|  | Frequently Asked Questions: | 
|  | =========================== | 
|  | subject: unified zoran driver (zr360x7, zoran, buz, dc10(+), dc30(+), lml33) | 
|  | website: http://mjpeg.sourceforge.net/driver-zoran/ | 
|  |  | 
|  | 1. What cards are supported | 
|  | 1.1 What the TV decoder can do an what not | 
|  | 1.2 What the TV encoder can do an what not | 
|  | 2. How do I get this damn thing to work | 
|  | 3. What mainboard should I use (or why doesn't my card work) | 
|  | 4. Programming interface | 
|  | 5. Applications | 
|  | 6. Concerning buffer sizes, quality, output size etc. | 
|  | 7. It hangs/crashes/fails/whatevers! Help! | 
|  | 8. Maintainers/Contacting | 
|  | 9. License | 
|  |  | 
|  | =========================== | 
|  |  | 
|  | 1. What cards are supported | 
|  |  | 
|  | Iomega Buz, Linux Media Labs LML33/LML33R10, Pinnacle/Miro | 
|  | DC10/DC10+/DC30/DC30+ and related boards (available under various names). | 
|  |  | 
|  | Iomega Buz: | 
|  | * Zoran zr36067 PCI controller | 
|  | * Zoran zr36060 MJPEG codec | 
|  | * Philips saa7111 TV decoder | 
|  | * Philips saa7185 TV encoder | 
|  | Drivers to use: videodev, i2c-core, i2c-algo-bit, | 
|  | videocodec, saa7111, saa7185, zr36060, zr36067 | 
|  | Inputs/outputs: Composite and S-video | 
|  | Norms: PAL, SECAM (720x576 @ 25 fps), NTSC (720x480 @ 29.97 fps) | 
|  | Card number: 7 | 
|  |  | 
|  | AverMedia 6 Eyes AVS6EYES: | 
|  | * Zoran zr36067 PCI controller | 
|  | * Zoran zr36060 MJPEG codec | 
|  | * Samsung ks0127 TV decoder | 
|  | * Conexant bt866  TV encoder | 
|  | Drivers to use: videodev, i2c-core, i2c-algo-bit, | 
|  | videocodec, ks0127, bt866, zr36060, zr36067 | 
|  | Inputs/outputs: Six physical inputs. 1-6 are composite, | 
|  | 1-2, 3-4, 5-6 doubles as S-video, | 
|  | 1-3 triples as component. | 
|  | One composite output. | 
|  | Norms: PAL, SECAM (720x576 @ 25 fps), NTSC (720x480 @ 29.97 fps) | 
|  | Card number: 8 | 
|  | Not autodetected, card=8 is necessary. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Linux Media Labs LML33: | 
|  | * Zoran zr36067 PCI controller | 
|  | * Zoran zr36060 MJPEG codec | 
|  | * Brooktree bt819 TV decoder | 
|  | * Brooktree bt856 TV encoder | 
|  | Drivers to use: videodev, i2c-core, i2c-algo-bit, | 
|  | videocodec, bt819, bt856, zr36060, zr36067 | 
|  | Inputs/outputs: Composite and S-video | 
|  | Norms: PAL (720x576 @ 25 fps), NTSC (720x480 @ 29.97 fps) | 
|  | Card number: 5 | 
|  |  | 
|  | Linux Media Labs LML33R10: | 
|  | * Zoran zr36067 PCI controller | 
|  | * Zoran zr36060 MJPEG codec | 
|  | * Philips saa7114 TV decoder | 
|  | * Analog Devices adv7170 TV encoder | 
|  | Drivers to use: videodev, i2c-core, i2c-algo-bit, | 
|  | videocodec, saa7114, adv7170, zr36060, zr36067 | 
|  | Inputs/outputs: Composite and S-video | 
|  | Norms: PAL (720x576 @ 25 fps), NTSC (720x480 @ 29.97 fps) | 
|  | Card number: 6 | 
|  |  | 
|  | Pinnacle/Miro DC10(new): | 
|  | * Zoran zr36057 PCI controller | 
|  | * Zoran zr36060 MJPEG codec | 
|  | * Philips saa7110a TV decoder | 
|  | * Analog Devices adv7176 TV encoder | 
|  | Drivers to use: videodev, i2c-core, i2c-algo-bit, | 
|  | videocodec, saa7110, adv7175, zr36060, zr36067 | 
|  | Inputs/outputs: Composite, S-video and Internal | 
|  | Norms: PAL, SECAM (768x576 @ 25 fps), NTSC (640x480 @ 29.97 fps) | 
|  | Card number: 1 | 
|  |  | 
|  | Pinnacle/Miro DC10+: | 
|  | * Zoran zr36067 PCI controller | 
