7.51. ioctl VIDIOC_QUERYSTD, VIDIOC_SUBDEV_QUERYSTD

7.51.1. Name

VIDIOC_QUERYSTD - VIDIOC_SUBDEV_QUERYSTD - Sense the video standard received by the current input

7.51.2. Synopsis

int ioctl(int fd, VIDIOC_QUERYSTD, v4l2_std_id *argp)
int ioctl(int fd, VIDIOC_SUBDEV_QUERYSTD, v4l2_std_id *argp)

7.51.3. Arguments

fd
File descriptor returned by open().
argp
Pointer to v4l2_std_id.

7.51.4. Description

The hardware may be able to detect the current video standard automatically. To do so, applications call ioctl VIDIOC_QUERYSTD, VIDIOC_SUBDEV_QUERYSTD with a pointer to a v4l2_std_id type. The driver stores here a set of candidates, this can be a single flag or a set of supported standards if for example the hardware can only distinguish between 50 and 60 Hz systems. If no signal was detected, then the driver will return V4L2_STD_UNKNOWN. When detection is not possible or fails, the set must contain all standards supported by the current video input or output.

Note

Drivers shall not switch the video standard automatically if a new video standard is detected. Instead, drivers should send the V4L2_EVENT_SOURCE_CHANGE event (if they support this) and expect that userspace will take action by calling ioctl VIDIOC_QUERYSTD, VIDIOC_SUBDEV_QUERYSTD. The reason is that a new video standard can mean different buffer sizes as well, and you cannot change buffer sizes on the fly. In general, applications that receive the Source Change event will have to call ioctl VIDIOC_QUERYSTD, VIDIOC_SUBDEV_QUERYSTD, and if the detected video standard is valid they will have to stop streaming, set the new standard, allocate new buffers and start streaming again.

7.51.5. 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.

ENODATA
Standard video timings are not supported for this input or output.