Home | History | Annotate | Download | only in hardware
      1 /*
      2  * Copyright (C) 2013-2018 The Android Open Source Project
      3  *
      4  * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
      5  * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
      6  * You may obtain a copy of the License at
      7  *
      8  *      http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
      9  *
     10  * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
     11  * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
     12  * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
     13  * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
     14  * limitations under the License.
     15  */
     16 
     17 #ifndef ANDROID_INCLUDE_CAMERA3_H
     18 #define ANDROID_INCLUDE_CAMERA3_H
     19 
     20 #include <system/camera_metadata.h>
     21 #include "camera_common.h"
     22 
     23 /**
     24  * Camera device HAL 3.5[ CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_5 ]
     25  *
     26  * This is the current recommended version of the camera device HAL.
     27  *
     28  * Supports the android.hardware.Camera API, and as of v3.2, the
     29  * android.hardware.camera2 API as LIMITED or above hardware level.
     30  *
     31  * Camera devices that support this version of the HAL must return
     32  * CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_5 in camera_device_t.common.version and in
     33  * camera_info_t.device_version (from camera_module_t.get_camera_info).
     34  *
     35  * CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_3 and above:
     36  *    Camera modules that may contain version 3.3 or above devices must
     37  *    implement at least version 2.2 of the camera module interface (as defined
     38  *    by camera_module_t.common.module_api_version).
     39  *
     40  * CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_2:
     41  *    Camera modules that may contain version 3.2 devices must implement at
     42  *    least version 2.2 of the camera module interface (as defined by
     43  *    camera_module_t.common.module_api_version).
     44  *
     45  * <= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_1:
     46  *    Camera modules that may contain version 3.1 (or 3.0) devices must
     47  *    implement at least version 2.0 of the camera module interface
     48  *    (as defined by camera_module_t.common.module_api_version).
     49  *
     50  * See camera_common.h for more versioning details.
     51  *
     52  * Documentation index:
     53  *   S1. Version history
     54  *   S2. Startup and operation sequencing
     55  *   S3. Operational modes
     56  *   S4. 3A modes and state machines
     57  *   S5. Cropping
     58  *   S6. Error management
     59  *   S7. Key Performance Indicator (KPI) glossary
     60  *   S8. Sample Use Cases
     61  *   S9. Notes on Controls and Metadata
     62  *   S10. Reprocessing flow and controls
     63  */
     64 
     65 /**
     66  * S1. Version history:
     67  *
     68  * 1.0: Initial Android camera HAL (Android 4.0) [camera.h]:
     69  *
     70  *   - Converted from C++ CameraHardwareInterface abstraction layer.
     71  *
     72  *   - Supports android.hardware.Camera API.
     73  *
     74  * 2.0: Initial release of expanded-capability HAL (Android 4.2) [camera2.h]:
     75  *
     76  *   - Sufficient for implementing existing android.hardware.Camera API.
     77  *
     78  *   - Allows for ZSL queue in camera service layer
     79  *
     80  *   - Not tested for any new features such manual capture control, Bayer RAW
     81  *     capture, reprocessing of RAW data.
     82  *
     83  * 3.0: First revision of expanded-capability HAL:
     84  *
     85  *   - Major version change since the ABI is completely different. No change to
     86  *     the required hardware capabilities or operational model from 2.0.
     87  *
     88  *   - Reworked input request and stream queue interfaces: Framework calls into
     89  *     HAL with next request and stream buffers already dequeued. Sync framework
     90  *     support is included, necessary for efficient implementations.
     91  *
     92  *   - Moved triggers into requests, most notifications into results.
     93  *
     94  *   - Consolidated all callbacks into framework into one structure, and all
     95  *     setup methods into a single initialize() call.
     96  *
     97  *   - Made stream configuration into a single call to simplify stream
     98  *     management. Bidirectional streams replace STREAM_FROM_STREAM construct.
     99  *
    100  *   - Limited mode semantics for older/limited hardware devices.
    101  *
    102  * 3.1: Minor revision of expanded-capability HAL:
    103  *
    104  *   - configure_streams passes consumer usage flags to the HAL.
    105  *
    106  *   - flush call to drop all in-flight requests/buffers as fast as possible.
    107  *
    108  * 3.2: Minor revision of expanded-capability HAL:
    109  *
    110  *   - Deprecates get_metadata_vendor_tag_ops.  Please use get_vendor_tag_ops
    111  *     in camera_common.h instead.
    112  *
    113  *   - register_stream_buffers deprecated. All gralloc buffers provided
    114  *     by framework to HAL in process_capture_request may be new at any time.
