7.48. ioctl VIDIOC_QUERYCAP

7.48.1. Name

VIDIOC_QUERYCAP - Query device capabilities

7.48.2. Synopsis

VIDIOC_QUERYCAP

int ioctl(int fd, VIDIOC_QUERYCAP, struct v4l2_capability *argp)

7.48.3. Arguments

fd

File descriptor returned by open().

argp

Pointer to struct v4l2_capability.

7.48.4. Description

All V4L2 devices support the VIDIOC_QUERYCAP ioctl. It is used to identify kernel devices compatible with this specification and to obtain information about driver and hardware capabilities. The ioctl takes a pointer to a struct v4l2_capability which is filled by the driver. When the driver is not compatible with this specification the ioctl returns an EINVAL error code.

type v4l2_capability
struct v4l2_capability

__u8

driver[16]

Name of the driver, a unique NUL-terminated ASCII string. For example: “bttv”. Driver specific applications can use this information to verify the driver identity. It is also useful to work around known bugs, or to identify drivers in error reports.

Storing strings in fixed sized arrays is bad practice but unavoidable here. Drivers and applications should take precautions to never read or write beyond the end of the array and to make sure the strings are properly NUL-terminated.

__u8

card[32]

Name of the device, a NUL-terminated UTF-8 string. For example: “Yoyodyne TV/FM”. One driver may support different brands or models of video hardware. This information is intended for users, for example in a menu of available devices. Since multiple TV cards of the same brand may be installed which are supported by the same driver, this name should be combined with the character device file name (e. g. /dev/video2) or the bus_info string to avoid ambiguities.

__u8

bus_info[32]

Location of the device in the system, a NUL-terminated ASCII string. For example: “PCI:0000:05:06.0”. This information is intended for users, to distinguish multiple identical devices. If no such information is available the field must simply count the devices controlled by the driver (“platform:vivid-000”). The bus_info must start with “PCI:” for PCI boards, “PCIe:” for PCI Express boards, “usb-” for USB devices, “I2C:” for i2c devices, “ISA:” for ISA devices, “parport” for parallel port devices and “platform:” for platform devices.

__u32

version

Version number of the driver.

Starting with kernel 3.1, the version reported is provided by the V4L2 subsystem following the kernel numbering scheme. However, it may not always return the same version as the kernel if, for example, a stable or distribution-modified kernel uses the V4L2 stack from a newer kernel.

The version number is formatted using the KERNEL_VERSION() macro. For example if the media stack corresponds to the V4L2 version shipped with Kernel 4.14, it would be equivalent to:

#define KERNEL_VERSION(a,b,c) (((a) << 16) + ((b) << 8) + (c))

__u32 version = KERNEL_VERSION(4, 14, 0);

printf ("Version: %u.%u.%u\\n",

(version >> 16) & 0xFF, (version >> 8) & 0xFF, version & 0xFF);

__u32

capabilities

Available capabilities of the physical device as a whole, see Device Capabilities Flags. The same physical device can export multiple devices in /dev (e.g. /dev/videoX, /dev/vbiY and /dev/radioZ). The capabilities field should contain a union of all capabilities available around the several V4L2 devices exported to userspace. For all those devices the capabilities field returns the same set of capabilities. This allows applications to open just one of the devices (typically the video device) and discover whether video, vbi and/or radio are also supported.

__u32

device_caps

Device capabilities of the opened device, see Device Capabilities Flags. Should contain the available capabilities of that specific device node. So, for example, device_caps of a radio device will only contain radio related capabilities and no video or vbi capabilities. This field is only set if the capabilities field contains the V4L2_CAP_DEVICE_CAPS capability. Only the capabilities field can have the V4L2_CAP_DEVICE_CAPS capability, device_caps will never set V4L2_CAP_DEVICE_CAPS.

__u32

reserved[3]

Reserved for future extensions. Drivers must set this array to zero.

Device Capabilities Flags

V4L2_CAP_VIDEO_CAPTURE

0x00000001

The device supports the single-planar API through the Video Capture interface.

