz.
3)As in ISDB-Tsb the channel consists of only one or three segments the frequency step is 429kHz, 3*429 respectively. As for ISDB-T the central frequency of the channel is expected.
Specifies the frontend modulation type for cable and satellite types. The modulation can be one of the types bellow:
typedef enum fe_modulation { QPSK, QAM_16, QAM_32, QAM_64, QAM_128, QAM_256, QAM_AUTO, VSB_8, VSB_16, PSK_8, APSK_16, APSK_32, DQPSK, QAM_4_NR, } fe_modulation_t;
Bandwidth for the channel, in HZ.
Possible values:
1712000
,
5000000
,
6000000
,
7000000
,
8000000
,
10000000
.
Notes:
1) For ISDB-T it should be always 6000000Hz (6MHz)
2) For ISDB-Tsb it can vary depending on the number of connected segments
3) Bandwidth doesn't apply for DVB-C transmissions, as the bandwidth for DVB-C depends on the symbol rate
4) Bandwidth in ISDB-T is fixed (6MHz) or can be easily derived from other parameters (DTV_ISDBT_SB_SEGMENT_IDX, DTV_ISDBT_SB_SEGMENT_COUNT).
5) DVB-T supports 6, 7 and 8MHz.
6) In addition, DVB-T2 supports 1.172, 5 and 10MHz.
The Inversion field can take one of these values:
typedef enum fe_spectral_inversion { INVERSION_OFF, INVERSION_ON, INVERSION_AUTO } fe_spectral_inversion_t;
It indicates if spectral inversion should be presumed or not. In the automatic setting
(INVERSION_AUTO
) the hardware will try to figure out the correct setting by
itself.
Used cable/satellite transmissions. The acceptable values are:
typedef enum fe_code_rate { FEC_NONE = 0, FEC_1_2, FEC_2_3, FEC_3_4, FEC_4_5, FEC_5_6, FEC_6_7, FEC_7_8, FEC_8_9, FEC_AUTO, FEC_3_5, FEC_9_10, FEC_2_5, } fe_code_rate_t;
which correspond to error correction rates of 1/2, 2/3, etc., no error correction or auto detection.
The voltage is usually used with non-DiSEqC capable LNBs to switch the polarzation (horizontal/vertical). When using DiSEqC epuipment this voltage has to be switched consistently to the DiSEqC commands as described in the DiSEqC spec.
typedef enum fe_sec_voltage { SEC_VOLTAGE_13, SEC_VOLTAGE_18 } fe_sec_voltage_t;
Sets DVB-S2 pilot
Sets DVB-S2 rolloff
Specifies the type of Delivery system
Possible values:
typedef enum fe_delivery_system { SYS_UNDEFINED, SYS_DVBC_ANNEX_A, SYS_DVBC_ANNEX_B, SYS_DVBT, SYS_DSS, SYS_DVBS, SYS_DVBS2, SYS_DVBH, SYS_ISDBT, SYS_ISDBS, SYS_ISDBC, SYS_ATSC, SYS_ATSCMH, SYS_DTMB, SYS_CMMB, SYS_DAB, SYS_DVBT2, SYS_TURBO, SYS_DVBC_ANNEX_C, } fe_delivery_system_t;
If DTV_ISDBT_SOUND_BROADCASTING
is '0' this bit-field represents whether
the channel is in partial reception mode or not.
If '1' DTV_ISDBT_LAYERA_*
values are assigned to the center segment and
DTV_ISDBT_LAYERA_SEGMENT_COUNT
has to be '1'.
If in addition DTV_ISDBT_SOUND_BROADCASTING
is '1'
DTV_ISDBT_PARTIAL_RECEPTION
represents whether this ISDB-Tsb channel
is consisting of one segment and layer or three segments and two layers.
Possible values: 0, 1, -1 (AUTO)
This field represents whether the other DTV_ISDBT_*-parameters are
referring to an ISDB-T and an ISDB-Tsb channel. (See also
DTV_ISDBT_PARTIAL_RECEPTION
).
