Kernel-3.10.0-957.el7_sh_mobile_ceu_camera

Cropping and Scaling algorithm, used in the sh_mobile_ceu_camera driver
=======================================================================

Terminology

sensor scales: horizontal and vertical scales, configured by the sensor driver
host scales: -“- host driver
combined scales: sensor_scale * host_scale

Generic scaling / cropping scheme

-1–
|
-2– -
| –
| –
+-5– . – -3– -
| ... -\ | … -4– . - -7..
| . | . .6–
|
| . .6’-
| .´
| … -4’- .´
| …´ - -7’.
+-5’- .´ -/
| – -3’- -/
| –/
| –/
-2’- -/
|
|
-1’-

In the above chart minuses and slashes represent “real” data amounts, points and
accents represent “useful” data, basically, CEU scaled and cropped output,
mapped back onto the client’s source plane.

Such a configuration can be produced by user requests:

S_CROP(left / top = (5) - (1), width / height = (5’) - (5))
S_FMT(width / height = (6’) - (6))

Here:

(1) to (1’) - whole max width or height
(1) to (2) - sensor cropped left or top
(2) to (2’) - sensor cropped width or height
(3) to (3’) - sensor scale
(3) to (4) - CEU cropped left or top
(4) to (4’) - CEU cropped width or height
(5) to (5’) - reverse sensor scale applied to CEU cropped width or height
(2) to (5) - reverse sensor scale applied to CEU cropped left or top
(6) to (6’) - CEU scale - user window

S_FMT

Do not touch input rectangle - it is already optimal.

  1. Calculate current sensor scales:

    scale_s = ((2’) - (2)) / ((3’) - (3))

  2. Calculate “effective” input crop (sensor subwindow) - CEU crop scaled back at
    current sensor scales onto input window - this is user S_CROP:

    width_u = (5’) - (5) = ((4’) - (4)) * scale_s

  3. Calculate new combined scales from “effective” input window to requested user
    window:

    scale_comb = width_u / ((6’) - (6))

  4. Calculate sensor output window by applying combined scales to real input
    window:

    width_s_out = ((7’) - (7)) = ((2’) - (2)) / scale_comb

  5. Apply iterative sensor S_FMT for sensor output window.

    subdev->video_ops->s_fmt(.width = width_s_out)

  6. Retrieve sensor output window (g_fmt)

  7. Calculate new sensor scales:

    scale_s_new = ((3’)_new - (3)_new) / ((2’) - (2))

  8. Calculate new CEU crop - apply sensor scales to previously calculated
    “effective” crop:

    width_ceu = (4’)_new - (4)_new = width_u / scale_s_new
    left_ceu = (4)_new - (3)_new = ((5) - (2)) / scale_s_new

  9. Use CEU cropping to crop to the new window:

    ceu_crop(.width = width_ceu, .left = left_ceu)

  10. Use CEU scaling to scale to the requested user window:

    scale_ceu = width_ceu / width

S_CROP

The API at http://v4l2spec.bytesex.org/spec/x1904.htm says:

“…specification does not define an origin or units. However by convention
drivers should horizontally count unscaled samples relative to 0H.”

We choose to follow the advise and interpret cropping units as client input
pixels.

Cropping is performed in the following 6 steps:

  1. Request exactly user rectangle from the sensor.

  2. If smaller - iterate until a larger one is obtained. Result: sensor cropped
    to 2 : 2’, target crop 5 : 5’, current output format 6’ - 6.

  3. In the previous step the sensor has tried to preserve its output frame as
    good as possible, but it could have changed. Retrieve it again.

  4. Sensor scaled to 3 : 3’. Sensor’s scale is (2’ - 2) / (3’ - 3). Calculate
    intermediate window: 4’ - 4 = (5’ - 5) * (3’ - 3) / (2’ - 2)

  5. Calculate and apply host scale = (6’ - 6) / (4’ - 4)

  6. Calculate and apply host crop: 6 - 7 = (5 - 2) * (6’ - 6) / (5’ - 5)


Author: Guennadi Liakhovetski g.liakhovetski@gmx.de