|  | * Zoran zr36060 MJPEG codec | 
|  | * Philips saa7110a TV decoder | 
|  | * Analog Devices adv7176 TV encoder | 
|  | Drivers to use: videodev, i2c-core, i2c-algo-bit, | 
|  | videocodec, sa7110, adv7175, zr36060, zr36067 | 
|  | Inputs/outputs: Composite, S-video and Internal | 
|  | Norms: PAL, SECAM (768x576 @ 25 fps), NTSC (640x480 @ 29.97 fps) | 
|  | Card number: 2 | 
|  |  | 
|  | Pinnacle/Miro DC10(old): * | 
|  | * Zoran zr36057 PCI controller | 
|  | * Zoran zr36050 MJPEG codec | 
|  | * Zoran zr36016 Video Front End or Fuji md0211 Video Front End (clone?) | 
|  | * Micronas vpx3220a TV decoder | 
|  | * mse3000 TV encoder or Analog Devices adv7176 TV encoder * | 
|  | Drivers to use: videodev, i2c-core, i2c-algo-bit, | 
|  | videocodec, vpx3220, mse3000/adv7175, zr36050, zr36016, zr36067 | 
|  | Inputs/outputs: Composite, S-video and Internal | 
|  | Norms: PAL, SECAM (768x576 @ 25 fps), NTSC (640x480 @ 29.97 fps) | 
|  | Card number: 0 | 
|  |  | 
|  | Pinnacle/Miro DC30: * | 
|  | * Zoran zr36057 PCI controller | 
|  | * Zoran zr36050 MJPEG codec | 
|  | * Zoran zr36016 Video Front End | 
|  | * Micronas vpx3225d/vpx3220a/vpx3216b TV decoder | 
|  | * Analog Devices adv7176 TV encoder | 
|  | Drivers to use: videodev, i2c-core, i2c-algo-bit, | 
|  | videocodec, vpx3220/vpx3224, adv7175, zr36050, zr36016, zr36067 | 
|  | Inputs/outputs: Composite, S-video and Internal | 
|  | Norms: PAL, SECAM (768x576 @ 25 fps), NTSC (640x480 @ 29.97 fps) | 
|  | Card number: 3 | 
|  |  | 
|  | Pinnacle/Miro DC30+: * | 
|  | * Zoran zr36067 PCI controller | 
|  | * Zoran zr36050 MJPEG codec | 
|  | * Zoran zr36016 Video Front End | 
|  | * Micronas vpx3225d/vpx3220a/vpx3216b TV decoder | 
|  | * Analog Devices adv7176 TV encoder | 
|  | Drivers to use: videodev, i2c-core, i2c-algo-bit, | 
|  | videocodec, vpx3220/vpx3224, adv7175, zr36050, zr36015, zr36067 | 
|  | Inputs/outputs: Composite, S-video and Internal | 
|  | Norms: PAL, SECAM (768x576 @ 25 fps), NTSC (640x480 @ 29.97 fps) | 
|  | Card number: 4 | 
|  |  | 
|  | Note: No module for the mse3000 is available yet | 
|  | Note: No module for the vpx3224 is available yet | 
|  | Note: use encoder=X or decoder=X for non-default i2c chips (see i2c-id.h) | 
|  |  | 
|  | =========================== | 
|  |  | 
|  | 1.1 What the TV decoder can do an what not | 
|  |  | 
|  | The best know TV standards are NTSC/PAL/SECAM. but for decoding a frame that | 
|  | information is not enough. There are several formats of the TV standards. | 
|  | And not every TV decoder is able to handle every format. Also the every | 
|  | combination is supported by the driver. There are currently 11 different | 
|  | tv broadcast formats all aver the world. | 
|  |  | 
|  | The CCIR defines parameters needed for broadcasting the signal. | 
|  | The CCIR has defined different standards: A,B,D,E,F,G,D,H,I,K,K1,L,M,N,... | 
|  | The CCIR says not much about the colorsystem used !!! | 
|  | And talking about a colorsystem says not to much about how it is broadcast. | 
|  |  | 
|  | The CCIR standards A,E,F are not used any more. | 
|  |  | 
|  | When you speak about NTSC, you usually mean the standard: CCIR - M using | 
|  | the NTSC colorsystem which is used in the USA, Japan, Mexico, Canada | 
|  | and a few others. | 
|  |  | 
|  | When you talk about PAL, you usually mean: CCIR - B/G using the PAL | 
|  | colorsystem which is used in many Countries. | 
|  |  | 