    115  *
    116  *   - add partial result support. process_capture_result may be called
    117  *     multiple times with a subset of the available result before the full
    118  *     result is available.
    119  *
    120  *   - add manual template to camera3_request_template. The applications may
    121  *     use this template to control the capture settings directly.
    122  *
    123  *   - Rework the bidirectional and input stream specifications.
    124  *
    125  *   - change the input buffer return path. The buffer is returned in
    126  *     process_capture_result instead of process_capture_request.
    127  *
    128  * 3.3: Minor revision of expanded-capability HAL:
    129  *
    130  *   - OPAQUE and YUV reprocessing API updates.
    131  *
    132  *   - Basic support for depth output buffers.
    133  *
    134  *   - Addition of data_space field to camera3_stream_t.
    135  *
    136  *   - Addition of rotation field to camera3_stream_t.
    137  *
    138  *   - Addition of camera3 stream configuration operation mode to camera3_stream_configuration_t
    139  *
    140  * 3.4: Minor additions to supported metadata and changes to data_space support
    141  *
    142  *   - Add ANDROID_SENSOR_OPAQUE_RAW_SIZE static metadata as mandatory if
    143  *     RAW_OPAQUE format is supported.
    144  *
    145  *   - Add ANDROID_CONTROL_POST_RAW_SENSITIVITY_BOOST_RANGE static metadata as
    146  *     mandatory if any RAW format is supported
    147  *
    148  *   - Switch camera3_stream_t data_space field to a more flexible definition,
    149  *     using the version 0 definition of dataspace encoding.
    150  *
    151  *   - General metadata additions which are available to use for HALv3.2 or
    152  *     newer:
    153  *     - ANDROID_INFO_SUPPORTED_HARDWARE_LEVEL_3
    154  *     - ANDROID_CONTROL_POST_RAW_SENSITIVITY_BOOST
    155  *     - ANDROID_CONTROL_POST_RAW_SENSITIVITY_BOOST_RANGE
    156  *     - ANDROID_SENSOR_DYNAMIC_BLACK_LEVEL
    157  *     - ANDROID_SENSOR_DYNAMIC_WHITE_LEVEL
    158  *     - ANDROID_SENSOR_OPAQUE_RAW_SIZE
    159  *     - ANDROID_SENSOR_OPTICAL_BLACK_REGIONS
    160  *
    161  * 3.5: Minor revisions to support session parameters and logical multi camera:
    162  *
    163  *   - Add ANDROID_REQUEST_AVAILABLE_SESSION_KEYS static metadata, which is
    164  *     optional for implementations that want to support session parameters. If support is
    165  *     needed, then Hal should populate the list with all available capture request keys
    166  *     that can cause severe processing delays when modified by client. Typical examples
    167  *     include parameters that require time-consuming HW re-configuration or internal camera
    168  *     pipeline update.
    169  *
    170  *   - Add a session parameter field to camera3_stream_configuration which can be populated
    171  *     by clients with initial values for the keys found in ANDROID_REQUEST_AVAILABLE_SESSION_KEYS.
    172  *
    173  *   - Metadata additions for logical multi camera capability:
    174  *     - ANDROID_REQUEST_AVAILABLE_CAPABILITIES_LOGICAL_MULTI_CAMERA
    175  *     - ANDROID_LOGICAL_MULTI_CAMERA_PHYSICAL_IDS
    176  *     - ANDROID_LOGICAL_MULTI_CAMERA_SYNC_TYPE
    177  *
    178  *   - Add physical camera id field in camera3_stream, so that for a logical
    179  *     multi camera, the application has the option to specify which physical camera
    180  *     a particular stream is configured on.
    181  *
    182  *   - Add physical camera id and settings field in camera3_capture_request, so that
    183  *     for a logical multi camera, the application has the option to specify individual
    184  *     settings for a particular physical device.
    185  *
    186  */
    187 
    188 /**
    189  * S2. Startup and general expected operation sequence:
    190  *
    191  * 1. Framework calls camera_module_t->common.open(), which returns a
    192  *    hardware_device_t structure.
    193  *
    194  * 2. Framework inspects the hardware_device_t->version field, and instantiates
    195  *    the appropriate handler for that version of the camera hardware device. In
    196  *    case the version is CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_0, the device is cast to
    197  *    a camera3_device_t.
    198  *
    199  * 3. Framework calls camera3_device_t->ops->initialize() with the framework
    200  *    callback function pointers. This will only be called this one time after
    201  *    open(), before any other functions in the ops structure are called.
    202  *
    203  * 4. The framework calls camera3_device_t->ops->configure_streams() with a list
    204  *    of input/output streams to the HAL device.