Possible values: 0, 1, -1 (AUTO)
This field only applies if DTV_ISDBT_SOUND_BROADCASTING
is '1'.
(Note of the author: This might not be the correct description of the
SUBCHANNEL-ID
in all details, but it is my understanding of the technical
background needed to program a device)
An ISDB-Tsb channel (1 or 3 segments) can be broadcasted alone or in a set of connected ISDB-Tsb channels. In this set of channels every channel can be received independently. The number of connected ISDB-Tsb segment can vary, e.g. depending on the frequency spectrum bandwidth available.
Example: Assume 8 ISDB-Tsb connected segments are broadcasted. The broadcaster has several possibilities to put those channels in the air: Assuming a normal 13-segment ISDB-T spectrum he can align the 8 segments from position 1-8 to 5-13 or anything in between.
The underlying layer of segments are subchannels: each segment is consisting of several subchannels with a predefined IDs. A sub-channel is used to help the demodulator to synchronize on the channel.
An ISDB-T channel is always centered over all sub-channels. As for the example above, in ISDB-Tsb it is no longer as simple as that.
The DTV_ISDBT_SB_SUBCHANNEL_ID
parameter is used to give the
sub-channel ID of the segment to be demodulated.
Possible values: 0 .. 41, -1 (AUTO)
This field only applies if DTV_ISDBT_SOUND_BROADCASTING
is '1'.
DTV_ISDBT_SB_SEGMENT_IDX
gives the index of the segment to be
demodulated for an ISDB-Tsb channel where several of them are
transmitted in the connected manner.
Possible values: 0 .. DTV_ISDBT_SB_SEGMENT_COUNT
- 1
Note: This value cannot be determined by an automatic channel search.
This field only applies if DTV_ISDBT_SOUND_BROADCASTING
is '1'.
DTV_ISDBT_SB_SEGMENT_COUNT
gives the total count of connected ISDB-Tsb
channels.
Possible values: 1 .. 13
Note: This value cannot be determined by an automatic channel search.
ISDB-T channels can be coded hierarchically. As opposed to DVB-T in ISDB-T hierarchical layers can be decoded simultaneously. For that reason a ISDB-T demodulator has 3 Viterbi and 3 Reed-Solomon decoders.
ISDB-T has 3 hierarchical layers which each can use a part of the available segments. The total number of segments over all layers has to 13 in ISDB-T.
There are 3 parameter sets, for Layers A, B and C.
Hierarchical reception in ISDB-T is achieved by enabling or disabling
layers in the decoding process. Setting all bits of
DTV_ISDBT_LAYER_ENABLED
to '1' forces all layers (if applicable) to be
demodulated. This is the default.
If the channel is in the partial reception mode
(DTV_ISDBT_PARTIAL_RECEPTION
= 1) the central segment can be decoded
independently of the other 12 segments. In that mode layer A has to
have a SEGMENT_COUNT
of 1.
In ISDB-Tsb only layer A is used, it can be 1 or 3 in ISDB-Tsb
according to DTV_ISDBT_PARTIAL_RECEPTION
. SEGMENT_COUNT
must be filled
accordingly.
Possible values: 0x1, 0x2, 0x4 (|-able)
DTV_ISDBT_LAYER_ENABLED[0:0]
- layer A
DTV_ISDBT_LAYER_ENABLED[1:1]
- layer B
DTV_ISDBT_LAYER_ENABLED[2:2]
- layer C
DTV_ISDBT_LAYER_ENABLED[31:3]
unused
Possible values: QAM_AUTO
, QPSK, QAM_16
, QAM_64
, DQPSK
Note: If layer C is DQPSK
layer B has to be DQPSK
. If layer B is DQPSK
and DTV_ISDBT_PARTIAL_RECEPTION
=0 layer has to be DQPSK
.