V4L2_CAP_VIDEO_CAPTURE_MPLANE

0x00001000

The device supports the multi-planar API through the Video Capture interface.

V4L2_CAP_VIDEO_OUTPUT

0x00000002

The device supports the single-planar API through the Video Output interface.

V4L2_CAP_VIDEO_OUTPUT_MPLANE

0x00002000

The device supports the multi-planar API through the Video Output interface.

V4L2_CAP_VIDEO_M2M

0x00008000

The device supports the single-planar API through the Video Memory-To-Memory interface.

V4L2_CAP_VIDEO_M2M_MPLANE

0x00004000

The device supports the multi-planar API through the Video Memory-To-Memory interface.

V4L2_CAP_VIDEO_OVERLAY

0x00000004

The device supports the Video Overlay interface. A video overlay device typically stores captured images directly in the video memory of a graphics card, with hardware clipping and scaling.

V4L2_CAP_VBI_CAPTURE

0x00000010

The device supports the Raw VBI Capture interface, providing Teletext and Closed Caption data.

V4L2_CAP_VBI_OUTPUT

0x00000020

The device supports the Raw VBI Output interface.

V4L2_CAP_SLICED_VBI_CAPTURE

0x00000040

The device supports the Sliced VBI Capture interface.

V4L2_CAP_SLICED_VBI_OUTPUT

0x00000080

The device supports the Sliced VBI Output interface.

V4L2_CAP_RDS_CAPTURE

0x00000100

The device supports the RDS capture interface.

V4L2_CAP_VIDEO_OUTPUT_OVERLAY

0x00000200

The device supports the Video Output Overlay (OSD) interface. Unlike the Video Overlay interface, this is a secondary function of video output devices and overlays an image onto an outgoing video signal. When the driver sets this flag, it must clear the V4L2_CAP_VIDEO_OVERLAY flag and vice versa. [1]

V4L2_CAP_HW_FREQ_SEEK

0x00000400

The device supports the ioctl VIDIOC_S_HW_FREQ_SEEK ioctl for hardware frequency seeking.

V4L2_CAP_RDS_OUTPUT

0x00000800

The device supports the RDS output interface.

V4L2_CAP_TUNER

0x00010000

The device has some sort of tuner to receive RF-modulated video signals. For more information about tuner programming see Tuners and Modulators.

V4L2_CAP_AUDIO

0x00020000

The device has audio inputs or outputs. It may or may not support audio recording or playback, in PCM or compressed formats. PCM audio support must be implemented as ALSA or OSS interface. For more information on audio inputs and outputs see Audio Inputs and Outputs.

V4L2_CAP_RADIO

0x00040000

This is a radio receiver.

V4L2_CAP_MODULATOR

0x00080000

The device has some sort of modulator to emit RF-modulated video/audio signals. For more information about modulator programming see Tuners and Modulators.

V4L2_CAP_SDR_CAPTURE

0x00100000

The device supports the SDR Capture interface.

V4L2_CAP_EXT_PIX_FORMAT

0x00200000

The device supports the struct v4l2_pix_format extended fields.

V4L2_CAP_SDR_OUTPUT

0x00400000

The device supports the SDR Output interface.

V4L2_CAP_META_CAPTURE

0x00800000

The device supports the Metadata Interface capture interface.

V4L2_CAP_READWRITE

0x01000000

The device supports the read() and/or write() I/O methods.

V4L2_CAP_STREAMING

0x04000000

The device supports the streaming I/O method.

V4L2_CAP_META_OUTPUT

0x08000000

The device supports the Metadata Interface output interface.

V4L2_CAP_TOUCH

0x10000000

This is a touch device.

V4L2_CAP_IO_MC

0x20000000

There is only one input and/or output seen from userspace. The whole video topology configuration, including which I/O entity is routed to the input/output, is configured by userspace via the Media Controller. See Part IV - Media Controller API.

V4L2_CAP_DEVICE_CAPS

0x80000000

The driver fills the device_caps field. This capability can only appear in the capabilities field and never in the device_caps field.

7.48.5. 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 Generic Error Codes chapter.