|  | When you talk about SECAM, you mean: CCIR - L using the SECAM Colorsystem | 
|  | which is used in France, and a few others. | 
|  |  | 
|  | There the other version of SECAM, CCIR - D/K is used in Bulgaria, China, | 
|  | Slovakai, Hungary, Korea (Rep.), Poland, Rumania and a others. | 
|  |  | 
|  | The CCIR - H uses the PAL colorsystem (sometimes SECAM) and is used in | 
|  | Egypt, Libya, Sri Lanka, Syrain Arab. Rep. | 
|  |  | 
|  | The CCIR - I uses the PAL colorsystem, and is used in Great Britain, Hong Kong, | 
|  | Ireland, Nigeria, South Africa. | 
|  |  | 
|  | The CCIR - N uses the PAL colorsystem and PAL frame size but the NTSC framerate, | 
|  | and is used in Argentinia, Uruguay, an a few others | 
|  |  | 
|  | We do not talk about how the audio is broadcast ! | 
|  |  | 
|  | A rather good sites about the TV standards are: | 
|  | http://www.sony.jp/ServiceArea/Voltage_map/ | 
|  | http://info.electronicwerkstatt.de/bereiche/fernsehtechnik/frequenzen_und_normen/Fernsehnormen/ | 
|  | and http://www.cabl.com/restaurant/channel.html | 
|  |  | 
|  | Other weird things around: NTSC 4.43 is a modificated NTSC, which is mainly | 
|  | used in PAL VCR's that are able to play back NTSC. PAL 60 seems to be the same | 
|  | as NTSC 4.43 . The Datasheets also talk about NTSC 44, It seems as if it would | 
|  | be the same as NTSC 4.43. | 
|  | NTSC Combs seems to be a decoder mode where the decoder uses a comb filter | 
|  | to split coma and luma instead of a Delay line. | 
|  |  | 
|  | But I did not defiantly find out what NTSC Comb is. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Philips saa7111 TV decoder | 
|  | was introduced in 1997, is used in the BUZ and | 
|  | can handle: PAL B/G/H/I, PAL N, PAL M, NTSC M, NTSC N, NTSC 4.43 and SECAM | 
|  |  | 
|  | Philips saa7110a TV decoder | 
|  | was introduced in 1995, is used in the Pinnacle/Miro DC10(new), DC10+ and | 
|  | can handle: PAL B/G, NTSC M and SECAM | 
|  |  | 
|  | Philips saa7114 TV decoder | 
|  | was introduced in 2000, is used in the LML33R10 and | 
|  | can handle: PAL B/G/D/H/I/N, PAL N, PAL M, NTSC M, NTSC 4.43 and SECAM | 
|  |  | 
|  | Brooktree bt819 TV decoder | 
|  | was introduced in 1996, and is used in the LML33 and | 
|  | can handle: PAL B/D/G/H/I, NTSC M | 
|  |  | 
|  | Micronas vpx3220a TV decoder | 
|  | was introduced in 1996, is used in the DC30 and DC30+ and | 
|  | can handle: PAL B/G/H/I, PAL N, PAL M, NTSC M, NTSC 44, PAL 60, SECAM,NTSC Comb | 
|  |  | 
|  | Samsung ks0127 TV decoder | 
|  | is used in the AVS6EYES card and | 
|  | can handle: NTSC-M/N/44, PAL-M/N/B/G/H/I/D/K/L and SECAM | 
|  |  | 
|  | =========================== | 
|  |  | 
|  | 1.2 What the TV encoder can do an what not | 
|  |  | 
|  | The TV encoder are doing the "same" as the decoder, but in the oder direction. | 
|  | You feed them digital data and the generate a Composite or SVHS signal. | 
|  | For information about the colorsystems and TV norm take a look in the | 
|  | TV decoder section. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Philips saa7185 TV Encoder | 
|  | was introduced in 1996, is used in the BUZ | 
|  | can generate: PAL B/G, NTSC M | 
|  |  | 
|  | Brooktree bt856 TV Encoder | 
|  | was introduced in 1994, is used in the LML33 | 
|  | can generate: PAL B/D/G/H/I/N, PAL M, NTSC M, PAL-N (Argentina) | 
|  |  | 
|  | Analog Devices adv7170 TV Encoder | 
|  | was introduced in 2000, is used in the LML300R10 | 