Possible values: 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, -1 (AUTO)
Note: Truth table for DTV_ISDBT_SOUND_BROADCASTING
and
DTV_ISDBT_PARTIAL_RECEPTION
and LAYER
*_SEGMENT_COUNT
Valid values: 0, 1, 2, 4, -1 (AUTO)
when DTV_ISDBT_SOUND_BROADCASTING is active, value 8 is also valid.
Note: The real time interleaving length depends on the mode (fft-size). The values here are referring to what can be found in the TMCC-structure, as shown in the table below.
Version number of the FIC (Fast Information Channel) signaling data.
FIC is used for relaying information to allow rapid service acquisition by the receiver.
Possible values: 0, 1, 2, 3, ..., 30, 31
Parade identification number
A parade is a collection of up to eight MH groups, conveying one or two ensembles.
Possible values: 0, 1, 2, 3, ..., 126, 127
Number of MH groups per MH subframe for a designated parade.
Possible values: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8
Total number of MH groups including all MH groups belonging to all MH parades in one MH subframe.
Possible values: 0, 1, 2, 3, ..., 30, 31
RS frame mode.
Possible values are:
typedef enum atscmh_rs_frame_mode { ATSCMH_RSFRAME_PRI_ONLY = 0, ATSCMH_RSFRAME_PRI_SEC = 1, } atscmh_rs_frame_mode_t;
RS frame ensemble.
Possible values are:
typedef enum atscmh_rs_frame_ensemble { ATSCMH_RSFRAME_ENS_PRI = 0, ATSCMH_RSFRAME_ENS_SEC = 1, } atscmh_rs_frame_ensemble_t;
RS code mode (primary).
Possible values are:
typedef enum atscmh_rs_code_mode { ATSCMH_RSCODE_211_187 = 0, ATSCMH_RSCODE_223_187 = 1, ATSCMH_RSCODE_235_187 = 2, } atscmh_rs_code_mode_t;
RS code mode (secondary).
Possible values are:
typedef enum atscmh_rs_code_mode { ATSCMH_RSCODE_211_187 = 0, ATSCMH_RSCODE_223_187 = 1, ATSCMH_RSCODE_235_187 = 2, } atscmh_rs_code_mode_t;
Series Concatenated Convolutional Code Block Mode.
Possible values are:
typedef enum atscmh_sccc_block_mode { ATSCMH_SCCC_BLK_SEP = 0, ATSCMH_SCCC_BLK_COMB = 1, } atscmh_sccc_block_mode_t;
Series Concatenated Convolutional Code Rate.
Possible values are:
typedef enum atscmh_sccc_code_mode { ATSCMH_SCCC_CODE_HLF = 0, ATSCMH_SCCC_CODE_QTR = 1, } atscmh_sccc_code_mode_t;
Series Concatenated Convolutional Code Rate.
Possible values are:
typedef enum atscmh_sccc_code_mode { ATSCMH_SCCC_CODE_HLF = 0, ATSCMH_SCCC_CODE_QTR = 1, } atscmh_sccc_code_mode_t;
Series Concatenated Convolutional Code Rate.
Possible values are:
typedef enum atscmh_sccc_code_mode { ATSCMH_SCCC_CODE_HLF = 0, ATSCMH_SCCC_CODE_QTR = 1, } atscmh_sccc_code_mode_t;
Used on terrestrial transmissions. The acceptable values are:
typedef enum fe_code_rate { FEC_NONE = 0, FEC_1_2, FEC_2_3, FEC_3_4, FEC_4_5, FEC_5_6, FEC_6_7, FEC_7_8, FEC_8_9, FEC_AUTO, FEC_3_5, FEC_9_10, } fe_code_rate_t;
Used on terrestrial transmissions. The acceptable values are:
typedef enum fe_code_rate { FEC_NONE = 0, FEC_1_2, FEC_2_3, FEC_3_4, FEC_4_5, FEC_5_6, FEC_6_7, FEC_7_8, FEC_8_9, FEC_AUTO, FEC_3_5, FEC_9_10, } fe_code_rate_t;
Possible values are:
typedef enum fe_guard_interval { GUARD_INTERVAL_1_32, GUARD_INTERVAL_1_16, GUARD_INTERVAL_1_8, GUARD_INTERVAL_1_4, GUARD_INTERVAL_AUTO, GUARD_INTERVAL_1_128, GUARD_INTERVAL_19_128, GUARD_INTERVAL_19_256, GUARD_INTERVAL_PN420, GUARD_INTERVAL_PN595, GUARD_INTERVAL_PN945, } fe_guard_interval_t;
Notes:
1) If DTV_GUARD_INTERVAL
is set the GUARD_INTERVAL_AUTO
the hardware will
try to find the correct guard interval (if capable) and will use TMCC to fill
in the missing parameters.