    205  *
    206  * 5. <= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_1:
    207  *
    208  *    The framework allocates gralloc buffers and calls
    209  *    camera3_device_t->ops->register_stream_buffers() for at least one of the
    210  *    output streams listed in configure_streams. The same stream is registered
    211  *    only once.
    212  *
    213  *    >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_2:
    214  *
    215  *    camera3_device_t->ops->register_stream_buffers() is not called and must
    216  *    be NULL.
    217  *
    218  * 6. The framework requests default settings for some number of use cases with
    219  *    calls to camera3_device_t->ops->construct_default_request_settings(). This
    220  *    may occur any time after step 3.
    221  *
    222  * 7. The framework constructs and sends the first capture request to the HAL,
    223  *    with settings based on one of the sets of default settings, and with at
    224  *    least one output stream, which has been registered earlier by the
    225  *    framework. This is sent to the HAL with
    226  *    camera3_device_t->ops->process_capture_request(). The HAL must block the
    227  *    return of this call until it is ready for the next request to be sent.
    228  *
    229  *    >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_2:
    230  *
    231  *    The buffer_handle_t provided in the camera3_stream_buffer_t array
    232  *    in the camera3_capture_request_t may be new and never-before-seen
    233  *    by the HAL on any given new request.
    234  *
    235  * 8. The framework continues to submit requests, and call
    236  *    construct_default_request_settings to get default settings buffers for
    237  *    other use cases.
    238  *
    239  *    <= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_1:
    240  *
    241  *    The framework may call register_stream_buffers() at this time for
    242  *    not-yet-registered streams.
    243  *
    244  * 9. When the capture of a request begins (sensor starts exposing for the
    245  *    capture) or processing a reprocess request begins, the HAL
    246  *    calls camera3_callback_ops_t->notify() with the SHUTTER event, including
    247  *    the frame number and the timestamp for start of exposure. For a reprocess
    248  *    request, the timestamp must be the start of exposure of the input image
    249  *    which can be looked up with android.sensor.timestamp from
    250  *    camera3_capture_request_t.settings when process_capture_request() is
    251  *    called.
    252  *
    253  *    <= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_1:
    254  *
    255  *    This notify call must be made before the first call to
    256  *    process_capture_result() for that frame number.
    257  *
    258  *    >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_2:
    259  *
    260  *    The camera3_callback_ops_t->notify() call with the SHUTTER event should
    261  *    be made as early as possible since the framework will be unable to
    262  *    deliver gralloc buffers to the application layer (for that frame) until
    263  *    it has a valid timestamp for the start of exposure (or the input image's
    264  *    start of exposure for a reprocess request).
    265  *
    266  *    Both partial metadata results and the gralloc buffers may be sent to the
    267  *    framework at any time before or after the SHUTTER event.
    268  *
    269  * 10. After some pipeline delay, the HAL begins to return completed captures to
    270  *    the framework with camera3_callback_ops_t->process_capture_result(). These
    271  *    are returned in the same order as the requests were submitted. Multiple
    272  *    requests can be in flight at once, depending on the pipeline depth of the
    273  *    camera HAL device.
    274  *
    275  *    >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_2:
    276  *
    277  *    Once a buffer is returned by process_capture_result as part of the
    278  *    camera3_stream_buffer_t array, and the fence specified by release_fence
    279  *    has been signaled (this is a no-op for -1 fences), the ownership of that
    280  *    buffer is considered to be transferred back to the framework. After that,
    281  *    the HAL must no longer retain that particular buffer, and the
    282  *    framework may clean up the memory for it immediately.
    283  *
    284  *    process_capture_result may be called multiple times for a single frame,
    285  *    each time with a new disjoint piece of metadata and/or set of gralloc
    286  *    buffers. The framework will accumulate these partial metadata results
    287  *    into one result.
    288  *
    289  *    In particular, it is legal for a process_capture_result to be called
    290  *    simultaneously for both a frame N and a frame N+1 as long as the
    291  *    above rule holds for gralloc buffers (both input and output).
    292  *
    293  * 11. After some time, the framework may stop submitting new requests, wait for
    294  *    the existing captures to complete (all buffers filled, all results
    295  *    returned), and then call configure_streams() again. This resets the camera
    296  *    hardware and pipeline for a new set of input/output streams. Some streams
    297  *    may be reused from the previous configuration; if these streams' buffers
    298  *    had already been registered with the HAL, they will not be registered
    299  *    again. The framework then continues from step 7, if at least one
    300  *    registered output stream remains (otherwise, step 5 is required first).
