| This file contains some additional information for the Philips and OEM webcams. |
| E-mail: webcam@smcc.demon.nl Last updated: 2004-01-19 |
| Site: http://www.smcc.demon.nl/webcam/ |
| |
| As of this moment, the following cameras are supported: |
| * Philips PCA645 |
| * Philips PCA646 |
| * Philips PCVC675 |
| * Philips PCVC680 |
| * Philips PCVC690 |
| * Philips PCVC720/40 |
| * Philips PCVC730 |
| * Philips PCVC740 |
| * Philips PCVC750 |
| * Askey VC010 |
| * Creative Labs Webcam 5 |
| * Creative Labs Webcam Pro Ex |
| * Logitech QuickCam 3000 Pro |
| * Logitech QuickCam 4000 Pro |
| * Logitech QuickCam Notebook Pro |
| * Logitech QuickCam Zoom |
| * Logitech QuickCam Orbit |
| * Logitech QuickCam Sphere |
| * Samsung MPC-C10 |
| * Samsung MPC-C30 |
| * Sotec Afina Eye |
| * AME CU-001 |
| * Visionite VCS-UM100 |
| * Visionite VCS-UC300 |
| |
| The main webpage for the Philips driver is at the address above. It contains |
| a lot of extra information, a FAQ, and the binary plugin 'PWCX'. This plugin |
| contains decompression routines that allow you to use higher image sizes and |
| framerates; in addition the webcam uses less bandwidth on the USB bus (handy |
| if you want to run more than 1 camera simultaneously). These routines fall |
| under a NDA, and may therefore not be distributed as source; however, its use |
| is completely optional. |
| |
| You can build this code either into your kernel, or as a module. I recommend |
| the latter, since it makes troubleshooting a lot easier. The built-in |
| microphone is supported through the USB Audio class. |
| |
| When you load the module you can set some default settings for the |
| camera; some programs depend on a particular image-size or -format and |
| don't know how to set it properly in the driver. The options are: |
| |
| size |
| Can be one of 'sqcif', 'qsif', 'qcif', 'sif', 'cif' or |
| 'vga', for an image size of resp. 128x96, 160x120, 176x144, |
| 320x240, 352x288 and 640x480 (of course, only for those cameras that |
| support these resolutions). |
| |
| fps |
| Specifies the desired framerate. Is an integer in the range of 4-30. |
| |
| fbufs |
| This parameter specifies the number of internal buffers to use for storing |
| frames from the cam. This will help if the process that reads images from |
| the cam is a bit slow or momentarily busy. However, on slow machines it |
| only introduces lag, so choose carefully. The default is 3, which is |
| reasonable. You can set it between 2 and 5. |
| |
| mbufs |
| This is an integer between 1 and 10. It will tell the module the number of |
| buffers to reserve for mmap(), VIDIOCCGMBUF, VIDIOCMCAPTURE and friends. |
| The default is 2, which is adequate for most applications (double |
| buffering). |
| |
| Should you experience a lot of 'Dumping frame...' messages during |
| grabbing with a tool that uses mmap(), you might want to increase if. |
| However, it doesn't really buffer images, it just gives you a bit more |
| slack when your program is behind. But you need a multi-threaded or |
| forked program to really take advantage of these buffers. |
| |
| The absolute maximum is 10, but don't set it too high! Every buffer takes |
| up 460 KB of RAM, so unless you have a lot of memory setting this to |
| something more than 4 is an absolute waste. This memory is only |
| allocated during open(), so nothing is wasted when the camera is not in |
| use. |
| |
| power_save |
| When power_save is enabled (set to 1), the module will try to shut down |
| the cam on close() and re-activate on open(). This will save power and |
| turn off the LED. Not all cameras support this though (the 645 and 646 |
| don't have power saving at all), and some models don't work either (they |
| will shut down, but never wake up). Consider this experimental. By |
| default this option is disabled. |
| |
| compression (only useful with the plugin) |
| With this option you can control the compression factor that the camera |
| uses to squeeze the image through the USB bus. You can set the |
| parameter between 0 and 3: |
| 0 = prefer uncompressed images; if the requested mode is not available |
| in an uncompressed format, the driver will silently switch to low |
| compression. |
| 1 = low compression. |
| 2 = medium compression. |
| 3 = high compression. |
| |
| High compression takes less bandwidth of course, but it could also |
| introduce some unwanted artefacts. The default is 2, medium compression. |
| See the FAQ on the website for an overview of which modes require |
| compression. |
| |
| The compression parameter does not apply to the 645 and 646 cameras |
| and OEM models derived from those (only a few). Most cams honour this |
| parameter. |
| |
| leds |
| This settings takes 2 integers, that define the on/off time for the LED |
| (in milliseconds). One of the interesting things that you can do with |