2) Intervals 1/128, 19/128 and 19/256 are used only for DVB-T2 at present
3) DTMB specifies PN420, PN595 and PN945.
Specifies the number of carriers used by the standard
Possible values are:
typedef enum fe_transmit_mode { TRANSMISSION_MODE_2K, TRANSMISSION_MODE_8K, TRANSMISSION_MODE_AUTO, TRANSMISSION_MODE_4K, TRANSMISSION_MODE_1K, TRANSMISSION_MODE_16K, TRANSMISSION_MODE_32K, TRANSMISSION_MODE_C1, TRANSMISSION_MODE_C3780, } fe_transmit_mode_t;
Notes:
1) ISDB-T supports three carrier/symbol-size: 8K, 4K, 2K. It is called 'mode' in the standard: Mode 1 is 2K, mode 2 is 4K, mode 3 is 8K
2) If DTV_TRANSMISSION_MODE
is set the TRANSMISSION_MODE_AUTO
the
hardware will try to find the correct FFT-size (if capable) and will
use TMCC to fill in the missing parameters.
3) DVB-T specifies 2K and 8K as valid sizes.
4) DVB-T2 specifies 1K, 2K, 4K, 8K, 16K and 32K.
5) DTMB specifies C1 and C3780.
Frontend hierarchy
typedef enum fe_hierarchy { HIERARCHY_NONE, HIERARCHY_1, HIERARCHY_2, HIERARCHY_4, HIERARCHY_AUTO } fe_hierarchy_t;
DVB-S2, DVB-T2 and ISDB-S support the transmission of several streams on a single transport stream. This property enables the DVB driver to handle substream filtering, when supported by the hardware. By default, substream filtering is disabled.
For DVB-S2 and DVB-T2, the valid substream id range is from 0 to 255.
For ISDB, the valid substream id range is from 1 to 65535.
To disable it, you should use the special macro NO_STREAM_ID_FILTER.
Note: any value outside the id range also disables filtering.
A Multi standard frontend needs to advertise the delivery systems provided. Applications need to enumerate the provided delivery systems, before using any other operation with the frontend. Prior to it's introduction, FE_GET_INFO was used to determine a frontend type. A frontend which provides more than a single delivery system, FE_GET_INFO doesn't help much. Applications which intends to use a multistandard frontend must enumerate the delivery systems associated with it, rather than trying to use FE_GET_INFO. In the case of a legacy frontend, the result is just the same as with FE_GET_INFO, but in a more structured format
enum fe_interleaving { INTERLEAVING_NONE, INTERLEAVING_AUTO, INTERLEAVING_240, INTERLEAVING_720, };
The values are returned via dtv_property.stat
.
If the property is supported, dtv_property.stat.len
is bigger than zero.
For most delivery systems, dtv_property.stat.len
will be 1 if the stats is supported, and the properties will
return a single value for each parameter.
It should be noticed, however, that new OFDM delivery systems
like ISDB can use different modulation types for each group of
carriers. On such standards, up to 3 groups of statistics can be
provided, and dtv_property.stat.len
is updated
to reflect the "global" metrics, plus one metric per each carrier
group (called "layer" on ISDB).