    301  *
    302  * 12. Alternatively, the framework may call camera3_device_t->common->close()
    303  *    to end the camera session. This may be called at any time when no other
    304  *    calls from the framework are active, although the call may block until all
    305  *    in-flight captures have completed (all results returned, all buffers
    306  *    filled). After the close call returns, no more calls to the
    307  *    camera3_callback_ops_t functions are allowed from the HAL. Once the
    308  *    close() call is underway, the framework may not call any other HAL device
    309  *    functions.
    310  *
    311  * 13. In case of an error or other asynchronous event, the HAL must call
    312  *    camera3_callback_ops_t->notify() with the appropriate error/event
    313  *    message. After returning from a fatal device-wide error notification, the
    314  *    HAL should act as if close() had been called on it. However, the HAL must
    315  *    either cancel or complete all outstanding captures before calling
    316  *    notify(), so that once notify() is called with a fatal error, the
    317  *    framework will not receive further callbacks from the device. Methods
    318  *    besides close() should return -ENODEV or NULL after the notify() method
    319  *    returns from a fatal error message.
    320  */
    321 
    322 /**
    323  * S3. Operational modes:
    324  *
    325  * The camera 3 HAL device can implement one of two possible operational modes;
    326  * limited and full. Full support is expected from new higher-end
    327  * devices. Limited mode has hardware requirements roughly in line with those
    328  * for a camera HAL device v1 implementation, and is expected from older or
    329  * inexpensive devices. Full is a strict superset of limited, and they share the
    330  * same essential operational flow, as documented above.
    331  *
    332  * The HAL must indicate its level of support with the
    333  * android.info.supportedHardwareLevel static metadata entry, with 0 indicating
    334  * limited mode, and 1 indicating full mode support.
    335  *
    336  * Roughly speaking, limited-mode devices do not allow for application control
    337  * of capture settings (3A control only), high-rate capture of high-resolution
    338  * images, raw sensor readout, or support for YUV output streams above maximum
    339  * recording resolution (JPEG only for large images).
    340  *
    341  * ** Details of limited mode behavior:
    342  *
    343  * - Limited-mode devices do not need to implement accurate synchronization
    344  *   between capture request settings and the actual image data
    345  *   captured. Instead, changes to settings may take effect some time in the
    346  *   future, and possibly not for the same output frame for each settings
    347  *   entry. Rapid changes in settings may result in some settings never being
    348  *   used for a capture. However, captures that include high-resolution output
    349  *   buffers ( > 1080p ) have to use the settings as specified (but see below
    350  *   for processing rate).
    351  *
    352  * - Limited-mode devices do not need to support most of the
    353  *   settings/result/static info metadata. Specifically, only the following settings
    354  *   are expected to be consumed or produced by a limited-mode HAL device:
    355  *
    356  *   android.control.aeAntibandingMode (controls and dynamic)
    357  *   android.control.aeExposureCompensation (controls and dynamic)
    358  *   android.control.aeLock (controls and dynamic)
    359  *   android.control.aeMode (controls and dynamic)
    360  *   android.control.aeRegions (controls and dynamic)
    361  *   android.control.aeTargetFpsRange (controls and dynamic)
    362  *   android.control.aePrecaptureTrigger (controls and dynamic)
    363  *   android.control.afMode (controls and dynamic)
    364  *   android.control.afRegions (controls and dynamic)
    365  *   android.control.awbLock (controls and dynamic)
    366  *   android.control.awbMode (controls and dynamic)
    367  *   android.control.awbRegions (controls and dynamic)
    368  *   android.control.captureIntent (controls and dynamic)
    369  *   android.control.effectMode (controls and dynamic)
    370  *   android.control.mode (controls and dynamic)
    371  *   android.control.sceneMode (controls and dynamic)
    372  *   android.control.videoStabilizationMode (controls and dynamic)
    373  *   android.control.aeAvailableAntibandingModes (static)
    374  *   android.control.aeAvailableModes (static)
    375  *   android.control.aeAvailableTargetFpsRanges (static)
    376  *   android.control.aeCompensationRange (static)
    377  *   android.control.aeCompensationStep (static)
    378  *   android.control.afAvailableModes (static)
    379  *   android.control.availableEffects (static)
    380  *   android.control.availableSceneModes (static)
    381  *   android.control.availableVideoStabilizationModes (static)
