|   <title>Raw VBI Data Interface</title> | 
 |  | 
 |   <para>VBI is an abbreviation of Vertical Blanking Interval, a gap | 
 | in the sequence of lines of an analog video signal. During VBI | 
 | no picture information is transmitted, allowing some time while the | 
 | electron beam of a cathode ray tube TV returns to the top of the | 
 | screen. Using an oscilloscope you will find here the vertical | 
 | synchronization pulses and short data packages ASK | 
 | modulated<footnote><para>ASK: Amplitude-Shift Keying. A high signal | 
 | level represents a '1' bit, a low level a '0' bit.</para></footnote> | 
 | onto the video signal. These are transmissions of services such as | 
 | Teletext or Closed Caption.</para> | 
 |  | 
 |   <para>Subject of this interface type is raw VBI data, as sampled off | 
 | a video signal, or to be added to a signal for output. | 
 | The data format is similar to uncompressed video images, a number of | 
 | lines times a number of samples per line, we call this a VBI image.</para> | 
 |  | 
 |   <para>Conventionally V4L2 VBI devices are accessed through character | 
 | device special files named <filename>/dev/vbi</filename> and | 
 | <filename>/dev/vbi0</filename> to <filename>/dev/vbi31</filename> with | 
 | major number 81 and minor numbers 224 to 255. | 
 | <filename>/dev/vbi</filename> is typically a symbolic link to the | 
 | preferred VBI device. This convention applies to both input and output | 
 | devices.</para> | 
 |  | 
 |   <para>To address the problems of finding related video and VBI | 
 | devices VBI capturing and output is also available as device function | 
 | under <filename>/dev/video</filename>. To capture or output raw VBI | 
 | data with these devices applications must call the &VIDIOC-S-FMT; | 
 | ioctl. Accessed as <filename>/dev/vbi</filename>, raw VBI capturing | 
 | or output is the default device function.</para> | 
 |  | 
 |     <section> | 
 |       <title>Querying Capabilities</title> | 
 |  | 
 |       <para>Devices supporting the raw VBI capturing or output API set | 
 | the <constant>V4L2_CAP_VBI_CAPTURE</constant> or | 
 | <constant>V4L2_CAP_VBI_OUTPUT</constant> flags, respectively, in the | 
 | <structfield>capabilities</structfield> field of &v4l2-capability; | 
 | returned by the &VIDIOC-QUERYCAP; ioctl. At least one of the | 
 | read/write, streaming or asynchronous I/O methods must be | 
 | supported. VBI devices may or may not have a tuner or modulator.</para> | 
 |     </section> | 
 |  | 
 |     <section> | 
 |       <title>Supplemental Functions</title> | 
 |  | 
 |       <para>VBI devices shall support <link linkend="video">video | 
 | input or output</link>, <link linkend="tuner">tuner or | 
 | modulator</link>, and <link linkend="control">controls</link> ioctls | 
 | as needed. The <link linkend="standard">video standard</link> ioctls provide | 
 | information vital to program a VBI device, therefore must be | 
 | supported.</para> | 
 |     </section> | 
 |  | 
 |     <section> | 
 |       <title>Raw VBI Format Negotiation</title> | 
 |  | 
 |       <para>Raw VBI sampling abilities can vary, in particular the | 
 | sampling frequency. To properly interpret the data V4L2 specifies an | 
 | ioctl to query the sampling parameters. Moreover, to allow for some | 
 | flexibility applications can also suggest different parameters.</para> | 
 |  | 
 |       <para>As usual these parameters are <emphasis>not</emphasis> | 
 | reset at &func-open; time to permit Unix tool chains, programming a | 
 | device and then reading from it as if it was a plain file. Well | 
 | written V4L2 applications should always ensure they really get what | 
 | they want, requesting reasonable parameters and then checking if the | 
 | actual parameters are suitable.</para> | 
 |  | 
 |       <para>To query the current raw VBI capture parameters | 
 | applications set the <structfield>type</structfield> field of a | 
 | &v4l2-format; to <constant>V4L2_BUF_TYPE_VBI_CAPTURE</constant> or | 
 | <constant>V4L2_BUF_TYPE_VBI_OUTPUT</constant>, and call the | 
 | &VIDIOC-G-FMT; ioctl with a pointer to this structure. Drivers fill | 
 | the &v4l2-vbi-format; <structfield>vbi</structfield> member of the | 
