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Common bindings for video receiver and transmitter interfaces
General concept
---------------
Video data pipelines usually consist of external devices, e.g. camera sensors,
controlled over an I2C, SPI or UART bus, and SoC internal IP blocks, including
video DMA engines and video data processors.
SoC internal blocks are described by DT nodes, placed similarly to other SoC
blocks. External devices are represented as child nodes of their respective
bus controller nodes, e.g. I2C.
Data interfaces on all video devices are described by their child 'port' nodes.
Configuration of a port depends on other devices participating in the data
transfer and is described by 'endpoint' subnodes.
device {
...
ports {
#address-cells = <1>;
#size-cells = <0>;
port@0 {
...
endpoint@0 { ... };
endpoint@1 { ... };
};
port@1 { ... };
};
};
If a port can be configured to work with more than one remote device on the same
bus, an 'endpoint' child node must be provided for each of them. If more than
one port is present in a device node or there is more than one endpoint at a
port, or port node needs to be associated with a selected hardware interface,
a common scheme using '#address-cells', '#size-cells' and 'reg' properties is
used.
All 'port' nodes can be grouped under optional 'ports' node, which allows to
specify #address-cells, #size-cells properties independently for the 'port'
and 'endpoint' nodes and any child device nodes a device might have.
Two 'endpoint' nodes are linked with each other through their 'remote-endpoint'
phandles. An endpoint subnode of a device contains all properties needed for
configuration of this device for data exchange with other device. In most
cases properties at the peer 'endpoint' nodes will be identical, however they
might need to be different when there is any signal modifications on the bus
between two devices, e.g. there are logic signal inverters on the lines.
It is allowed for multiple endpoints at a port to be active simultaneously,
where supported by a device. For example, in case where a data interface of
a device is partitioned into multiple data busses, e.g. 16-bit input port
divided into two separate ITU-R BT.656 8-bit busses. In such case bus-width
and data-shift properties can be used to assign physical data lines to each
endpoint node (logical bus).
Required properties
-------------------
If there is more than one 'port' or more than one 'endpoint' node or 'reg'
property is present in port and/or endpoint nodes the following properties
are required in a relevant parent node:
- #address-cells : number of cells required to define port/endpoint
identifier, should be 1.
- #size-cells : should be zero.
Optional endpoint properties
----------------------------
- remote-endpoint: phandle to an 'endpoint' subnode of a remote device node.
- slave-mode: a boolean property indicating that the link is run in slave mode.
The default when this property is not specified is master mode. In the slave
mode horizontal and vertical synchronization signals are provided to the
slave device (data source) by the master device (data sink). In the master
mode the data source device is also the source of the synchronization signals.
- bus-width: number of data lines actively used, valid for the parallel busses.
- data-shift: on the parallel data busses, if bus-width is used to specify the
number of data lines, data-shift can be used to specify which data lines are
used, e.g. "bus-width=<8>; data-shift=<2>;" means, that lines 9:2 are used.
- hsync-active: active state of the HSYNC signal, 0/1 for LOW/HIGH respectively.
- vsync-active: active state of the VSYNC signal, 0/1 for LOW/HIGH respectively.
Note, that if HSYNC and VSYNC polarities are not specified, embedded
synchronization may be required, where supported.
- data-active: similar to HSYNC and VSYNC, specifies data line polarity.
- field-even-active: field signal level during the even field data transmission.
- pclk-sample: sample data on rising (1) or falling (0) edge of the pixel clock
signal.
- sync-on-green-active: active state of Sync-on-green (SoG) signal, 0/1 for
LOW/HIGH respectively.
- data-lanes: an array of physical data lane indexes. Position of an entry
determines the logical lane number, while the value of an entry indicates
physical lane, e.g. for 2-lane MIPI CSI-2 bus we could have
"data-lanes = <1 2>;", assuming the clock lane is on hardware lane 0.
This property is valid for serial busses only (e.g. MIPI CSI-2).
- clock-lanes: an array of physical clock lane indexes. Position of an entry
determines the logical lane number, while the value of an entry indicates
physical lane, e.g. for a MIPI CSI-2 bus we could have "clock-lanes = <0>;",
which places the clock lane on hardware lane 0. This property is valid for
serial busses only (e.g. MIPI CSI-2). Note that for the MIPI CSI-2 bus this
array contains only one entry.