|  | can generate: PAL B/D/G/H/I/N, PAL M, NTSC M, PAL 60 | 
|  |  | 
|  | Analog Devices adv7175 TV Encoder | 
|  | was introduced in 1996, is used in the DC10, DC10+, DC10 old, DC30, DC30+ | 
|  | can generate: PAL B/D/G/H/I/N, PAL M, NTSC M | 
|  |  | 
|  | ITT mse3000 TV encoder | 
|  | was introduced in 1991, is used in the DC10 old | 
|  | can generate: PAL , NTSC , SECAM | 
|  |  | 
|  | Conexant bt866 TV encoder | 
|  | is used in AVS6EYES, and | 
|  | can generate: NTSC/PAL, PALÂM, PALÂN | 
|  |  | 
|  | The adv717x, should be able to produce PAL N. But you find nothing PAL N | 
|  | specific in the registers. Seem that you have to reuse a other standard | 
|  | to generate PAL N, maybe it would work if you use the PAL M settings. | 
|  |  | 
|  | ========================== | 
|  |  | 
|  | 2. How do I get this damn thing to work | 
|  |  | 
|  | Load zr36067.o. If it can't autodetect your card, use the card=X insmod | 
|  | option with X being the card number as given in the previous section. | 
|  | To have more than one card, use card=X1[,X2[,X3,[X4[..]]]] | 
|  |  | 
|  | To automate this, add the following to your /etc/modprobe.conf: | 
|  |  | 
|  | options zr36067 card=X1[,X2[,X3[,X4[..]]]] | 
|  | alias char-major-81-0 zr36067 | 
|  |  | 
|  | One thing to keep in mind is that this doesn't load zr36067.o itself yet. It | 
|  | just automates loading. If you start using xawtv, the device won't load on | 
|  | some systems, since you're trying to load modules as a user, which is not | 
|  | allowed ("permission denied"). A quick workaround is to add 'Load "v4l"' to | 
|  | XF86Config-4 when you use X by default, or to run 'v4l-conf -c <device>' in | 
|  | one of your startup scripts (normally rc.local) if you don't use X. Both | 
|  | make sure that the modules are loaded on startup, under the root account. | 
|  |  | 
|  | =========================== | 
|  |  | 
|  | 3. What mainboard should I use (or why doesn't my card work) | 
|  |  | 
|  | <insert lousy disclaimer here>. In short: good=SiS/Intel, bad=VIA. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Experience tells us that people with a Buz, on average, have more problems | 
|  | than users with a DC10+/LML33. Also, it tells us that people owning a VIA- | 
|  | based mainboard (ktXXX, MVP3) have more problems than users with a mainboard | 
|  | based on a different chipset. Here's some notes from Andrew Stevens: | 
|  | -- | 
|  | Here's my experience of using LML33 and Buz on various motherboards: | 
|  |  | 
|  | VIA MVP3 | 
|  | Forget it. Pointless. Doesn't work. | 
|  | Intel 430FX (Pentium 200) | 
|  | LML33 perfect, Buz tolerable (3 or 4 frames dropped per movie) | 
|  | Intel 440BX (early stepping) | 
|  | LML33 tolerable. Buz starting to get annoying (6-10 frames/hour) | 
|  | Intel 440BX (late stepping) | 
|  | Buz tolerable, LML3 almost perfect (occasional single frame drops) | 
|  | SiS735 | 
|  | LML33 perfect, Buz tolerable. | 
|  | VIA KT133(*) | 
|  | LML33 starting to get annoying, Buz poor enough that I have up. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Both 440BX boards were dual CPU versions. | 
|  | -- | 
|  | Bernhard Praschinger later added: | 
|  | -- | 
|  | AMD 751 | 
|  | Buz perfect-tolerable | 
|  | AMD 760 | 
|  | Buz perfect-tolerable | 
|  | -- | 
|  | In general, people on the user mailinglist won't give you much of a chance | 
|  | if you have a VIA-based motherboard. They may be cheap, but sometimes, you'd | 