So, in order to be consistent with other delivery systems, the first
value at dtv_property.stat.dtv_stats
array refers to the global metric. The other elements of the array
represent each layer, starting from layer A(index 1),
layer B (index 2) and so on.
The number of filled elements are stored at dtv_property.stat.len
.
Each element of the dtv_property.stat.dtv_stats
array consists on two elements:
svalue
or uvalue
, where
svalue
is for signed values of the measure (dB measures)
and uvalue
is for unsigned values (counters, relative scale)
scale
- Scale for the value. It can be:
FE_SCALE_NOT_AVAILABLE
- The parameter is supported by the frontend, but it was not possible to collect it (could be a transitory or permanent condition)
FE_SCALE_DECIBEL
- parameter is a signed value, measured in 1/1000 dB
FE_SCALE_RELATIVE
- parameter is a unsigned value, where 0 means 0% and 65535 means 100%.
FE_SCALE_COUNTER
- parameter is a unsigned value that counts the occurrence of an event, like bit error, block error, or lapsed time.
Indicates the signal strength level at the analog part of the tuner or of the demod.
Possible scales for this metric are:
FE_SCALE_NOT_AVAILABLE
- it failed to measure it, or the measurement was not complete yet.
FE_SCALE_DECIBEL
- signal strength is in 0.0001 dBm units, power measured in miliwatts. This value is generally negative.
FE_SCALE_RELATIVE
- The frontend provides a 0% to 100% measurement for power (actually, 0 to 65535).
Indicates the Signal to Noise ratio for the main carrier.
Possible scales for this metric are:
FE_SCALE_NOT_AVAILABLE
- it failed to measure it, or the measurement was not complete yet.
FE_SCALE_DECIBEL
- Signal/Noise ratio is in 0.0001 dB units.
FE_SCALE_RELATIVE
- The frontend provides a 0% to 100% measurement for Signal/Noise (actually, 0 to 65535).
Measures the number of bit errors before the forward error correction (FEC) on the inner coding block (before Viterbi, LDPC or other inner code).
This measure is taken during the same interval as DTV_STAT_PRE_TOTAL_BIT_COUNT
.
In order to get the BER (Bit Error Rate) measurement, it should be divided by
DTV_STAT_PRE_TOTAL_BIT_COUNT
.
This measurement is monotonically increased, as the frontend gets more bit count measurements. The frontend may reset it when a channel/transponder is tuned.
Possible scales for this metric are:
FE_SCALE_NOT_AVAILABLE
- it failed to measure it, or the measurement was not complete yet.
FE_SCALE_COUNTER
- Number of error bits counted before the inner coding.
Measures the amount of bits received before the inner code block, during the same period as
DTV_STAT_PRE_ERROR_BIT_COUNT
measurement was taken.
It should be noticed that this measurement can be smaller than the total amount of bits on the transport stream, as the frontend may need to manually restart the measurement, losing some data between each measurement interval.
This measurement is monotonically increased, as the frontend gets more bit count measurements. The frontend may reset it when a channel/transponder is tuned.
Possible scales for this metric are:
FE_SCALE_NOT_AVAILABLE
- it failed to measure it, or the measurement was not complete yet.
FE_SCALE_COUNTER
- Number of bits counted while measuring
DTV_STAT_PRE_ERROR_BIT_COUNT
.
Measures the number of bit errors after the forward error correction (FEC) done by inner code block (after Viterbi, LDPC or other inner code).
This measure is taken during the same interval as DTV_STAT_POST_TOTAL_BIT_COUNT
.
In order to get the BER (Bit Error Rate) measurement, it should be divided by
DTV_STAT_POST_TOTAL_BIT_COUNT
.
This measurement is monotonically increased, as the frontend gets more bit count measurements. The frontend may reset it when a channel/transponder is tuned.
Possible scales for this metric are:
FE_SCALE_NOT_AVAILABLE
- it failed to measure it, or the measurement was not complete yet.
FE_SCALE_COUNTER
- Number of error bits counted after the inner coding.