 | <structfield>fmt</structfield> union.</para> | 
 |  | 
 |       <para>To request different parameters applications set the | 
 | <structfield>type</structfield> field of a &v4l2-format; as above and | 
 | initialize all fields of the &v4l2-vbi-format; | 
 | <structfield>vbi</structfield> member of the | 
 | <structfield>fmt</structfield> union, or better just modify the | 
 | results of <constant>VIDIOC_G_FMT</constant>, and call the | 
 | &VIDIOC-S-FMT; ioctl with a pointer to this structure. Drivers return | 
 | an &EINVAL; only when the given parameters are ambiguous, otherwise | 
 | they modify the parameters according to the hardware capabilites and | 
 | return the actual parameters. When the driver allocates resources at | 
 | this point, it may return an &EBUSY; to indicate the returned | 
 | parameters are valid but the required resources are currently not | 
 | available. That may happen for instance when the video and VBI areas | 
 | to capture would overlap, or when the driver supports multiple opens | 
 | and another process already requested VBI capturing or output. Anyway, | 
 | applications must expect other resource allocation points which may | 
 | return <errorcode>EBUSY</errorcode>, at the &VIDIOC-STREAMON; ioctl | 
 | and the first read(), write() and select() call.</para> | 
 |  | 
 |       <para>VBI devices must implement both the | 
 | <constant>VIDIOC_G_FMT</constant> and | 
 | <constant>VIDIOC_S_FMT</constant> ioctl, even if | 
 | <constant>VIDIOC_S_FMT</constant> ignores all requests and always | 
 | returns default parameters as <constant>VIDIOC_G_FMT</constant> does. | 
 | <constant>VIDIOC_TRY_FMT</constant> is optional.</para> | 
 |  | 
 |       <table pgwide="1" frame="none" id="v4l2-vbi-format"> | 
 | 	<title>struct <structname>v4l2_vbi_format</structname></title> | 
 | 	<tgroup cols="3"> | 
 | 	  &cs-str; | 
 | 	  <tbody valign="top"> | 
 | 	    <row> | 
 | 	      <entry>__u32</entry> | 
 | 	      <entry><structfield>sampling_rate</structfield></entry> | 
 | 	      <entry>Samples per second, i. e. unit 1 Hz.</entry> | 
 | 	    </row> | 
 | 	    <row> | 
 | 	      <entry>__u32</entry> | 
 | 	      <entry><structfield>offset</structfield></entry> | 
 | 	      <entry><para>Horizontal offset of the VBI image, | 
 | relative to the leading edge of the line synchronization pulse and | 
 | counted in samples: The first sample in the VBI image will be located | 
 | <structfield>offset</structfield> / | 
 | <structfield>sampling_rate</structfield> seconds following the leading | 
 | edge. See also <xref linkend="vbi-hsync" />.</para></entry> | 
 | 	    </row> | 
 | 	    <row> | 
 | 	      <entry>__u32</entry> | 
 | 	      <entry><structfield>samples_per_line</structfield></entry> | 
 | 	      <entry></entry> | 
 | 	    </row> | 
 | 	    <row> | 
 | 	      <entry>__u32</entry> | 
 | 	      <entry><structfield>sample_format</structfield></entry> | 
 | 	      <entry><para>Defines the sample format as in <xref | 
 | linkend="pixfmt" />, a four-character-code.<footnote> | 
 | 		    <para>A few devices may be unable to | 
 | sample VBI data at all but can extend the video capture window to the | 
 | VBI region.</para> | 
 | 		  </footnote> Usually this is | 
 | <constant>V4L2_PIX_FMT_GREY</constant>, i. e. each sample | 
 | consists of 8 bits with lower values oriented towards the black level. | 
 | Do not assume any other correlation of values with the signal level. | 
 | For example, the MSB does not necessarily indicate if the signal is | 
 | 'high' or 'low' because 128 may not be the mean value of the | 
 | signal. Drivers shall not convert the sample format by software.</para></entry> | 
 | 	    </row> | 
 | 	    <row> | 
 | 	      <entry>__u32</entry> | 
 | 	      <entry><structfield>start</structfield>[2]</entry> | 
 | 	      <entry>This is the scanning system line number | 
 | associated with the first line of the VBI image, of the first and the | 
 | second field respectively. See <xref linkend="vbi-525" /> and | 
 | <xref linkend="vbi-625" /> for valid values. VBI input drivers can | 
 | return start values 0 if the hardware cannot reliable identify | 
 | scanning lines, VBI acquisition may not require this | 
 | information.</entry> | 