|  | rather want to spend some more money on better boards. In general, VIA | 
|  | mainboard's IDE/PCI performance will also suck badly compared to others. | 
|  | You'll noticed the DC10+/DC30+ aren't mentioned anywhere in the overview. | 
|  | Basically, you can assume that if the Buz works, the LML33 will work too. If | 
|  | the LML33 works, the DC10+/DC30+ will work too. They're most tolerant to | 
|  | different mainboard chipsets from all of the supported cards. | 
|  |  | 
|  | If you experience timeouts during capture, buy a better mainboard or lower | 
|  | the quality/buffersize during capture (see 'Concerning buffer sizes, quality, | 
|  | output size etc.'). If it hangs, there's little we can do as of now. Check | 
|  | your IRQs and make sure the card has its own interrupts. | 
|  |  | 
|  | =========================== | 
|  |  | 
|  | 4. Programming interface | 
|  |  | 
|  | This driver conforms to video4linux and video4linux2, both can be used to | 
|  | use the driver. Since video4linux didn't provide adequate calls to fully | 
|  | use the cards' features, we've introduced several programming extensions, | 
|  | which are currently officially accepted in the 2.4.x branch of the kernel. | 
|  | These extensions are known as the v4l/mjpeg extensions. See zoran.h for | 
|  | details (structs/ioctls). | 
|  |  | 
|  | Information - video4linux: | 
|  | http://roadrunner.swansea.linux.org.uk/v4lapi.shtml | 
|  | Documentation/video4linux/API.html | 
|  | /usr/include/linux/videodev.h | 
|  |  | 
|  | Information - video4linux/mjpeg extensions: | 
|  | ./zoran.h | 
|  | (also see below) | 
|  |  | 
|  | Information - video4linux2: | 
|  | http://linuxtv.org | 
|  | http://v4l2spec.bytesex.org/ | 
|  | /usr/include/linux/videodev2.h | 
|  |  | 
|  | More information on the video4linux/mjpeg extensions, by Serguei | 
|  | Miridonovi and Rainer Johanni: | 
|  | -- | 
|  | The ioctls for that interface are as follows: | 
|  |  | 
|  | BUZIOC_G_PARAMS | 
|  | BUZIOC_S_PARAMS | 
|  |  | 
|  | Get and set the parameters of the buz. The user should always do a | 
|  | BUZIOC_G_PARAMS (with a struct buz_params) to obtain the default | 
|  | settings, change what he likes and then make a BUZIOC_S_PARAMS call. | 
|  |  | 
|  | BUZIOC_REQBUFS | 
|  |  | 
|  | Before being able to capture/playback, the user has to request | 
|  | the buffers he is wanting to use. Fill the structure | 
|  | zoran_requestbuffers with the size (recommended: 256*1024) and | 
|  | the number (recommended 32 up to 256). There are no such restrictions | 
|  | as for the Video for Linux buffers, you should LEAVE SUFFICIENT | 
|  | MEMORY for your system however, else strange things will happen .... | 
|  | On return, the zoran_requestbuffers structure contains number and | 
|  | size of the actually allocated buffers. | 
|  | You should use these numbers for doing a mmap of the buffers | 
|  | into the user space. | 
|  | The BUZIOC_REQBUFS ioctl also makes it happen, that the next mmap | 
|  | maps the MJPEG buffer instead of the V4L buffers. | 
|  |  | 
|  | BUZIOC_QBUF_CAPT | 
|  | BUZIOC_QBUF_PLAY | 
|  |  | 
|  | Queue a buffer for capture or playback. The first call also starts | 
|  | streaming capture. When streaming capture is going on, you may | 
|  | only queue further buffers or issue syncs until streaming | 
|  | capture is switched off again with a argument of -1 to | 
|  | a BUZIOC_QBUF_CAPT/BUZIOC_QBUF_PLAY ioctl. | 