    382  *   android.control.awbAvailableModes (static)
    383  *   android.control.maxRegions (static)
    384  *   android.control.sceneModeOverrides (static)
    385  *   android.control.aeState (dynamic)
    386  *   android.control.afState (dynamic)
    387  *   android.control.awbState (dynamic)
    388  *
    389  *   android.flash.mode (controls and dynamic)
    390  *   android.flash.info.available (static)
    391  *
    392  *   android.info.supportedHardwareLevel (static)
    393  *
    394  *   android.jpeg.gpsCoordinates (controls and dynamic)
    395  *   android.jpeg.gpsProcessingMethod (controls and dynamic)
    396  *   android.jpeg.gpsTimestamp (controls and dynamic)
    397  *   android.jpeg.orientation (controls and dynamic)
    398  *   android.jpeg.quality (controls and dynamic)
    399  *   android.jpeg.thumbnailQuality (controls and dynamic)
    400  *   android.jpeg.thumbnailSize (controls and dynamic)
    401  *   android.jpeg.availableThumbnailSizes (static)
    402  *   android.jpeg.maxSize (static)
    403  *
    404  *   android.lens.info.minimumFocusDistance (static)
    405  *
    406  *   android.request.id (controls and dynamic)
    407  *
    408  *   android.scaler.cropRegion (controls and dynamic)
    409  *   android.scaler.availableStreamConfigurations (static)
    410  *   android.scaler.availableMinFrameDurations (static)
    411  *   android.scaler.availableStallDurations (static)
    412  *   android.scaler.availableMaxDigitalZoom (static)
    413  *   android.scaler.maxDigitalZoom (static)
    414  *   android.scaler.croppingType (static)
    415  *
    416  *   android.sensor.orientation (static)
    417  *   android.sensor.timestamp (dynamic)
    418  *
    419  *   android.statistics.faceDetectMode (controls and dynamic)
    420  *   android.statistics.info.availableFaceDetectModes (static)
    421  *   android.statistics.faceIds (dynamic)
    422  *   android.statistics.faceLandmarks (dynamic)
    423  *   android.statistics.faceRectangles (dynamic)
    424  *   android.statistics.faceScores (dynamic)
    425  *
    426  *   android.sync.frameNumber (dynamic)
    427  *   android.sync.maxLatency (static)
    428  *
    429  * - Captures in limited mode that include high-resolution (> 1080p) output
    430  *   buffers may block in process_capture_request() until all the output buffers
    431  *   have been filled. A full-mode HAL device must process sequences of
    432  *   high-resolution requests at the rate indicated in the static metadata for
    433  *   that pixel format. The HAL must still call process_capture_result() to
    434  *   provide the output; the framework must simply be prepared for
    435  *   process_capture_request() to block until after process_capture_result() for
    436  *   that request completes for high-resolution captures for limited-mode
    437  *   devices.
    438  *
    439  * - Full-mode devices must support below additional capabilities:
    440  *   - 30fps at maximum resolution is preferred, more than 20fps is required.
    441  *   - Per frame control (android.sync.maxLatency == PER_FRAME_CONTROL).
    442  *   - Sensor manual control metadata. See MANUAL_SENSOR defined in
    443  *     android.request.availableCapabilities.
    444  *   - Post-processing manual control metadata. See MANUAL_POST_PROCESSING defined
    445  *     in android.request.availableCapabilities.
    446  *
    447  */
    448 
    449 /**
    450  * S4. 3A modes and state machines:
    451  *
    452  * While the actual 3A algorithms are up to the HAL implementation, a high-level
    453  * state machine description is defined by the HAL interface, to allow the HAL
    454  * device and the framework to communicate about the current state of 3A, and to
    455  * trigger 3A events.
    456  *
    457  * When the device is opened, all the individual 3A states must be
    458  * STATE_INACTIVE. Stream configuration does not reset 3A. For example, locked
    459  * focus must be maintained across the configure() call.
    460  *
    461  * Triggering a 3A action involves simply setting the relevant trigger entry in
    462  * the settings for the next request to indicate start of trigger. For example,
    463  * the trigger for starting an autofocus scan is setting the entry
    464  * ANDROID_CONTROL_AF_TRIGGER to ANDROID_CONTROL_AF_TRIGGER_START for one
    465  * request, and cancelling an autofocus scan is triggered by setting
    466  * ANDROID_CONTROL_AF_TRIGGER to ANDROID_CONTRL_AF_TRIGGER_CANCEL. Otherwise,
    467  * the entry will not exist, or be set to ANDROID_CONTROL_AF_TRIGGER_IDLE. Each
    468  * request with a trigger entry set to a non-IDLE value will be treated as an
    469  * independent triggering event.
    470  *
    471  * At the top level, 3A is controlled by the ANDROID_CONTROL_MODE setting, which
    472  * selects between no 3A (ANDROID_CONTROL_MODE_OFF), normal AUTO mode
    473  * (ANDROID_CONTROL_MODE_AUTO), and using the scene mode setting
    474  * (ANDROID_CONTROL_USE_SCENE_MODE).