- clock-noncontinuous: a boolean property to allow MIPI CSI-2 non-continuous
clock mode.
- link-frequencies: Allowed data bus frequencies. For MIPI CSI-2, for
instance, this is the actual frequency of the bus, not bits per clock per
lane value. An array of 64-bit unsigned integers.
Example
-------
The example snippet below describes two data pipelines. ov772x and imx074 are
camera sensors with a parallel and serial (MIPI CSI-2) video bus respectively.
Both sensors are on the I2C control bus corresponding to the i2c0 controller
node. ov772x sensor is linked directly to the ceu0 video host interface.
imx074 is linked to ceu0 through the MIPI CSI-2 receiver (csi2). ceu0 has a
(single) DMA engine writing captured data to memory. ceu0 node has a single
'port' node which may indicate that at any time only one of the following data
pipelines can be active: ov772x -> ceu0 or imx074 -> csi2 -> ceu0.
ceu0: ceu@0xfe910000 {
compatible = "renesas,sh-mobile-ceu";
reg = <0xfe910000 0xa0>;
interrupts = <0x880>;
mclk: master_clock {
compatible = "renesas,ceu-clock";
#clock-cells = <1>;
clock-frequency = <50000000>; /* Max clock frequency */
clock-output-names = "mclk";
};
port {
#address-cells = <1>;
#size-cells = <0>;
/* Parallel bus endpoint */
ceu0_1: endpoint@1 {
reg = <1>; /* Local endpoint # */
remote = <&ov772x_1_1>; /* Remote phandle */
bus-width = <8>; /* Used data lines */
data-shift = <2>; /* Lines 9:2 are used */
/* If hsync-active/vsync-active are missing,
embedded BT.656 sync is used */
hsync-active = <0>; /* Active low */
vsync-active = <0>; /* Active low */
data-active = <1>; /* Active high */
pclk-sample = <1>; /* Rising */
};
/* MIPI CSI-2 bus endpoint */
ceu0_0: endpoint@0 {
reg = <0>;
remote = <&csi2_2>;
};
};
};
i2c0: i2c@0xfff20000 {
...
ov772x_1: camera@0x21 {
compatible = "ovti,ov772x";
reg = <0x21>;
vddio-supply = <&regulator1>;
vddcore-supply = <&regulator2>;
clock-frequency = <20000000>;
clocks = <&mclk 0>;
clock-names = "xclk";
port {
/* With 1 endpoint per port no need for addresses. */
ov772x_1_1: endpoint {
bus-width = <8>;
remote-endpoint = <&ceu0_1>;
hsync-active = <1>;
vsync-active = <0>; /* Who came up with an
inverter here ?... */
data-active = <1>;
pclk-sample = <1>;
};
};
};
imx074: camera@0x1a {
compatible = "sony,imx074";
reg = <0x1a>;
vddio-supply = <&regulator1>;
vddcore-supply = <&regulator2>;
clock-frequency = <30000000>; /* Shared clock with ov772x_1 */
clocks = <&mclk 0>;
clock-names = "sysclk"; /* Assuming this is the
name in the datasheet */
port {
imx074_1: endpoint {
clock-lanes = <0>;
data-lanes = <1 2>;
remote-endpoint = <&csi2_1>;
};
};
};
};
csi2: csi2@0xffc90000 {
compatible = "renesas,sh-mobile-csi2";
reg = <0xffc90000 0x1000>;
interrupts = <0x17a0>;
#address-cells = <1>;
#size-cells = <0>;
port@1 {
compatible = "renesas,csi2c"; /* One of CSI2I and CSI2C. */
reg = <1>; /* CSI-2 PHY #1 of 2: PHY_S,
PHY_M has port address 0,
is unused. */
csi2_1: endpoint {
clock-lanes = <0>;
data-lanes = <2 1>;
remote-endpoint = <&imx074_1>;
};
};
port@2 {
reg = <2>; /* port 2: link to the CEU */
csi2_2: endpoint {
remote-endpoint = <&ceu0_0>;
};
};
};