VIDIOC_DBG_G_REGISTER, VIDIOC_DBG_S_REGISTER — Read or write hardware registers
int ioctl( | int fd, |
int request, | |
struct v4l2_dbg_register *argp) ; |
int ioctl( | int fd, |
int request, | |
const struct v4l2_dbg_register
*argp) ; |
fd
File descriptor returned by open()
.
request
VIDIOC_DBG_G_REGISTER, VIDIOC_DBG_S_REGISTER
argp
This is an experimental interface and may change in the future.
For driver debugging purposes these ioctls allow test applications to access hardware registers directly. Regular applications must not use them.
Since writing or even reading registers can jeopardize the
system security, its stability and damage the hardware, both ioctls
require superuser privileges. Additionally the Linux kernel must be
compiled with the CONFIG_VIDEO_ADV_DEBUG
option
to enable these ioctls.
To write a register applications must initialize all fields
of a struct v4l2_dbg_register except for size
and call
VIDIOC_DBG_S_REGISTER
with a pointer to this
structure. The match.type
and
match.addr
or match.name
fields select a chip on the TV
card, the reg
field specifies a register
number and the val
field the value to be
written into the register.
To read a register applications must initialize the
match.type
,
match.addr
or match.name
and
reg
fields, and call
VIDIOC_DBG_G_REGISTER
with a pointer to this
structure. On success the driver stores the register value in the
val
field and the size (in bytes) of the
value in size
.
When match.type
is
V4L2_CHIP_MATCH_BRIDGE
,
match.addr
selects the nth non-sub-device chip
on the TV card. The number zero always selects the host chip, e. g. the
chip connected to the PCI or USB bus. You can find out which chips are
present with the VIDIOC_DBG_G_CHIP_INFO
ioctl.
When match.type
is
V4L2_CHIP_MATCH_SUBDEV
,
match.addr
selects the nth sub-device.
These ioctls are optional, not all drivers may support them.
However when a driver supports these ioctls it must also support
VIDIOC_DBG_G_CHIP_INFO
. Conversely it may support
VIDIOC_DBG_G_CHIP_INFO
but not these ioctls.
VIDIOC_DBG_G_REGISTER
and
VIDIOC_DBG_S_REGISTER
were introduced in Linux
2.6.21, but their API was changed to the one described here in kernel 2.6.29.
We recommended the v4l2-dbg utility over calling these ioctls directly. It is available from the LinuxTV v4l-dvb repository; see http://linuxtv.org/repo/ for access instructions.
Table A.7. struct v4l2_dbg_match
__u32 | type | See Table A.9, “Chip Match Types” for a list of possible types. | |
union | (anonymous) | ||
__u32 | addr | Match a chip by this number, interpreted according
to the type field. | |
char | name[32] | Match a chip by this name, interpreted according
to the type field. Currently unused. |
Table A.8. struct v4l2_dbg_register
struct v4l2_dbg_match | match | How to match the chip, see Table A.7, “struct v4l2_dbg_match”. | |
__u32 | size | The register size in bytes. | |
__u64 | reg | A register number. | |
__u64 | val | The value read from, or to be written into the register. |
Table A.9. Chip Match Types
V4L2_CHIP_MATCH_BRIDGE | 0 | Match the nth chip on the card, zero for the bridge chip. Does not match sub-devices. |
V4L2_CHIP_MATCH_SUBDEV | 4 | Match the nth sub-device. |
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.
Insufficient permissions. Root privileges are required to execute these ioctls.