1Common bindings for video receiver and transmitter interfaces 2 3General concept 4--------------- 5 6Video data pipelines usually consist of external devices, e.g. camera sensors, 7controlled over an I2C, SPI or UART bus, and SoC internal IP blocks, including 8video DMA engines and video data processors. 9 10SoC internal blocks are described by DT nodes, placed similarly to other SoC 11blocks. External devices are represented as child nodes of their respective 12bus controller nodes, e.g. I2C. 13 14Data interfaces on all video devices are described by their child 'port' nodes. 15Configuration of a port depends on other devices participating in the data 16transfer and is described by 'endpoint' subnodes. 17 18device { 19 ... 20 ports { 21 #address-cells = <1>; 22 #size-cells = <0>; 23 24 port@0 { 25 ... 26 endpoint@0 { ... }; 27 endpoint@1 { ... }; 28 }; 29 port@1 { ... }; 30 }; 31}; 32 33If a port can be configured to work with more than one remote device on the same 34bus, an 'endpoint' child node must be provided for each of them. If more than 35one port is present in a device node or there is more than one endpoint at a 36port, or port node needs to be associated with a selected hardware interface, 37a common scheme using '#address-cells', '#size-cells' and 'reg' properties is 38used. 39 40All 'port' nodes can be grouped under optional 'ports' node, which allows to 41specify #address-cells, #size-cells properties independently for the 'port' 42and 'endpoint' nodes and any child device nodes a device might have. 43 44Two 'endpoint' nodes are linked with each other through their 'remote-endpoint' 45phandles. An endpoint subnode of a device contains all properties needed for 46configuration of this device for data exchange with other device. In most 47cases properties at the peer 'endpoint' nodes will be identical, however they 48might need to be different when there is any signal modifications on the bus 49between two devices, e.g. there are logic signal inverters on the lines. 50 51It is allowed for multiple endpoints at a port to be active simultaneously, 52where supported by a device. For example, in case where a data interface of 53a device is partitioned into multiple data busses, e.g. 16-bit input port 54divided into two separate ITU-R BT.656 8-bit busses. In such case bus-width 55and data-shift properties can be used to assign physical data lines to each 56endpoint node (logical bus). 57 58Documenting bindings for devices 59-------------------------------- 60 61All required and optional bindings the device supports shall be explicitly 62documented in device DT binding documentation. This also includes port and 63endpoint nodes for the device, including unit-addresses and reg properties where 64relevant. 65 66Please also see Documentation/devicetree/bindings/graph.txt . 67 68Required properties 69------------------- 70 71If there is more than one 'port' or more than one 'endpoint' node or 'reg' 72property is present in port and/or endpoint nodes the following properties 73are required in a relevant parent node: 74 75 - #address-cells : number of cells required to define port/endpoint 76 identifier, should be 1. 77 - #size-cells : should be zero. 78 79 80Optional properties 81------------------- 82 83- flash-leds: An array of phandles, each referring to a flash LED, a sub-node 84 of the LED driver device node. 85 86- lens-focus: A phandle to the node of the focus lens controller. 87 88- rotation: The device, typically an image sensor, is not mounted upright, 89 but a number of degrees counter clockwise. Typical values are 0 and 180 90 (upside down). 91 92 93Optional endpoint properties 94---------------------------- 95 96- remote-endpoint: phandle to an 'endpoint' subnode of a remote device node. 97- slave-mode: a boolean property indicating that the link is run in slave mode. 98 The default when this property is not specified is master mode. In the slave 99 mode horizontal and vertical synchronization signals are provided to the 100 slave device (data source) by the master device (data sink). In the master 101 mode the data source device is also the source of the synchronization signals. 102- bus-type: data bus type. Possible values are: 103 1 - MIPI CSI-2 C-PHY 104 2 - MIPI CSI1 105 3 - CCP2 106 4 - MIPI CSI-2 D-PHY 107 5 - Parallel 108 6 - Bt.656 109- bus-width: number of data lines actively used, valid for the parallel busses. 110- data-shift: on the parallel data busses, if bus-width is used to specify the 111 number of data lines, data-shift can be used to specify which data lines are 112 used, e.g. "bus-width=<8>; data-shift=<2>;" means, that lines 9:2 are used. 113- hsync-active: active state of the HSYNC signal, 0/1 for LOW/HIGH respectively. 114- vsync-active: active state of the VSYNC signal, 0/1 for LOW/HIGH respectively. 115 Note, that if HSYNC and VSYNC polarities are not specified, embedded 116 synchronization may be required, where supported. 117- data-active: similar to HSYNC and VSYNC, specifies data line polarity. 118- data-enable-active: similar to HSYNC and VSYNC, specifies the data enable 119 signal polarity. 120- field-even-active: field signal level during the even field data transmission. 121- pclk-sample: sample data on rising (1) or falling (0) edge of the pixel clock 122 signal. 