|  |  | 
|  | BUZIOC_SYNC | 
|  |  | 
|  | Issue this ioctl when all buffers are queued. This ioctl will | 
|  | block until the first buffer becomes free for saving its | 
|  | data to disk (after BUZIOC_QBUF_CAPT) or for reuse (after BUZIOC_QBUF_PLAY). | 
|  |  | 
|  | BUZIOC_G_STATUS | 
|  |  | 
|  | Get the status of the input lines (video source connected/norm). | 
|  |  | 
|  | For programming example, please, look at lavrec.c and lavplay.c code in | 
|  | lavtools-1.2p2 package (URL: http://www.cicese.mx/~mirsev/DC10plus/) | 
|  | and the 'examples' directory in the original Buz driver distribution. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Additional notes for software developers: | 
|  |  | 
|  | The driver returns maxwidth and maxheight parameters according to | 
|  | the current TV standard (norm). Therefore, the software which | 
|  | communicates with the driver and "asks" for these parameters should | 
|  | first set the correct norm. Well, it seems logically correct: TV | 
|  | standard is "more constant" for current country than geometry | 
|  | settings of a variety of TV capture cards which may work in ITU or | 
|  | square pixel format. Remember that users now can lock the norm to | 
|  | avoid any ambiguity. | 
|  | -- | 
|  | Please note that lavplay/lavrec are also included in the MJPEG-tools | 
|  | (http://mjpeg.sf.net/). | 
|  |  | 
|  | =========================== | 
|  |  | 
|  | 5. Applications | 
|  |  | 
|  | Applications known to work with this driver: | 
|  |  | 
|  | TV viewing: | 
|  | * xawtv | 
|  | * kwintv | 
|  | * probably any TV application that supports video4linux or video4linux2. | 
|  |  | 
|  | MJPEG capture/playback: | 
|  | * mjpegtools/lavtools (or Linux Video Studio) | 
|  | * gstreamer | 
|  | * mplayer | 
|  |  | 
|  | General raw capture: | 
|  | * xawtv | 
|  | * gstreamer | 
|  | * probably any application that supports video4linux or video4linux2 | 
|  |  | 
|  | Video editing: | 
|  | * Cinelerra | 
|  | * MainActor | 
|  | * mjpegtools (or Linux Video Studio) | 
|  |  | 
|  | =========================== | 
|  |  | 
|  | 6. Concerning buffer sizes, quality, output size etc. | 
|  |  | 
|  | The zr36060 can do 1:2 JPEG compression. This is really the theoretical | 
|  | maximum that the chipset can reach. The driver can, however, limit compression | 
|  | to a maximum (size) of 1:4. The reason for this is that some cards (e.g. Buz) | 
|  | can't handle 1:2 compression without stopping capture after only a few minutes. | 
|  | With 1:4, it'll mostly work. If you have a Buz, use 'low_bitrate=1' to go into | 
|  | 1:4 max. compression mode. | 
|  |  | 
|  | 100% JPEG quality is thus 1:2 compression in practice. So for a full PAL frame | 
|  | (size 720x576). The JPEG fields are stored in YUY2 format, so the size of the | 
|  | fields are 720x288x16/2 bits/field (2 fields/frame) = 207360 bytes/field x 2 = | 
|  | 414720 bytes/frame (add some more bytes for headers and DHT (huffman)/DQT | 
|  | (quantization) tables, and you'll get to something like 512kB per frame for | 
|  | 1:2 compression. For 1:4 compression, you'd have frames of half this size. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Some additional explanation by Martin Samuelsson, which also explains the | 
|  | importance of buffer sizes: | 
|  | -- | 
|  | > Hmm, I do not think it is really that way. With the current (downloaded | 