Measures the amount of bits received after the inner coding, during the same period as
DTV_STAT_POST_ERROR_BIT_COUNT
measurement was taken.
It should be noticed that this measurement can be smaller than the total amount of bits on the transport stream, as the frontend may need to manually restart the measurement, losing some data between each measurement interval.
This measurement is monotonically increased, as the frontend gets more bit count measurements. The frontend may reset it when a channel/transponder is tuned.
Possible scales for this metric are:
FE_SCALE_NOT_AVAILABLE
- it failed to measure it, or the measurement was not complete yet.
FE_SCALE_COUNTER
- Number of bits counted while measuring
DTV_STAT_POST_ERROR_BIT_COUNT
.
Measures the number of block errors after the outer forward error correction coding (after Reed-Solomon or other outer code).
This measurement is monotonically increased, as the frontend gets more bit count measurements. The frontend may reset it when a channel/transponder is tuned.
Possible scales for this metric are:
FE_SCALE_NOT_AVAILABLE
- it failed to measure it, or the measurement was not complete yet.
FE_SCALE_COUNTER
- Number of error blocks counted after the outer coding.
Measures the total number of blocks received during the same period as
DTV_STAT_ERROR_BLOCK_COUNT
measurement was taken.
It can be used to calculate the PER indicator, by dividing
DTV_STAT_ERROR_BLOCK_COUNT
by DTV-STAT-TOTAL-BLOCK-COUNT
.
Possible scales for this metric are:
FE_SCALE_NOT_AVAILABLE
- it failed to measure it, or the measurement was not complete yet.
FE_SCALE_COUNTER
- Number of blocks counted while measuring
DTV_STAT_ERROR_BLOCK_COUNT
.
DVB-T2 support is currently in the early stages of development, so expect that this section maygrow and become more detailed with time.
The following parameters are valid for DVB-T2:
In addition, the DTV QoS statistics are also valid.
This ISDB-T/ISDB-Tsb API extension should reflect all information needed to tune any ISDB-T/ISDB-Tsb hardware. Of course it is possible that some very sophisticated devices won't need certain parameters to tune.
The information given here should help application writers to know how to handle ISDB-T and ISDB-Tsb hardware using the Linux DVB-API.
The details given here about ISDB-T and ISDB-Tsb are just enough to basically show the dependencies between the needed parameter values, but surely some information is left out. For more detailed information see the following documents:
ARIB STD-B31 - "Transmission System for Digital Terrestrial Television Broadcasting" and
ARIB TR-B14 - "Operational Guidelines for Digital Terrestrial Television Broadcasting".
In order to understand the ISDB specific parameters, one has to have some knowledge the channel structure in ISDB-T and ISDB-Tsb. I.e. it has to be known to the reader that an ISDB-T channel consists of 13 segments, that it can have up to 3 layer sharing those segments, and things like that.
The following parameters are valid for ISDB-T:
In addition, the DTV QoS statistics are also valid.
The following parameters are valid for ATSC:
In addition, the DTV QoS statistics are also valid.
The DVB-C Annex-A is the widely used cable standard. Transmission uses QAM modulation.
The DVB-C Annex-C is optimized for 6MHz, and is used in Japan. It supports a subset of the Annex A modulation types, and a roll-off of 0.13, instead of 0.15
The following parameters are valid for DVB-C Annex A/C:
In addition, the DTV QoS statistics are also valid.
The DVB-C Annex-B is only used on a few Countries like the United States.
The following parameters are valid for DVB-C Annex B:
In addition, the DTV QoS statistics are also valid.
The following parameters are valid for DVB-S:
In addition, the DTV QoS statistics are also valid.
Future implementations might add those two missing parameters:
In addition to all parameters valid for DVB-S, DVB-S2 supports the following parameters:
In addition, the DTV QoS statistics are also valid.
In addition to all parameters valid for DVB-S, turbo code supports the following parameters:
The following parameters are valid for ISDB-S: