| .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GFDL-1.1-no-invariants-or-later |
| .. c:namespace:: CEC |
| |
| .. _CEC_DQEVENT: |
| |
| ***************** |
| ioctl CEC_DQEVENT |
| ***************** |
| |
| Name |
| ==== |
| |
| CEC_DQEVENT - Dequeue a CEC event |
| |
| Synopsis |
| ======== |
| |
| .. c:macro:: CEC_DQEVENT |
| |
| ``int ioctl(int fd, CEC_DQEVENT, struct cec_event *argp)`` |
| |
| Arguments |
| ========= |
| |
| ``fd`` |
| File descriptor returned by :c:func:`open()`. |
| |
| ``argp`` |
| |
| Description |
| =========== |
| |
| CEC devices can send asynchronous events. These can be retrieved by |
| calling :c:func:`CEC_DQEVENT`. If the file descriptor is in |
| non-blocking mode and no event is pending, then it will return -1 and |
| set errno to the ``EAGAIN`` error code. |
| |
| The internal event queues are per-filehandle and per-event type. If |
| there is no more room in a queue then the last event is overwritten with |
| the new one. This means that intermediate results can be thrown away but |
| that the latest event is always available. This also means that is it |
| possible to read two successive events that have the same value (e.g. |
| two :ref:`CEC_EVENT_STATE_CHANGE <CEC-EVENT-STATE-CHANGE>` events with |
| the same state). In that case the intermediate state changes were lost but |
| it is guaranteed that the state did change in between the two events. |
| |
| .. tabularcolumns:: |p{1.2cm}|p{2.9cm}|p{13.4cm}| |
| |
| .. c:type:: cec_event_state_change |
| |
| .. flat-table:: struct cec_event_state_change |
| :header-rows: 0 |
| :stub-columns: 0 |
| :widths: 1 1 8 |
| |
| * - __u16 |
| - ``phys_addr`` |
| - The current physical address. This is ``CEC_PHYS_ADDR_INVALID`` if no |
| valid physical address is set. |
| * - __u16 |
| - ``log_addr_mask`` |
| - The current set of claimed logical addresses. This is 0 if no logical |
| addresses are claimed or if ``phys_addr`` is ``CEC_PHYS_ADDR_INVALID``. |
| If bit 15 is set (``1 << CEC_LOG_ADDR_UNREGISTERED``) then this device |
| has the unregistered logical address. In that case all other bits are 0. |
| * - __u16 |
| - ``have_conn_info`` |
| - If non-zero, then HDMI connector information is available. |
| This field is only valid if ``CEC_CAP_CONNECTOR_INFO`` is set. If that |
| capability is set and ``have_conn_info`` is zero, then that indicates |
| that the HDMI connector device is not instantiated, either because |
| the HDMI driver is still configuring the device or because the HDMI |
| device was unbound. |
| |
| .. c:type:: cec_event_lost_msgs |
| |
| .. tabularcolumns:: |p{1.0cm}|p{2.0cm}|p{14.5cm}| |
| |
| .. flat-table:: struct cec_event_lost_msgs |
| :header-rows: 0 |
| :stub-columns: 0 |
| :widths: 1 1 16 |
| |
| * - __u32 |
| - ``lost_msgs`` |
| - Set to the number of lost messages since the filehandle was opened |
| or since the last time this event was dequeued for this |
| filehandle. The messages lost are the oldest messages. So when a |
| new message arrives and there is no more room, then the oldest |
| message is discarded to make room for the new one. The internal |
| size of the message queue guarantees that all messages received in |
| the last two seconds will be stored. Since messages should be |
| replied to within a second according to the CEC specification, |
| this is more than enough. |
| |
| .. tabularcolumns:: |p{1.0cm}|p{4.4cm}|p{2.5cm}|p{9.6cm}| |
| |
| .. c:type:: cec_event |
| |
| .. flat-table:: struct cec_event |
| :header-rows: 0 |
| :stub-columns: 0 |
| :widths: 1 1 8 |
| |
| * - __u64 |
| - ``ts`` |
| - Timestamp of the event in ns. |
| |
| The timestamp has been taken from the ``CLOCK_MONOTONIC`` clock. |
| |
| To access the same clock from userspace use :c:func:`clock_gettime`. |
| * - __u32 |
| - ``event`` |
| - The CEC event type, see :ref:`cec-events`. |
| * - __u32 |
| - ``flags`` |
| - Event flags, see :ref:`cec-event-flags`. |
| * - union { |
| - (anonymous) |
| * - struct cec_event_state_change |
| - ``state_change`` |
| - The new adapter state as sent by the :ref:`CEC_EVENT_STATE_CHANGE <CEC-EVENT-STATE-CHANGE>` |