|  | > at 18:00 Monday) driver I get that output sizes for 10 sec: | 
|  | > -q 50 -b 128 : 24.283.332 Bytes | 
|  | > -q 50 -b 256 : 48.442.368 | 
|  | > -q 25 -b 128 : 24.655.992 | 
|  | > -q 25 -b 256 : 25.859.820 | 
|  |  | 
|  | I woke up, and can't go to sleep again. I'll kill some time explaining why | 
|  | this doesn't look strange to me. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Let's do some math using a width of 704 pixels. I'm not sure whether the Buz | 
|  | actually use that number or not, but that's not too important right now. | 
|  |  | 
|  | 704x288 pixels, one field, is 202752 pixels. Divided by 64 pixels per block; | 
|  | 3168 blocks per field. Each pixel consist of two bytes; 128 bytes per block; | 
|  | 1024 bits per block. 100% in the new driver mean 1:2 compression; the maximum | 
|  | output becomes 512 bits per block. Actually 510, but 512 is simpler to use | 
|  | for calculations. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Let's say that we specify d1q50. We thus want 256 bits per block; times 3168 | 
|  | becomes 811008 bits; 101376 bytes per field. We're talking raw bits and bytes | 
|  | here, so we don't need to do any fancy corrections for bits-per-pixel or such | 
|  | things. 101376 bytes per field. | 
|  |  | 
|  | d1 video contains two fields per frame. Those sum up to 202752 bytes per | 
|  | frame, and one of those frames goes into each buffer. | 
|  |  | 
|  | But wait a second! -b128 gives 128kB buffers! It's not possible to cram | 
|  | 202752 bytes of JPEG data into 128kB! | 
|  |  | 
|  | This is what the driver notice and automatically compensate for in your | 
|  | examples. Let's do some math using this information: | 
|  |  | 
|  | 128kB is 131072 bytes. In this buffer, we want to store two fields, which | 
|  | leaves 65536 bytes for each field. Using 3168 blocks per field, we get | 
|  | 20.68686868... available bytes per block; 165 bits. We can't allow the | 
|  | request for 256 bits per block when there's only 165 bits available! The -q50 | 
|  | option is silently overridden, and the -b128 option takes precedence, leaving | 
|  | us with the equivalence of -q32. | 
|  |  | 
|  | This gives us a data rate of 165 bits per block, which, times 3168, sums up | 
|  | to 65340 bytes per field, out of the allowed 65536. The current driver has | 
|  | another level of rate limiting; it won't accept -q values that fill more than | 
|  | 6/8 of the specified buffers. (I'm not sure why. "Playing it safe" seem to be | 
|  | a safe bet. Personally, I think I would have lowered requested-bits-per-block | 
|  | by one, or something like that.) We can't use 165 bits per block, but have to | 
|  | lower it again, to 6/8 of the available buffer space: We end up with 124 bits | 
|  | per block, the equivalence of -q24. With 128kB buffers, you can't use greater | 
|  | than -q24 at -d1. (And PAL, and 704 pixels width...) | 
|  |  | 
|  | The third example is limited to -q24 through the same process. The second | 
|  | example, using very similar calculations, is limited to -q48. The only | 
|  | example that actually grab at the specified -q value is the last one, which | 
|  | is clearly visible, looking at the file size. | 
|  | -- | 
|  |  | 
|  | Conclusion: the quality of the resulting movie depends on buffer size, quality, | 
|  | whether or not you use 'low_bitrate=1' as insmod option for the zr36060.c | 
|  | module to do 1:4 instead of 1:2 compression, etc. | 
|  |  | 
