linux/Documentation/userspace-api/media/cec/cec-ioc-receive.rst
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   1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GFDL-1.1-no-invariants-or-later
   2.. c:namespace:: CEC
   3
   4.. _CEC_TRANSMIT:
   5.. _CEC_RECEIVE:
   6
   7***********************************
   8ioctls CEC_RECEIVE and CEC_TRANSMIT
   9***********************************
  10
  11Name
  12====
  13
  14CEC_RECEIVE, CEC_TRANSMIT - Receive or transmit a CEC message
  15
  16Synopsis
  17========
  18
  19.. c:macro:: CEC_RECEIVE
  20
  21``int ioctl(int fd, CEC_RECEIVE, struct cec_msg *argp)``
  22
  23.. c:macro:: CEC_TRANSMIT
  24
  25``int ioctl(int fd, CEC_TRANSMIT, struct cec_msg *argp)``
  26
  27Arguments
  28=========
  29
  30``fd``
  31    File descriptor returned by :c:func:`open()`.
  32
  33``argp``
  34    Pointer to struct cec_msg.
  35
  36Description
  37===========
  38
  39To receive a CEC message the application has to fill in the
  40``timeout`` field of struct :c:type:`cec_msg` and pass it to
  41:ref:`ioctl CEC_RECEIVE <CEC_RECEIVE>`.
  42If the file descriptor is in non-blocking mode and there are no received
  43messages pending, then it will return -1 and set errno to the ``EAGAIN``
  44error code. If the file descriptor is in blocking mode and ``timeout``
  45is non-zero and no message arrived within ``timeout`` milliseconds, then
  46it will return -1 and set errno to the ``ETIMEDOUT`` error code.
  47
  48A received message can be:
  49
  501. a message received from another CEC device (the ``sequence`` field will
  51   be 0, ``tx_status`` will be 0 and ``rx_status`` will be non-zero).
  522. the transmit result of an earlier non-blocking transmit (the ``sequence``
  53   field will be non-zero, ``tx_status`` will be non-zero and ``rx_status``
  54   will be 0).
  553. the reply to an earlier non-blocking transmit (the ``sequence`` field will
  56   be non-zero, ``tx_status`` will be 0 and ``rx_status`` will be non-zero).
  57
  58To send a CEC message the application has to fill in the struct
  59:c:type:`cec_msg` and pass it to :ref:`ioctl CEC_TRANSMIT <CEC_TRANSMIT>`.
  60The :ref:`ioctl CEC_TRANSMIT <CEC_TRANSMIT>` is only available if
  61``CEC_CAP_TRANSMIT`` is set. If there is no more room in the transmit
  62queue, then it will return -1 and set errno to the ``EBUSY`` error code.
  63The transmit queue has enough room for 18 messages (about 1 second worth
  64of 2-byte messages). Note that the CEC kernel framework will also reply
  65to core messages (see :ref:`cec-core-processing`), so it is not a good
  66idea to fully fill up the transmit queue.
  67
  68If the file descriptor is in non-blocking mode then the transmit will
  69return 0 and the result of the transmit will be available via
  70:ref:`ioctl CEC_RECEIVE <CEC_RECEIVE>` once the transmit has finished.
  71If a non-blocking transmit also specified waiting for a reply, then
  72the reply will arrive in a later message. The ``sequence`` field can
  73be used to associate both transmit results and replies with the original
  74transmit.
  75
  76Normally calling :ref:`ioctl CEC_TRANSMIT <CEC_TRANSMIT>` when the physical
  77address is invalid (due to e.g. a disconnect) will return ``ENONET``.
  78
  79However, the CEC specification allows sending messages from 'Unregistered' to
  80'TV' when the physical address is invalid since some TVs pull the hotplug detect
  81pin of the HDMI connector low when they go into standby, or when switching to
  82another input.
  83
  84When the hotplug detect pin goes low the EDID disappears, and thus the
  85physical address, but the cable is still connected and CEC still works.
  86In order to detect/wake up the device it is allowed to send poll and 'Image/Text
  87View On' messages from initiator 0xf ('Unregistered') to destination 0 ('TV').
  88
  89.. tabularcolumns:: |p{1.0cm}|p{3.5cm}|p{12.8cm}|
  90
  91.. c:type:: cec_msg
  92
  93.. cssclass:: longtable
  94
  95.. flat-table:: struct cec_msg
  96    :header-rows:  0
  97    :stub-columns: 0
  98    :widths:       1 1 16
  99
 100    * - __u64
 101      - ``tx_ts``
 102      - Timestamp in ns of when the last byte of the message was transmitted.
 103        The timestamp has been taken from the ``CLOCK_MONOTONIC`` clock. To access
 104        the same clock from userspace use :c:func:`clock_gettime`.
 105    * - __u64
 106      - ``rx_ts``
 107      - Timestamp in ns of when the last byte of the message was received.
 108        The timestamp has been taken from the ``CLOCK_MONOTONIC`` clock. To access
 109        the same clock from userspace use :c:func:`clock_gettime`.
 110    * - __u32
 111      - ``len``
 112      - The length of the message. For :ref:`ioctl CEC_TRANSMIT <CEC_TRANSMIT>` this is filled in
 113        by the application. The driver will fill this in for
 114        :ref:`ioctl CEC_RECEIVE <CEC_RECEIVE>`. For :ref:`ioctl CEC_TRANSMIT <CEC_TRANSMIT>` it will be
 115        filled in by the driver with the length of the reply message if ``reply`` was set.
 116    * - __u32
 117      - ``timeout``
 118      - The timeout in milliseconds. This is the time the device will wait
 119        for a message to be received before timing out. If it is set to 0,
 120        then it will wait indefinitely when it is called by :ref:`ioctl CEC_RECEIVE <CEC_RECEIVE>`.
 121        If it is 0 and it is called by :ref:`ioctl CEC_TRANSMIT <CEC_TRANSMIT>`,
 122        then it will be replaced by 1000 if the ``reply`` is non-zero or
 123        ignored if ``reply`` is 0.
 124    * - __u32
 125      - ``sequence``
 126      - A non-zero sequence number is automatically assigned by the CEC framework
 127        for all transmitted messages. It is used by the CEC framework when it queues
 128        the transmit result for a non-blocking transmit. This allows the application
 129        to associate the received message with the original transmit.
 130
 131        In addition, if a non-blocking transmit will wait for a reply (ii.e. ``timeout``
 132        was not 0), then the ``sequence`` field of the reply will be set to the sequence
 133        value of the original transmit. This allows the application to associate the
 134        received message with the original transmit.
 135    * - __u32
 136      - ``flags``
 137      - Flags. See :ref:`cec-msg-flags` for a list of available flags.
 138    * - __u8
 139      - ``msg[16]``
 140      - The message payload. For :ref:`ioctl CEC_TRANSMIT <CEC_TRANSMIT>` this is filled in by the
 141        application. The driver will fill this in for :ref:`ioctl CEC_RECEIVE <CEC_RECEIVE>`.
 142        For :ref:`ioctl CEC_TRANSMIT <CEC_TRANSMIT>` it will be filled in by the driver with
 143        the payload of the reply message if ``timeout`` was set.
 144    * - __u8
 145      - ``reply``
 146      - Wait until this message is replied. If ``reply`` is 0 and the
 147        ``timeout`` is 0, then don't wait for a reply but return after
 148        transmitting the message. Ignored by :ref:`ioctl CEC_RECEIVE <CEC_RECEIVE>`.
 149        The case where ``reply`` is 0 (this is the opcode for the Feature Abort
 150        message) and ``timeout`` is non-zero is specifically allowed to make it
 151        possible to send a message and wait up to ``timeout`` milliseconds for a
 152        Feature Abort reply. In this case ``rx_status`` will either be set
 153        to :ref:`CEC_RX_STATUS_TIMEOUT <CEC-RX-STATUS-TIMEOUT>` or
 154        :ref:`CEC_RX_STATUS_FEATURE_ABORT <CEC-RX-STATUS-FEATURE-ABORT>`.
 155
 156        If the transmitter message is ``CEC_MSG_INITIATE_ARC`` then the ``reply``
 157        values ``CEC_MSG_REPORT_ARC_INITIATED`` and ``CEC_MSG_REPORT_ARC_TERMINATED``
 158        are processed differently: either value will match both possible replies.
 159        The reason is that the ``CEC_MSG_INITIATE_ARC`` message is the only CEC
 160        message that has two possible replies other than Feature Abort. The
 161        ``reply`` field will be updated with the actual reply so that it is
 162        synchronized with the contents of the received message.
 163    * - __u8
 164      - ``rx_status``
 165      - The status bits of the received message. See
 166        :ref:`cec-rx-status` for the possible status values.
 167    * - __u8
 168      - ``tx_status``
 169      - The status bits of the transmitted message. See
 170        :ref:`cec-tx-status` for the possible status values.
 171        When calling :ref:`ioctl CEC_TRANSMIT <CEC_TRANSMIT>` in non-blocking mode,
 172        this field will be 0 if the transmit started, or non-0 if the transmit
 173        result is known immediately. The latter would be the case when attempting
 174        to transmit a Poll message to yourself. That results in a
 175        :ref:`CEC_TX_STATUS_NACK <CEC-TX-STATUS-NACK>` without ever actually
 176        transmitting the Poll message.
 177    * - __u8
 178      - ``tx_arb_lost_cnt``
 179      - A counter of the number of transmit attempts that resulted in the
 180        Arbitration Lost error. This is only set if the hardware supports
 181        this, otherwise it is always 0. This counter is only valid if the
 182        :ref:`CEC_TX_STATUS_ARB_LOST <CEC-TX-STATUS-ARB-LOST>` status bit is set.
 183    * - __u8
 184      - ``tx_nack_cnt``
 185      - A counter of the number of transmit attempts that resulted in the
 186        Not Acknowledged error. This is only set if the hardware supports
 187        this, otherwise it is always 0. This counter is only valid if the
 188        :ref:`CEC_TX_STATUS_NACK <CEC-TX-STATUS-NACK>` status bit is set.
 189    * - __u8
 190      - ``tx_low_drive_cnt``
 191      - A counter of the number of transmit attempts that resulted in the
 192        Arbitration Lost error. This is only set if the hardware supports
 193        this, otherwise it is always 0. This counter is only valid if the
 194        :ref:`CEC_TX_STATUS_LOW_DRIVE <CEC-TX-STATUS-LOW-DRIVE>` status bit is set.
 195    * - __u8
 196      - ``tx_error_cnt``
 197      - A counter of the number of transmit errors other than Arbitration
 198        Lost or Not Acknowledged. This is only set if the hardware
 199        supports this, otherwise it is always 0. This counter is only
 200        valid if the :ref:`CEC_TX_STATUS_ERROR <CEC-TX-STATUS-ERROR>` status bit is set.
 201
 202.. tabularcolumns:: |p{6.2cm}|p{1.0cm}|p{10.1cm}|
 203
 204.. _cec-msg-flags:
 205
 206.. flat-table:: Flags for struct cec_msg
 207    :header-rows:  0
 208    :stub-columns: 0
 209    :widths:       3 1 4
 210
 211    * .. _`CEC-MSG-FL-REPLY-TO-FOLLOWERS`:
 212
 213      - ``CEC_MSG_FL_REPLY_TO_FOLLOWERS``
 214      - 1
 215      - If a CEC transmit expects a reply, then by default that reply is only sent to
 216        the filehandle that called :ref:`ioctl CEC_TRANSMIT <CEC_TRANSMIT>`. If this
 217        flag is set, then the reply is also sent to all followers, if any. If the
 218        filehandle that called :ref:`ioctl CEC_TRANSMIT <CEC_TRANSMIT>` is also a
 219        follower, then that filehandle will receive the reply twice: once as the
 220        result of the :ref:`ioctl CEC_TRANSMIT <CEC_TRANSMIT>`, and once via
 221        :ref:`ioctl CEC_RECEIVE <CEC_RECEIVE>`.
 222
 223    * .. _`CEC-MSG-FL-RAW`:
 224
 225      - ``CEC_MSG_FL_RAW``
 226      - 2
 227      - Normally CEC messages are validated before transmitting them. If this
 228        flag is set when :ref:`ioctl CEC_TRANSMIT <CEC_TRANSMIT>` is called,
 229        then no validation takes place and the message is transmitted as-is.
 230        This is useful when debugging CEC issues.
 231        This flag is only allowed if the process has the ``CAP_SYS_RAWIO``
 232        capability. If that is not set, then the ``EPERM`` error code is
 233        returned.
 234
 235.. tabularcolumns:: |p{5.6cm}|p{0.9cm}|p{10.8cm}|
 236
 237.. _cec-tx-status:
 238
 239.. flat-table:: CEC Transmit Status
 240    :header-rows:  0
 241    :stub-columns: 0
 242    :widths:       3 1 16
 243
 244    * .. _`CEC-TX-STATUS-OK`:
 245
 246      - ``CEC_TX_STATUS_OK``
 247      - 0x01
 248      - The message was transmitted successfully. This is mutually
 249        exclusive with :ref:`CEC_TX_STATUS_MAX_RETRIES <CEC-TX-STATUS-MAX-RETRIES>`.
 250        Other bits can still be set if earlier attempts met with failure before
 251        the transmit was eventually successful.
 252    * .. _`CEC-TX-STATUS-ARB-LOST`:
 253
 254      - ``CEC_TX_STATUS_ARB_LOST``
 255      - 0x02
 256      - CEC line arbitration was lost, i.e. another transmit started at the
 257        same time with a higher priority. Optional status, not all hardware
 258        can detect this error condition.
 259    * .. _`CEC-TX-STATUS-NACK`:
 260
 261      - ``CEC_TX_STATUS_NACK``
 262      - 0x04
 263      - Message was not acknowledged. Note that some hardware cannot tell apart
 264        a 'Not Acknowledged' status from other error conditions, i.e. the result
 265        of a transmit is just OK or FAIL. In that case this status will be
 266        returned when the transmit failed.
 267    * .. _`CEC-TX-STATUS-LOW-DRIVE`:
 268
 269      - ``CEC_TX_STATUS_LOW_DRIVE``
 270      - 0x08
 271      - Low drive was detected on the CEC bus. This indicates that a
 272        follower detected an error on the bus and requests a
 273        retransmission. Optional status, not all hardware can detect this
 274        error condition.
 275    * .. _`CEC-TX-STATUS-ERROR`:
 276
 277      - ``CEC_TX_STATUS_ERROR``
 278      - 0x10
 279      - Some error occurred. This is used for any errors that do not fit
 280        ``CEC_TX_STATUS_ARB_LOST`` or ``CEC_TX_STATUS_LOW_DRIVE``, either because
 281        the hardware could not tell which error occurred, or because the hardware
 282        tested for other conditions besides those two. Optional status.
 283    * .. _`CEC-TX-STATUS-MAX-RETRIES`:
 284
 285      - ``CEC_TX_STATUS_MAX_RETRIES``
 286      - 0x20
 287      - The transmit failed after one or more retries. This status bit is
 288        mutually exclusive with :ref:`CEC_TX_STATUS_OK <CEC-TX-STATUS-OK>`.
 289        Other bits can still be set to explain which failures were seen.
 290    * .. _`CEC-TX-STATUS-ABORTED`:
 291
 292      - ``CEC_TX_STATUS_ABORTED``
 293      - 0x40
 294      - The transmit was aborted due to an HDMI disconnect, or the adapter
 295        was unconfigured, or a transmit was interrupted, or the driver
 296        returned an error when attempting to start a transmit.
 297    * .. _`CEC-TX-STATUS-TIMEOUT`:
 298
 299      - ``CEC_TX_STATUS_TIMEOUT``
 300      - 0x80
 301      - The transmit timed out. This should not normally happen and this
 302        indicates a driver problem.
 303
 304.. tabularcolumns:: |p{5.6cm}|p{0.9cm}|p{10.8cm}|
 305
 306.. _cec-rx-status:
 307
 308.. flat-table:: CEC Receive Status
 309    :header-rows:  0
 310    :stub-columns: 0
 311    :widths:       3 1 16
 312
 313    * .. _`CEC-RX-STATUS-OK`:
 314
 315      - ``CEC_RX_STATUS_OK``
 316      - 0x01
 317      - The message was received successfully.
 318    * .. _`CEC-RX-STATUS-TIMEOUT`:
 319
 320      - ``CEC_RX_STATUS_TIMEOUT``
 321      - 0x02
 322      - The reply to an earlier transmitted message timed out.
 323    * .. _`CEC-RX-STATUS-FEATURE-ABORT`:
 324
 325      - ``CEC_RX_STATUS_FEATURE_ABORT``
 326      - 0x04
 327      - The message was received successfully but the reply was
 328        ``CEC_MSG_FEATURE_ABORT``. This status is only set if this message
 329        was the reply to an earlier transmitted message.
 330    * .. _`CEC-RX-STATUS-ABORTED`:
 331
 332      - ``CEC_RX_STATUS_ABORTED``
 333      - 0x08
 334      - The wait for a reply to an earlier transmitted message was aborted
 335        because the HDMI cable was disconnected, the adapter was unconfigured
 336        or the :ref:`CEC_TRANSMIT <CEC_RECEIVE>` that waited for a
 337        reply was interrupted.
 338
 339
 340Return Value
 341============
 342
 343On success 0 is returned, on error -1 and the ``errno`` variable is set
 344appropriately. The generic error codes are described at the
 345:ref:`Generic Error Codes <gen-errors>` chapter.
 346
 347The :ref:`ioctl CEC_RECEIVE <CEC_RECEIVE>` can return the following
 348error codes:
 349
 350EAGAIN
 351    No messages are in the receive queue, and the filehandle is in non-blocking mode.
 352
 353ETIMEDOUT
 354    The ``timeout`` was reached while waiting for a message.
 355
 356ERESTARTSYS
 357    The wait for a message was interrupted (e.g. by Ctrl-C).
 358
 359The :ref:`ioctl CEC_TRANSMIT <CEC_TRANSMIT>` can return the following
 360error codes:
 361
 362ENOTTY
 363    The ``CEC_CAP_TRANSMIT`` capability wasn't set, so this ioctl is not supported.
 364
 365EPERM
 366    The CEC adapter is not configured, i.e. :ref:`ioctl CEC_ADAP_S_LOG_ADDRS <CEC_ADAP_S_LOG_ADDRS>`
 367    has never been called, or ``CEC_MSG_FL_RAW`` was used from a process that
 368    did not have the ``CAP_SYS_RAWIO`` capability.
 369
 370ENONET
 371    The CEC adapter is not configured, i.e. :ref:`ioctl CEC_ADAP_S_LOG_ADDRS <CEC_ADAP_S_LOG_ADDRS>`
 372    was called, but the physical address is invalid so no logical address was claimed.
 373    An exception is made in this case for transmits from initiator 0xf ('Unregistered')
 374    to destination 0 ('TV'). In that case the transmit will proceed as usual.
 375
 376EBUSY
 377    Another filehandle is in exclusive follower or initiator mode, or the filehandle
 378    is in mode ``CEC_MODE_NO_INITIATOR``. This is also returned if the transmit
 379    queue is full.
 380
 381EINVAL
 382    The contents of struct :c:type:`cec_msg` is invalid.
 383
 384ERESTARTSYS
 385    The wait for a successful transmit was interrupted (e.g. by Ctrl-C).
 386