The zr36067 driver doesn't make a distinction between the different sub-types
of NTSC, PAL, or SECAM norms. For example, when the enum std ioctl returns
the PAL standard it returns PAL_BG|PAL_DK|PAL_H|PAL_I.
When setting the norm, it required the bitmask to match exactly the set of
norms used during the enumeration. If just one norm was specified, for
example PAL_BG or NTSC_M, it would fail. This violates the V4L2 spec,
"VIDIOC_S_STD accepts *one* or more flags..."
The key thing to realize is that V4L2_STD_PAL is not one bit, it is multiple
bits. It's ok to call S_STD with any *one* of those bits, but the driver was
requiring *all* of them.
This fixes the S_STD function so that it will accept any set of one or more
PAL norms as PAL, and the same for NTSC and SECAM.
Signed-off-by: Trent Piepho <xyzzy@speakeasy.org>
Acked-by: Ronald S. Bultje <rbultje@ronald.bitfreak.net>
Signed-off-by: Mauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab@infradead.org>
dprintk(3, KERN_DEBUG "%s: VIDIOC_S_STD - norm=0x%llx\n",
ZR_DEVNAME(zr), (unsigned long long)*std);
- if (*std == V4L2_STD_PAL)
+ if ((*std & V4L2_STD_PAL) && !(*std & ~V4L2_STD_PAL))
norm = VIDEO_MODE_PAL;
- else if (*std == V4L2_STD_NTSC)
+ else if ((*std & V4L2_STD_NTSC) && !(*std & ~V4L2_STD_NTSC))
norm = VIDEO_MODE_NTSC;
- else if (*std == V4L2_STD_SECAM)
+ else if ((*std & V4L2_STD_SECAM) && !(*std & ~V4L2_STD_SECAM))
norm = VIDEO_MODE_SECAM;
else if (*std == V4L2_STD_ALL)
norm = VIDEO_MODE_AUTO;