|  | If you experience timeouts, lowering the quality/buffersize or using | 
|  | 'low_bitrate=1 as insmod option for zr36060.o might actually help, as is | 
|  | proven by the Buz. | 
|  |  | 
|  | =========================== | 
|  |  | 
|  | 7. It hangs/crashes/fails/whatevers! Help! | 
|  |  | 
|  | Make sure that the card has its own interrupts (see /proc/interrupts), check | 
|  | the output of dmesg at high verbosity (load zr36067.o with debug=2, | 
|  | load all other modules with debug=1). Check that your mainboard is favorable | 
|  | (see question 2) and if not, test the card in another computer. Also see the | 
|  | notes given in question 3 and try lowering quality/buffersize/capturesize | 
|  | if recording fails after a period of time. | 
|  |  | 
|  | If all this doesn't help, give a clear description of the problem including | 
|  | detailed hardware information (memory+brand, mainboard+chipset+brand, which | 
|  | MJPEG card, processor, other PCI cards that might be of interest), give the | 
|  | system PnP information (/proc/interrupts, /proc/dma, /proc/devices), and give | 
|  | the kernel version, driver version, glibc version, gcc version and any other | 
|  | information that might possibly be of interest. Also provide the dmesg output | 
|  | at high verbosity. See 'Contacting' on how to contact the developers. | 
|  |  | 
|  | =========================== | 
|  |  | 
|  | 8. Maintainers/Contacting | 
|  |  | 
|  | The driver is currently maintained by Laurent Pinchart and Ronald Bultje | 
|  | (<laurent.pinchart@skynet.be> and <rbultje@ronald.bitfreak.net>). For bug | 
|  | reports or questions, please contact the mailinglist instead of the developers | 
|  | individually. For user questions (i.e. bug reports or how-to questions), send | 
|  | an email to <mjpeg-users@lists.sf.net>, for developers (i.e. if you want to | 
|  | help programming), send an email to <mjpeg-developer@lists.sf.net>. See | 
|  | http://www.sf.net/projects/mjpeg/ for subscription information. | 
|  |  | 
|  | For bug reports, be sure to include all the information as described in | 
|  | the section 'It hangs/crashes/fails/whatevers! Help!'. Please make sure | 
|  | you're using the latest version (http://mjpeg.sf.net/driver-zoran/). | 
|  |  | 
|  | Previous maintainers/developers of this driver include Serguei Miridonov | 
|  | <mirsev@cicese.mx>, Wolfgang Scherr <scherr@net4you.net>, Dave Perks | 
|  | <dperks@ibm.net> and Rainer Johanni <Rainer@Johanni.de>. | 
|  |  | 
|  | =========================== | 
|  |  | 
|  | 9. License | 
|  |  | 
|  | This driver is distributed under the terms of the General Public License. | 
|  |  | 
|  | This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify | 
|  | it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by | 
|  | the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or | 
|  | (at your option) any later version. | 
|  |  | 
|  | This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, | 
|  | but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of | 
|  | MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the | 
|  | GNU General Public License for more details. | 
|  |  | 
|  | You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License | 
|  | along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software | 
|  | Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. | 
|  |  | 
|  | See http://www.gnu.org/ for more information. |