    475  *
    476  * - In OFF mode, each of the individual AE/AF/AWB modes are effectively OFF,
    477  *   and none of the capture controls may be overridden by the 3A routines.
    478  *
    479  * - In AUTO mode, Auto-focus, auto-exposure, and auto-whitebalance all run
    480  *   their own independent algorithms, and have their own mode, state, and
    481  *   trigger metadata entries, as listed in the next section.
    482  *
    483  * - In USE_SCENE_MODE, the value of the ANDROID_CONTROL_SCENE_MODE entry must
    484  *   be used to determine the behavior of 3A routines. In SCENE_MODEs other than
    485  *   FACE_PRIORITY, the HAL must override the values of
    486  *   ANDROId_CONTROL_AE/AWB/AF_MODE to be the mode it prefers for the selected
    487  *   SCENE_MODE. For example, the HAL may prefer SCENE_MODE_NIGHT to use
    488  *   CONTINUOUS_FOCUS AF mode. Any user selection of AE/AWB/AF_MODE when scene
    489  *   must be ignored for these scene modes.
    490  *
    491  * - For SCENE_MODE_FACE_PRIORITY, the AE/AWB/AF_MODE controls work as in
    492  *   ANDROID_CONTROL_MODE_AUTO, but the 3A routines must bias toward metering
    493  *   and focusing on any detected faces in the scene.
    494  *
    495  * S4.1. Auto-focus settings and result entries:
    496  *
    497  *  Main metadata entries:
    498  *
    499  *   ANDROID_CONTROL_AF_MODE: Control for selecting the current autofocus
    500  *      mode. Set by the framework in the request settings.
    501  *
    502  *     AF_MODE_OFF: AF is disabled; the framework/app directly controls lens
    503  *         position.
    504  *
    505  *     AF_MODE_AUTO: Single-sweep autofocus. No lens movement unless AF is
    506  *         triggered.
    507  *
    508  *     AF_MODE_MACRO: Single-sweep up-close autofocus. No lens movement unless
    509  *         AF is triggered.
    510  *
    511  *     AF_MODE_CONTINUOUS_VIDEO: Smooth continuous focusing, for recording
    512  *         video. Triggering immediately locks focus in current
    513  *         position. Canceling resumes cotinuous focusing.
    514  *
    515  *     AF_MODE_CONTINUOUS_PICTURE: Fast continuous focusing, for
    516  *        zero-shutter-lag still capture. Triggering locks focus once currently
    517  *        active sweep concludes. Canceling resumes continuous focusing.
    518  *
    519  *     AF_MODE_EDOF: Advanced extended depth of field focusing. There is no
    520  *        autofocus scan, so triggering one or canceling one has no effect.
    521  *        Images are focused automatically by the HAL.
    522  *
    523  *   ANDROID_CONTROL_AF_STATE: Dynamic metadata describing the current AF
    524  *       algorithm state, reported by the HAL in the result metadata.
    525  *
    526  *     AF_STATE_INACTIVE: No focusing has been done, or algorithm was
    527  *        reset. Lens is not moving. Always the state for MODE_OFF or MODE_EDOF.
    528  *        When the device is opened, it must start in this state.
    529  *
    530  *     AF_STATE_PASSIVE_SCAN: A continuous focus algorithm is currently scanning
    531  *        for good focus. The lens is moving.
    532  *
    533  *     AF_STATE_PASSIVE_FOCUSED: A continuous focus algorithm believes it is
    534  *        well focused. The lens is not moving. The HAL may spontaneously leave
    535  *        this state.
    536  *
    537  *     AF_STATE_PASSIVE_UNFOCUSED: A continuous focus algorithm believes it is
    538  *        not well focused. The lens is not moving. The HAL may spontaneously
    539  *        leave this state.
    540  *
    541  *     AF_STATE_ACTIVE_SCAN: A scan triggered by the user is underway.
    542  *
    543  *     AF_STATE_FOCUSED_LOCKED: The AF algorithm believes it is focused. The
    544  *        lens is not moving.
    545  *
    546  *     AF_STATE_NOT_FOCUSED_LOCKED: The AF algorithm has been unable to
    547  *        focus. The lens is not moving.
    548  *
    549  *   ANDROID_CONTROL_AF_TRIGGER: Control for starting an autofocus scan, the
    550  *       meaning of which is mode- and state- dependent. Set by the framework in
    551  *       the request settings.
    552  *
    553  *     AF_TRIGGER_IDLE: No current trigger.
    554  *
    555  *     AF_TRIGGER_START: Trigger start of AF scan. Effect is mode and state
    556  *         dependent.
    557  *
    558  *     AF_TRIGGER_CANCEL: Cancel current AF scan if any, and reset algorithm to
    559  *         default.