| this is let the LED blink while the camera is in use. This: |
| |
| leds=500,500 |
| |
| will blink the LED once every second. But with: |
| |
| leds=0,0 |
| |
| the LED never goes on, making it suitable for silent surveillance. |
| |
| By default the camera's LED is on solid while in use, and turned off |
| when the camera is not used anymore. |
| |
| This parameter works only with the ToUCam range of cameras (720, 730, 740, |
| 750) and OEMs. For other cameras this command is silently ignored, and |
| the LED cannot be controlled. |
| |
| Finally: this parameters does not take effect UNTIL the first time you |
| open the camera device. Until then, the LED remains on. |
| |
| dev_hint |
| A long standing problem with USB devices is their dynamic nature: you |
| never know what device a camera gets assigned; it depends on module load |
| order, the hub configuration, the order in which devices are plugged in, |
| and the phase of the moon (i.e. it can be random). With this option you |
| can give the driver a hint as to what video device node (/dev/videoX) it |
| should use with a specific camera. This is also handy if you have two |
| cameras of the same model. |
| |
| A camera is specified by its type (the number from the camera model, |
| like PCA645, PCVC750VC, etc) and optionally the serial number (visible |
| in /proc/bus/usb/devices). A hint consists of a string with the following |
| format: |
| |
| [type[.serialnumber]:]node |
| |
| The square brackets mean that both the type and the serialnumber are |
| optional, but a serialnumber cannot be specified without a type (which |
| would be rather pointless). The serialnumber is separated from the type |
| by a '.'; the node number by a ':'. |
| |
| This somewhat cryptic syntax is best explained by a few examples: |
| |
| dev_hint=3,5 The first detected cam gets assigned |
| /dev/video3, the second /dev/video5. Any |
| other cameras will get the first free |
| available slot (see below). |
| |
| dev_hint=645:1,680:2 The PCA645 camera will get /dev/video1, |
| and a PCVC680 /dev/video2. |
| |
| dev_hint=645.0123:3,645.4567:0 The PCA645 camera with serialnumber |
| 0123 goes to /dev/video3, the same |
| camera model with the 4567 serial |
| gets /dev/video0. |
| |
| dev_hint=750:1,4,5,6 The PCVC750 camera will get /dev/video1, the |
| next 3 Philips cams will use /dev/video4 |
| through /dev/video6. |
| |
| Some points worth knowing: |
| - Serialnumbers are case sensitive and must be written full, including |
| leading zeroes (it's treated as a string). |
| - If a device node is already occupied, registration will fail and |
| the webcam is not available. |
| - You can have up to 64 video devices; be sure to make enough device |
| nodes in /dev if you want to spread the numbers. |
| After /dev/video9 comes /dev/video10 (not /dev/videoA). |
| - If a camera does not match any dev_hint, it will simply get assigned |
| the first available device node, just as it used to be. |
| |
| trace |
| In order to better detect problems, it is now possible to turn on a |
| 'trace' of some of the calls the module makes; it logs all items in your |
| kernel log at debug level. |
| |
| The trace variable is a bitmask; each bit represents a certain feature. |
| If you want to trace something, look up the bit value(s) in the table |
| below, add the values together and supply that to the trace variable. |
| |
| Value Value Description Default |
| (dec) (hex) |
| 1 0x1 Module initialization; this will log messages On |
| while loading and unloading the module |
| |
| 2 0x2 probe() and disconnect() traces On |
| |
| 4 0x4 Trace open() and close() calls Off |
| |
| 8 0x8 read(), mmap() and associated ioctl() calls Off |
| |
| 16 0x10 Memory allocation of buffers, etc. Off |
| |
| 32 0x20 Showing underflow, overflow and Dumping frame On |
| messages |
| |
| 64 0x40 Show viewport and image sizes Off |
| |
| 128 0x80 PWCX debugging Off |
| |
| For example, to trace the open() & read() functions, sum 8 + 4 = 12, |
| so you would supply trace=12 during insmod or modprobe. If |
| you want to turn the initialization and probing tracing off, set trace=0. |
| The default value for trace is 35 (0x23). |
| |
| |
| |
| Example: |
| |
| # modprobe pwc size=cif fps=15 power_save=1 |
| |
| The fbufs, mbufs and trace parameters are global and apply to all connected |
| cameras. Each camera has its own set of buffers. |
| |
| size and fps only specify defaults when you open() the device; this is to |
| accommodate some tools that don't set the size. You can change these |
| settings after open() with the Video4Linux ioctl() calls. The default of |
| defaults is QCIF size at 10 fps. |
| |
| The compression parameter is semiglobal; it sets the initial compression |
| preference for all camera's, but this parameter can be set per camera with |
| the VIDIOCPWCSCQUAL ioctl() call. |
| |
| All parameters are optional. |
| |