Video devices typically support one or more different video
standards or variations of standards. Each video input and output may
support another set of standards. This set is reported by the
std
field of struct v4l2_input and
struct v4l2_output returned by the VIDIOC_ENUMINPUT
and
VIDIOC_ENUMOUTPUT
ioctls, respectively.
V4L2 defines one bit for each analog video standard
currently in use worldwide, and sets aside bits for driver defined
standards, e. g. hybrid standards to watch NTSC video tapes on PAL TVs
and vice versa. Applications can use the predefined bits to select a
particular standard, although presenting the user a menu of supported
standards is preferred. To enumerate and query the attributes of the
supported standards applications use the VIDIOC_ENUMSTD
ioctl.
Many of the defined standards are actually just variations of a few major standards. The hardware may in fact not distinguish between them, or do so internal and switch automatically. Therefore enumerated standards also contain sets of one or more standard bits.
Assume a hypothetic tuner capable of demodulating B/PAL, G/PAL and I/PAL signals. The first enumerated standard is a set of B and G/PAL, switched automatically depending on the selected radio frequency in UHF or VHF band. Enumeration gives a "PAL-B/G" or "PAL-I" choice. Similar a Composite input may collapse standards, enumerating "PAL-B/G/H/I", "NTSC-M" and "SECAM-D/K".[5]
To query and select the standard used by the current video
input or output applications call the VIDIOC_G_STD
and
VIDIOC_S_STD
ioctl, respectively. The received
standard can be sensed with the VIDIOC_QUERYSTD
ioctl. Note that the
parameter of all these ioctls is a pointer to a v4l2_std_id type
(a standard set), not an index into the standard
enumeration. Drivers must implement all video standard ioctls
when the device has one or more video inputs or outputs.
Special rules apply to devices such as USB cameras where the notion of video standards makes little sense. More generally for any capture or output device which is:
incapable of capturing fields or frames at the nominal rate of the video standard, or
that does not support the video standard formats at all.
Here the driver shall set the
std
field of struct v4l2_input and struct v4l2_output
to zero and the VIDIOC_G_STD
,
VIDIOC_S_STD
,
VIDIOC_QUERYSTD
and
VIDIOC_ENUMSTD
ioctls shall return the
ENOTTY error code or the EINVAL error code.
Applications can make use of the Table A.42, “Input capabilities” and Table A.45, “Output capabilities” flags to determine whether the video standard ioctls can be used with the given input or output.
Example 1.5. Information about the current video standard
v4l2_std_id std_id; struct v4l2_standard standard; if (-1 == ioctl(fd,VIDIOC_G_STD
, &std_id)) { /* Note when VIDIOC_ENUMSTD always returns ENOTTY this is no video device or it falls under the USB exception, and VIDIOC_G_STD returning ENOTTY is no error. */ perror("VIDIOC_G_STD"); exit(EXIT_FAILURE); } memset(&standard, 0, sizeof(standard)); standard.index = 0; while (0 == ioctl(fd,VIDIOC_ENUMSTD
, &standard)) { if (standard.id & std_id) { printf("Current video standard: %s\n", standard.name); exit(EXIT_SUCCESS); } standard.index++; } /* EINVAL indicates the end of the enumeration, which cannot be empty unless this device falls under the USB exception. */ if (errno == EINVAL || standard.index == 0) { perror("VIDIOC_ENUMSTD"); exit(EXIT_FAILURE); }
Example 1.6. Listing the video standards supported by the current input
struct v4l2_input input; struct v4l2_standard standard; memset(&input, 0, sizeof(input)); if (-1 == ioctl(fd,VIDIOC_G_INPUT
, &input.index)) { perror("VIDIOC_G_INPUT"); exit(EXIT_FAILURE); } if (-1 == ioctl(fd,VIDIOC_ENUMINPUT
, &input)) { perror("VIDIOC_ENUM_INPUT"); exit(EXIT_FAILURE); } printf("Current input %s supports:\n", input.name); memset(&standard, 0, sizeof(standard)); standard.index = 0; while (0 == ioctl(fd,VIDIOC_ENUMSTD
, &standard)) { if (standard.id & input.std) printf("%s\n", standard.name); standard.index++; } /* EINVAL indicates the end of the enumeration, which cannot be empty unless this device falls under the USB exception. */ if (errno != EINVAL || standard.index == 0) { perror("VIDIOC_ENUMSTD"); exit(EXIT_FAILURE); }
Example 1.7. Selecting a new video standard
struct v4l2_input input; v4l2_std_id std_id; memset(&input, 0, sizeof(input)); if (-1 == ioctl(fd,VIDIOC_G_INPUT
, &input.index)) { perror("VIDIOC_G_INPUT"); exit(EXIT_FAILURE); } if (-1 == ioctl(fd,VIDIOC_ENUMINPUT
, &input)) { perror("VIDIOC_ENUM_INPUT"); exit(EXIT_FAILURE); } if (0 == (input.std & V4L2_STD_PAL_BG)) { fprintf(stderr, "Oops. B/G PAL is not supported.\n"); exit(EXIT_FAILURE); } /* Note this is also supposed to work when only B or G/PAL is supported. */ std_id = V4L2_STD_PAL_BG; if (-1 == ioctl(fd,VIDIOC_S_STD
, &std_id)) { perror("VIDIOC_S_STD"); exit(EXIT_FAILURE); }
[5] Some users are already confused by technical terms PAL, NTSC and SECAM. There is no point asking them to distinguish between B, G, D, or K when the software or hardware can do that automatically.