    560  *
    561  *  Additional metadata entries:
    562  *
    563  *   ANDROID_CONTROL_AF_REGIONS: Control for selecting the regions of the FOV
    564  *       that should be used to determine good focus. This applies to all AF
    565  *       modes that scan for focus. Set by the framework in the request
    566  *       settings.
    567  *
    568  * S4.2. Auto-exposure settings and result entries:
    569  *
    570  *  Main metadata entries:
    571  *
    572  *   ANDROID_CONTROL_AE_MODE: Control for selecting the current auto-exposure
    573  *       mode. Set by the framework in the request settings.
    574  *
    575  *     AE_MODE_OFF: Autoexposure is disabled; the user controls exposure, gain,
    576  *         frame duration, and flash.
    577  *
    578  *     AE_MODE_ON: Standard autoexposure, with flash control disabled. User may
    579  *         set flash to fire or to torch mode.
    580  *
    581  *     AE_MODE_ON_AUTO_FLASH: Standard autoexposure, with flash on at HAL's
    582  *         discretion for precapture and still capture. User control of flash
    583  *         disabled.
    584  *
    585  *     AE_MODE_ON_ALWAYS_FLASH: Standard autoexposure, with flash always fired
    586  *         for capture, and at HAL's discretion for precapture.. User control of
    587  *         flash disabled.
    588  *
    589  *     AE_MODE_ON_AUTO_FLASH_REDEYE: Standard autoexposure, with flash on at
    590  *         HAL's discretion for precapture and still capture. Use a flash burst
    591  *         at end of precapture sequence to reduce redeye in the final
    592  *         picture. User control of flash disabled.
    593  *
    594  *   ANDROID_CONTROL_AE_STATE: Dynamic metadata describing the current AE
    595  *       algorithm state, reported by the HAL in the result metadata.
    596  *
    597  *     AE_STATE_INACTIVE: Initial AE state after mode switch. When the device is
    598  *         opened, it must start in this state.
    599  *
    600  *     AE_STATE_SEARCHING: AE is not converged to a good value, and is adjusting
    601  *         exposure parameters.
    602  *
    603  *     AE_STATE_CONVERGED: AE has found good exposure values for the current
    604  *         scene, and the exposure parameters are not changing. HAL may
    605  *         spontaneously leave this state to search for better solution.
    606  *
    607  *     AE_STATE_LOCKED: AE has been locked with the AE_LOCK control. Exposure
    608  *         values are not changing.
    609  *
    610  *     AE_STATE_FLASH_REQUIRED: The HAL has converged exposure, but believes
    611  *         flash is required for a sufficiently bright picture. Used for
    612  *         determining if a zero-shutter-lag frame can be used.
    613  *
    614  *     AE_STATE_PRECAPTURE: The HAL is in the middle of a precapture
    615  *         sequence. Depending on AE mode, this mode may involve firing the
    616  *         flash for metering, or a burst of flash pulses for redeye reduction.
    617  *
    618  *   ANDROID_CONTROL_AE_PRECAPTURE_TRIGGER: Control for starting a metering
    619  *       sequence before capturing a high-quality image. Set by the framework in
    620  *       the request settings.
    621  *
    622  *      PRECAPTURE_TRIGGER_IDLE: No current trigger.
    623  *
    624  *      PRECAPTURE_TRIGGER_START: Start a precapture sequence. The HAL should
    625  *         use the subsequent requests to measure good exposure/white balance
    626  *         for an upcoming high-resolution capture.
    627  *
    628  *  Additional metadata entries:
    629  *
    630  *   ANDROID_CONTROL_AE_LOCK: Control for locking AE controls to their current
    631  *       values
    632  *
    633  *   ANDROID_CONTROL_AE_EXPOSURE_COMPENSATION: Control for adjusting AE
    634  *       algorithm target brightness point.
    635  *
    636  *   ANDROID_CONTROL_AE_TARGET_FPS_RANGE: Control for selecting the target frame
    637  *       rate range for the AE algorithm. The AE routine cannot change the frame
    638  *       rate to be outside these bounds.
    639  *
    640  *   ANDROID_CONTROL_AE_REGIONS: Control for selecting the regions of the FOV
    641  *       that should be used to determine good exposure levels. This applies to
    642  *       all AE modes besides OFF.
    643  *
    644  * S4.3. Auto-whitebalance settings and result entries:
    645  *
    646  *  Main metadata entries:
    647  *
    648  *   ANDROID_CONTROL_AWB_MODE: Control for selecting the current white-balance
    649  *       mode.
    650  *
    651  *     AWB_MODE_OFF: Auto-whitebalance is disabled. User controls color matrix.
