1.. Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this 2.. document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, 3.. Version 1.1 or any later version published by the Free Software 4.. Foundation, with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts 5.. and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included at 6.. Documentation/userspace-api/media/fdl-appendix.rst. 7.. 8.. TODO: replace it to GFDL-1.1-or-later WITH no-invariant-sections 9 10.. _media-controller-model: 11 12Media device model 13================== 14 15Discovering a device internal topology, and configuring it at runtime, 16is one of the goals of the media controller API. To achieve this, 17hardware devices and Linux Kernel interfaces are modelled as graph 18objects on an oriented graph. The object types that constitute the graph 19are: 20 21- An **entity** is a basic media hardware or software building block. 22 It can correspond to a large variety of logical blocks such as 23 physical hardware devices (CMOS sensor for instance), logical 24 hardware devices (a building block in a System-on-Chip image 25 processing pipeline), DMA channels or physical connectors. 26 27- An **interface** is a graph representation of a Linux Kernel 28 userspace API interface, like a device node or a sysfs file that 29 controls one or more entities in the graph. 30 31- A **pad** is a data connection endpoint through which an entity can 32 interact with other entities. Data (not restricted to video) produced 33 by an entity flows from the entity's output to one or more entity 34 inputs. Pads should not be confused with physical pins at chip 35 boundaries. 36 37- A **data link** is a point-to-point oriented connection between two 38 pads, either on the same entity or on different entities. Data flows 39 from a source pad to a sink pad. 40 41- An **interface link** is a point-to-point bidirectional control 42 connection between a Linux Kernel interface and an entity. 43