 | 	    </row> | 
 | 	    <row> | 
 | 	      <entry>__u32</entry> | 
 | 	      <entry><structfield>count</structfield>[2]</entry> | 
 | 	      <entry>The number of lines in the first and second | 
 | field image, respectively.</entry> | 
 | 	  </row> | 
 | 	  <row> | 
 | 	    <entry spanname="hspan"><para>Drivers should be as | 
 | flexibility as possible. For example, it may be possible to extend or | 
 | move the VBI capture window down to the picture area, implementing a | 
 | 'full field mode' to capture data service transmissions embedded in | 
 | the picture.</para><para>An application can set the first or second | 
 | <structfield>count</structfield> value to zero if no data is required | 
 | from the respective field; <structfield>count</structfield>[1] if the | 
 | scanning system is progressive, &ie; not interlaced. The | 
 | corresponding start value shall be ignored by the application and | 
 | driver. Anyway, drivers may not support single field capturing and | 
 | return both count values non-zero.</para><para>Both | 
 | <structfield>count</structfield> values set to zero, or line numbers | 
 | outside the bounds depicted in <xref linkend="vbi-525" /> and <xref | 
 | 		    linkend="vbi-625" />, or a field image covering | 
 | lines of two fields, are invalid and shall not be returned by the | 
 | driver.</para><para>To initialize the <structfield>start</structfield> | 
 | and <structfield>count</structfield> fields, applications must first | 
 | determine the current video standard selection. The &v4l2-std-id; or | 
 | the <structfield>framelines</structfield> field of &v4l2-standard; can | 
 | be evaluated for this purpose.</para></entry> | 
 | 	    </row> | 
 | 	    <row> | 
 | 	      <entry>__u32</entry> | 
 | 	      <entry><structfield>flags</structfield></entry> | 
 | 	      <entry>See <xref linkend="vbifmt-flags" /> below. Currently | 
 | only drivers set flags, applications must set this field to | 
 | zero.</entry> | 
 | 	    </row> | 
 | 	    <row> | 
 | 	      <entry>__u32</entry> | 
 | 	      <entry><structfield>reserved</structfield>[2]</entry> | 
 | 	      <entry>This array is reserved for future extensions. | 
 | Drivers and applications must set it to zero.</entry> | 
 | 	    </row> | 
 | 	  </tbody> | 
 | 	</tgroup> | 
 |       </table> | 
 |  | 
 |       <table pgwide="1" frame="none" id="vbifmt-flags"> | 
 | 	<title>Raw VBI Format Flags</title> | 
 | 	<tgroup cols="3"> | 
 | 	  &cs-def; | 
 | 	  <tbody valign="top"> | 
 | 	    <row> | 
 | 	      <entry><constant>V4L2_VBI_UNSYNC</constant></entry> | 
 | 	      <entry>0x0001</entry> | 
 | 	      <entry><para>This flag indicates hardware which does not | 
 | properly distinguish between fields. Normally the VBI image stores the | 
 | first field (lower scanning line numbers) first in memory. This may be | 
 | a top or bottom field depending on the video standard. When this flag | 
 | is set the first or second field may be stored first, however the | 
 | fields are still in correct temporal order with the older field first | 
 | in memory.<footnote> | 
 | 		  <para>Most VBI services transmit on both fields, but | 
 | some have different semantics depending on the field number. These | 
 | cannot be reliable decoded or encoded when | 
 | <constant>V4L2_VBI_UNSYNC</constant> is set.</para> | 
 | 		</footnote></para></entry> | 
 | 	    </row> | 
 | 	    <row> | 
 | 	      <entry><constant>V4L2_VBI_INTERLACED</constant></entry> | 
 | 	      <entry>0x0002</entry> | 
 | 	      <entry>By default the two field images will be passed | 
 | sequentially; all lines of the first field followed by all lines of | 
 | the second field (compare <xref linkend="field-order" /> | 
 | <constant>V4L2_FIELD_SEQ_TB</constant> and | 
 | <constant>V4L2_FIELD_SEQ_BT</constant>, whether the top or bottom | 
 | field is first in memory depends on the video standard). When this | 
 | flag is set, the two fields are interlaced (cf. | 
 | <constant>V4L2_FIELD_INTERLACED</constant>). The first line of the | 
 | first field followed by the first line of the second field, then the | 
 | two second lines, and so on. Such a layout may be necessary when the | 
 | hardware has been programmed to capture or output interlaced video | 