123- sync-on-green-active: active state of Sync-on-green (SoG) signal, 0/1 for 124 LOW/HIGH respectively. 125- data-lanes: an array of physical data lane indexes. Position of an entry 126 determines the logical lane number, while the value of an entry indicates 127 physical lane, e.g. for 2-lane MIPI CSI-2 bus we could have 128 "data-lanes = <1 2>;", assuming the clock lane is on hardware lane 0. 129 If the hardware does not support lane reordering, monotonically 130 incremented values shall be used from 0 or 1 onwards, depending on 131 whether or not there is also a clock lane. This property is valid for 132 serial busses only (e.g. MIPI CSI-2). 133- clock-lanes: an array of physical clock lane indexes. Position of an entry 134 determines the logical lane number, while the value of an entry indicates 135 physical lane, e.g. for a MIPI CSI-2 bus we could have "clock-lanes = <0>;", 136 which places the clock lane on hardware lane 0. This property is valid for 137 serial busses only (e.g. MIPI CSI-2). Note that for the MIPI CSI-2 bus this 138 array contains only one entry. 139- clock-noncontinuous: a boolean property to allow MIPI CSI-2 non-continuous 140 clock mode. 141- link-frequencies: Allowed data bus frequencies. For MIPI CSI-2, for 142 instance, this is the actual frequency of the bus, not bits per clock per 143 lane value. An array of 64-bit unsigned integers. 144- lane-polarities: an array of polarities of the lanes starting from the clock 145 lane and followed by the data lanes in the same order as in data-lanes. 146 Valid values are 0 (normal) and 1 (inverted). The length of the array 147 should be the combined length of data-lanes and clock-lanes properties. 148 If the lane-polarities property is omitted, the value must be interpreted 149 as 0 (normal). This property is valid for serial busses only. 150- strobe: Whether the clock signal is used as clock (0) or strobe (1). Used 151 with CCP2, for instance. 152 153Example 154------- 155 156The example snippet below describes two data pipelines. ov772x and imx074 are 157camera sensors with a parallel and serial (MIPI CSI-2) video bus respectively. 158Both sensors are on the I2C control bus corresponding to the i2c0 controller 159node. ov772x sensor is linked directly to the ceu0 video host interface. 160imx074 is linked to ceu0 through the MIPI CSI-2 receiver (csi2). ceu0 has a 161(single) DMA engine writing captured data to memory. ceu0 node has a single 162'port' node which may indicate that at any time only one of the following data 163pipelines can be active: ov772x -> ceu0 or imx074 -> csi2 -> ceu0. 164 165 ceu0: ceu@fe910000 { 166 compatible = "renesas,sh-mobile-ceu"; 167 reg = <0xfe910000 0xa0>; 168 interrupts = <0x880>; 169 170 mclk: master_clock { 171 compatible = "renesas,ceu-clock"; 172 #clock-cells = <1>; 173 clock-frequency = <50000000>; /* Max clock frequency */ 174 clock-output-names = "mclk"; 175 }; 176 177 port { 178 #address-cells = <1>; 179 #size-cells = <0>; 180 181 /* Parallel bus endpoint */ 182 ceu0_1: endpoint@1 { 183 reg = <1>; /* Local endpoint # */ 184 remote = <&ov772x_1_1>; /* Remote phandle */ 185 bus-width = <8>; /* Used data lines */ 186 data-shift = <2>; /* Lines 9:2 are used */ 187 188 /* If hsync-active/vsync-active are missing, 189 embedded BT.656 sync is used */ 190 hsync-active = <0>; /* Active low */ 191 vsync-active = <0>; /* Active low */ 192 data-active = <1>; /* Active high */ 193 pclk-sample = <1>; /* Rising */ 194 }; 195 196 /* MIPI CSI-2 bus endpoint */ 197 ceu0_0: endpoint@0 { 198 reg = <0>; 199 remote = <&csi2_2>; 200 }; 201 }; 202 }; 203 204 i2c0: i2c@fff20000 { 205 ... 206 ov772x_1: camera@21 { 207 compatible = "ovti,ov772x"; 208 reg = <0x21>; 209 vddio-supply = <®ulator1>; 210 vddcore-supply = <®ulator2>; 211 212 clock-frequency = <20000000>; 213 clocks = <&mclk 0>; 214 clock-names = "xclk"; 215 216 port { 217 /* With 1 endpoint per port no need for addresses. */ 218 ov772x_1_1: endpoint { 219 bus-width = <8>; 220 remote-endpoint = <&ceu0_1>; 221 hsync-active = <1>; 222 vsync-active = <0>; /* Who came up with an 223 inverter here ?... */ 224 data-active = <1>; 225 pclk-sample = <1>; 226 }; 227 }; 228 }; 229 230 imx074: camera@1a { 231 compatible = "sony,imx074"; 232 reg = <0x1a>; 233 vddio-supply = <®ulator1>; 234 vddcore-supply = <®ulator2>; 235 236 clock-frequency = <30000000>; /* Shared clock with ov772x_1 */ 237 clocks = <&mclk 0>; 238 clock-names = "sysclk"; /* Assuming this is the 239 name in the datasheet */ 240 port { 241 imx074_1: endpoint { 242 clock-lanes = <0>; 243 data-lanes = <1 2>; 244 remote-endpoint = <&csi2_1>; 245 }; 246 }; 247 }; 248 }; 249 250 csi2: csi2@ffc90000 { 251 compatible = "renesas,sh-mobile-csi2"; 252 reg = <0xffc90000 0x1000>; 253 interrupts = <0x17a0>; 254 #address-cells = <1>; 255 #size-cells = <0>; 256 257 port@1 { 258 compatible = "renesas,csi2c"; /* One of CSI2I and CSI2C. */ 259 reg = <1>; /* CSI-2 PHY #1 of 2: PHY_S, 260 PHY_M has port address 0, 261 is unused. */ 262 csi2_1: endpoint { 263 clock-lanes = <0>; 264 data-lanes = <2 1>; 265 remote-endpoint = <&imx074_1>; 266 }; 267 }; 268 port@2 { 269 reg = <2>; /* port 2: link to the CEU */ 270 271 csi2_2: endpoint { 272 remote-endpoint = <&ceu0_0>; 273 }; 274 }; 275 }; 276