Driver for Trust Computer Products Framegrabber, version 0.6.1 ------ --- ----- -------- -------- ------------ ------- - - - - ZORAN ------------------------------------------------------ Author: Pauline Middelink Date: 18 September 1999 Version: 0.6.1 - Description ------------------------------------------------ Video4Linux compatible driver for an unknown brand framegrabber (Sold in the Netherlands by TRUST Computer Products) and various other zoran zr36120 based framegrabbers. The card contains a ZR36120 Multimedia PCI Interface and a Philips SAA7110 Onechip Frontend videodecoder. There is also an DSP of which I have forgotten the number, since i will never get that thing to work without specs from the vendor itself. The SAA711x are capable of processing 6 different video inputs, CVBS1..6 and Y1+C1, Y2+C2, Y3+C3. All in 50/60Hz, NTSC, PAL or SECAM and delivering a YUV datastream. On my card the input 'CVBS-0' corresponds to channel CVBS2 and 'S-Video' to Y2+C2. I have some reports of other cards working with the mentioned chip sets. For a list of other working cards please have a look at the cards named in the tvcards struct in the beginning of zr36120.c After some testing, I discovered that the carddesigner messed up on the I2C interface. The Zoran chip includes 2 lines SDA and SCL which (s)he connected reversely. So we have to clock on the SDA and r/w data on the SCL pin. Life is fun... Each cardtype now has a bit which signifies if you have a card with the same deficiency. Oh, for the completeness of this story I must mention that my card delivers the VSYNC pulse of the SAA chip to GIRQ1, not GIRQ0 as some other cards have. This is also incorporated in the driver be clearing/setting the 'useirq1' bit in the tvcard description. Another problems of continuous capturing data with a Zoran chip is something nasty inside the chip. It effectively halves the fps we ought to get... Here is the scenario: capturing frames to memory is done in the so-called snapshot mode. In this mode the Zoran stops after capturing a frame worth of data and wait till the application set GRAB bit to indicate readiness for the next frame. After detecting a set bit, the chip neatly waits till the start of a frame, captures it and it goes back to off. Smart ppl will notice the problem here. Its the waiting on the _next_ frame each time we set the GRAB bit... Oh well, 12,5 fps is still plenty fast for me. -- update 28/7/1999 -- Don't believe a word I just said... Proof is the output of `streamer -t 300 -r 25 -f avi15 -o /dev/null` ++--+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-s+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+- 25/25 +-s+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-s+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+- 25/25 +-s+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-s+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+- 25/25 +-s+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-s+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+- 25/25 +-s+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-s+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+- 25/25 +-s+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-s+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+- 25/25 +-s+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-s+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+- 25/25 +-s+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-s+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+- 25/25 +-s+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-s+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+- 25/25 +-s+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-s+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+- 25/25 +-s+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-s+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+- 25/25 +-s+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-s+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+- syncer: done writer: done (note the /dev/null is prudent here, my system is not able to grab /and/ write 25 fps to a file... gifts welcome :) ) The technical reasoning follows: The zoran completed the last frame, the VSYNC goes low, and GRAB is cleared. The interrupt routine starts to work since its VSYNC driven, and again activates the GRAB bit. A few ms later the VSYNC (re-)rises and the zoran starts to work on a new and freshly broadcasted frame.... For pointers I used the specs of both chips. Below are the URLs: http://www.zoran.com/ftp/download/devices/pci/ZR36120/36120data.pdf http://www-us.semiconductor.philips.com/acrobat/datasheets/SAA_7110_A_1.pdf The documentation has very little on absolute numbers or timings needed for the various modes/resolutions, but there are other programs you can borrow those from. ------ Install -------------------------------------------- Read the file called TODO. Note its long list of limitations. Build a kernel with VIDEO4LINUX enabled. Activate the BT848 driver; we need this because we have need for the other modules (i2c and videodev) it enables. To install this software, extract it into a suitable directory. Examine the makefile and change anything you don't like. Type "make". After making the modules check if you have the much needed /dev/video devices. If not, execute the following 4 lines: mknod /dev/video c 81 0 mknod /dev/video1 c 81 1 mknod /dev/video2 c 81 2 mknod /dev/video3 c 81 3 mknod /dev/video4 c 81 4 After making/checking the devices do: modprobe i2c modprobe videodev modprobe saa7110 (optional) modprobe saa7111 (optional) modprobe tuner (optional) insmod zoran cardtype= is the cardtype of the card you have. The cardnumber can be found in the source of zr36120. Look for tvcards. If your card is not there, please try if any other card gives some response, and mail me if you got a working tvcard addition. PS.