 | images and is unable to separate the fields for VBI capturing at | 
 | the same time. For simplicity setting this flag implies that both | 
 | <structfield>count</structfield> values are equal and non-zero.</entry> | 
 | 	    </row> | 
 | 	  </tbody> | 
 | 	</tgroup> | 
 |       </table> | 
 |  | 
 |       <figure id="vbi-hsync"> | 
 | 	<title>Line synchronization</title> | 
 | 	<mediaobject> | 
 | 	  <imageobject> | 
 | 	    <imagedata fileref="vbi_hsync.pdf" format="PS" /> | 
 | 	  </imageobject> | 
 | 	  <imageobject> | 
 | 	    <imagedata fileref="vbi_hsync.gif" format="GIF" /> | 
 | 	  </imageobject> | 
 | 	  <textobject> | 
 | 	    <phrase>Line synchronization diagram</phrase> | 
 | 	  </textobject> | 
 | 	</mediaobject> | 
 |       </figure> | 
 |  | 
 |       <figure id="vbi-525"> | 
 | 	<title>ITU-R 525 line numbering (M/NTSC and M/PAL)</title> | 
 | 	<mediaobject> | 
 | 	  <imageobject> | 
 | 	    <imagedata fileref="vbi_525.pdf" format="PS" /> | 
 | 	  </imageobject> | 
 | 	  <imageobject> | 
 | 	    <imagedata fileref="vbi_525.gif" format="GIF" /> | 
 | 	  </imageobject> | 
 | 	  <textobject> | 
 | 	    <phrase>NTSC field synchronization diagram</phrase> | 
 | 	  </textobject> | 
 | 	  <caption> | 
 | 	    <para>(1) For the purpose of this specification field 2 | 
 | starts in line 264 and not 263.5 because half line capturing is not | 
 | supported.</para> | 
 | 	  </caption> | 
 | 	</mediaobject> | 
 |       </figure> | 
 |  | 
 |       <figure id="vbi-625"> | 
 | 	<title>ITU-R 625 line numbering</title> | 
 | 	<mediaobject> | 
 | 	  <imageobject> | 
 | 	    <imagedata fileref="vbi_625.pdf" format="PS" /> | 
 | 	  </imageobject> | 
 | 	  <imageobject> | 
 | 	    <imagedata fileref="vbi_625.gif" format="GIF" /> | 
 | 	  </imageobject> | 
 | 	  <textobject> | 
 | 	    <phrase>PAL/SECAM field synchronization diagram</phrase> | 
 | 	  </textobject> | 
 | 	  <caption> | 
 | 	    <para>(1) For the purpose of this specification field 2 | 
 | starts in line 314 and not 313.5 because half line capturing is not | 
 | supported.</para> | 
 | 	  </caption> | 
 | 	</mediaobject> | 
 |       </figure> | 
 |  | 
 |       <para>Remember the VBI image format depends on the selected | 
 | video standard, therefore the application must choose a new standard or | 
 | query the current standard first. Attempts to read or write data ahead | 
 | of format negotiation, or after switching the video standard which may | 
 | invalidate the negotiated VBI parameters, should be refused by the | 
 | driver. A format change during active I/O is not permitted.</para> | 
 |     </section> | 
 |  | 
 |     <section> | 
 |       <title>Reading and writing VBI images</title> | 
 |  | 
 |       <para>To assure synchronization with the field number and easier | 
 | implementation, the smallest unit of data passed at a time is one | 
 | frame, consisting of two fields of VBI images immediately following in | 
 | memory.</para> | 
 |  | 
 |       <para>The total size of a frame computes as follows:</para> | 
 |  | 
 |       <programlisting> | 
 | (<structfield>count</structfield>[0] + <structfield>count</structfield>[1]) * | 
 | <structfield>samples_per_line</structfield> * sample size in bytes</programlisting> | 
 |  | 
 |       <para>The sample size is most likely always one byte, | 
 | applications must check the <structfield>sample_format</structfield> | 
 | field though, to function properly with other drivers.</para> | 
 |  | 
 |       <para>A VBI device may support <link | 
 |       linkend="rw">read/write</link> and/or streaming (<link | 
 |       linkend="mmap">memory mapping</link> or <link | 
 |       linkend="userp">user pointer</link>) I/O. The latter bears the | 
 | possibility of synchronizing video and | 
 | VBI data by using buffer timestamps.</para> | 
 |  | 
 |       <para>Remember the &VIDIOC-STREAMON; ioctl and the first read(), | 
 | write() and select() call can be resource allocation points returning | 
 | an &EBUSY; if the required hardware resources are temporarily | 
 | unavailable, for example the device is already in use by another | 
 | process.</para> | 
 |   </section> | 
 |  | 
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