| event. |
| * - struct cec_event_lost_msgs |
| - ``lost_msgs`` |
| - The number of lost messages as sent by the :ref:`CEC_EVENT_LOST_MSGS <CEC-EVENT-LOST-MSGS>` |
| event. |
| * - } |
| - |
| |
| .. tabularcolumns:: |p{5.6cm}|p{0.9cm}|p{11.0cm}| |
| |
| .. _cec-events: |
| |
| .. flat-table:: CEC Events Types |
| :header-rows: 0 |
| :stub-columns: 0 |
| :widths: 3 1 16 |
| |
| * .. _`CEC-EVENT-STATE-CHANGE`: |
| |
| - ``CEC_EVENT_STATE_CHANGE`` |
| - 1 |
| - Generated when the CEC Adapter's state changes. When open() is |
| called an initial event will be generated for that filehandle with |
| the CEC Adapter's state at that time. |
| * .. _`CEC-EVENT-LOST-MSGS`: |
| |
| - ``CEC_EVENT_LOST_MSGS`` |
| - 2 |
| - Generated if one or more CEC messages were lost because the |
| application didn't dequeue CEC messages fast enough. |
| * .. _`CEC-EVENT-PIN-CEC-LOW`: |
| |
| - ``CEC_EVENT_PIN_CEC_LOW`` |
| - 3 |
| - Generated if the CEC pin goes from a high voltage to a low voltage. |
| Only applies to adapters that have the ``CEC_CAP_MONITOR_PIN`` |
| capability set. |
| * .. _`CEC-EVENT-PIN-CEC-HIGH`: |
| |
| - ``CEC_EVENT_PIN_CEC_HIGH`` |
| - 4 |
| - Generated if the CEC pin goes from a low voltage to a high voltage. |
| Only applies to adapters that have the ``CEC_CAP_MONITOR_PIN`` |
| capability set. |
| * .. _`CEC-EVENT-PIN-HPD-LOW`: |
| |
| - ``CEC_EVENT_PIN_HPD_LOW`` |
| - 5 |
| - Generated if the HPD pin goes from a high voltage to a low voltage. |
| Only applies to adapters that have the ``CEC_CAP_MONITOR_PIN`` |
| capability set. When open() is called, the HPD pin can be read and |
| if the HPD is low, then an initial event will be generated for that |
| filehandle. |
| * .. _`CEC-EVENT-PIN-HPD-HIGH`: |
| |
| - ``CEC_EVENT_PIN_HPD_HIGH`` |
| - 6 |
| - Generated if the HPD pin goes from a low voltage to a high voltage. |
| Only applies to adapters that have the ``CEC_CAP_MONITOR_PIN`` |
| capability set. When open() is called, the HPD pin can be read and |
| if the HPD is high, then an initial event will be generated for that |
| filehandle. |
| * .. _`CEC-EVENT-PIN-5V-LOW`: |
| |
| - ``CEC_EVENT_PIN_5V_LOW`` |
| - 6 |
| - Generated if the 5V pin goes from a high voltage to a low voltage. |
| Only applies to adapters that have the ``CEC_CAP_MONITOR_PIN`` |
| capability set. When open() is called, the 5V pin can be read and |
| if the 5V is low, then an initial event will be generated for that |
| filehandle. |
| * .. _`CEC-EVENT-PIN-5V-HIGH`: |
| |
| - ``CEC_EVENT_PIN_5V_HIGH`` |
| - 7 |
| - Generated if the 5V pin goes from a low voltage to a high voltage. |
| Only applies to adapters that have the ``CEC_CAP_MONITOR_PIN`` |
| capability set. When open() is called, the 5V pin can be read and |
| if the 5V is high, then an initial event will be generated for that |
| filehandle. |
| |
| .. tabularcolumns:: |p{6.0cm}|p{0.6cm}|p{10.9cm}| |
| |
| .. _cec-event-flags: |
| |
| .. flat-table:: CEC Event Flags |
| :header-rows: 0 |
| :stub-columns: 0 |
| :widths: 3 1 8 |
| |
| * .. _`CEC-EVENT-FL-INITIAL-STATE`: |
| |
| - ``CEC_EVENT_FL_INITIAL_STATE`` |
| - 1 |
| - Set for the initial events that are generated when the device is |
| opened. See the table above for which events do this. This allows |
| applications to learn the initial state of the CEC adapter at |
| open() time. |
| * .. _`CEC-EVENT-FL-DROPPED-EVENTS`: |
| |
| - ``CEC_EVENT_FL_DROPPED_EVENTS`` |
| - 2 |
| - Set if one or more events of the given event type have been dropped. |
| This is an indication that the application cannot keep up. |
| |
| |
| Return Value |
| ============ |
| |
| On success 0 is returned, on error -1 and the ``errno`` variable is set |
| appropriately. The generic error codes are described at the |
| :ref:`Generic Error Codes <gen-errors>` chapter. |
| |
| The :ref:`ioctl CEC_DQEVENT <CEC_DQEVENT>` can return the following |
| error codes: |
| |
| EAGAIN |
| This is returned when the filehandle is in non-blocking mode and there |
| are no pending events. |
| |
| ERESTARTSYS |
| An interrupt (e.g. Ctrl-C) arrived while in blocking mode waiting for |
| events to arrive. |