    652  *
    653  *     AWB_MODE_AUTO: Automatic white balance is enabled; 3A controls color
    654  *        transform, possibly using more complex transforms than a simple
    655  *        matrix.
    656  *
    657  *     AWB_MODE_INCANDESCENT: Fixed white balance settings good for indoor
    658  *        incandescent (tungsten) lighting, roughly 2700K.
    659  *
    660  *     AWB_MODE_FLUORESCENT: Fixed white balance settings good for fluorescent
    661  *        lighting, roughly 5000K.
    662  *
    663  *     AWB_MODE_WARM_FLUORESCENT: Fixed white balance settings good for
    664  *        fluorescent lighting, roughly 3000K.
    665  *
    666  *     AWB_MODE_DAYLIGHT: Fixed white balance settings good for daylight,
    667  *        roughly 5500K.
    668  *
    669  *     AWB_MODE_CLOUDY_DAYLIGHT: Fixed white balance settings good for clouded
    670  *        daylight, roughly 6500K.
    671  *
    672  *     AWB_MODE_TWILIGHT: Fixed white balance settings good for
    673  *        near-sunset/sunrise, roughly 15000K.
    674  *
    675  *     AWB_MODE_SHADE: Fixed white balance settings good for areas indirectly
    676  *        lit by the sun, roughly 7500K.
    677  *
    678  *   ANDROID_CONTROL_AWB_STATE: Dynamic metadata describing the current AWB
    679  *       algorithm state, reported by the HAL in the result metadata.
    680  *
    681  *     AWB_STATE_INACTIVE: Initial AWB state after mode switch. When the device
    682  *         is opened, it must start in this state.
    683  *
    684  *     AWB_STATE_SEARCHING: AWB is not converged to a good value, and is
    685  *         changing color adjustment parameters.
    686  *
    687  *     AWB_STATE_CONVERGED: AWB has found good color adjustment values for the
    688  *         current scene, and the parameters are not changing. HAL may
    689  *         spontaneously leave this state to search for better solution.
    690  *
    691  *     AWB_STATE_LOCKED: AWB has been locked with the AWB_LOCK control. Color
    692  *         adjustment values are not changing.
    693  *
    694  *  Additional metadata entries:
    695  *
    696  *   ANDROID_CONTROL_AWB_LOCK: Control for locking AWB color adjustments to
    697  *       their current values.
    698  *
    699  *   ANDROID_CONTROL_AWB_REGIONS: Control for selecting the regions of the FOV
    700  *       that should be used to determine good color balance. This applies only
    701  *       to auto-WB mode.
    702  *
    703  * S4.4. General state machine transition notes
    704  *
    705  *   Switching between AF, AE, or AWB modes always resets the algorithm's state
    706  *   to INACTIVE.  Similarly, switching between CONTROL_MODE or
    707  *   CONTROL_SCENE_MODE if CONTROL_MODE == USE_SCENE_MODE resets all the
    708  *   algorithm states to INACTIVE.
    709  *
    710  *   The tables below are per-mode.
    711  *
    712  * S4.5. AF state machines
    713  *
    714  *                       when enabling AF or changing AF mode
    715  *| state              | trans. cause  | new state          | notes            |
    716  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    717  *| Any                | AF mode change| INACTIVE           |                  |
    718  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    719  *
    720  *                            mode = AF_MODE_OFF or AF_MODE_EDOF
    721  *| state              | trans. cause  | new state          | notes            |
    722  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    723  *| INACTIVE           |               | INACTIVE           | Never changes    |
    724  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    725  *
    726  *                            mode = AF_MODE_AUTO or AF_MODE_MACRO
    727  *| state              | trans. cause  | new state          | notes            |
    728  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    729  *| INACTIVE           | AF_TRIGGER    | ACTIVE_SCAN        | Start AF sweep   |
    730  *|                    |               |                    | Lens now moving  |
    731  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    732  *| ACTIVE_SCAN        | AF sweep done | FOCUSED_LOCKED     | If AF successful |
    733  *|                    |               |                    | Lens now locked  |
    734  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    735  *| ACTIVE_SCAN        | AF sweep done | NOT_FOCUSED_LOCKED | If AF successful |
    736  *|                    |               |                    | Lens now locked  |
    737  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    738  *| ACTIVE_SCAN        | AF_CANCEL     | INACTIVE           | Cancel/reset AF  |
    739  *|                    |               |                    | Lens now locked  |
    740  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    741  *| FOCUSED_LOCKED     | AF_CANCEL     | INACTIVE           | Cancel/reset AF  |
    742  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    743  *| FOCUSED_LOCKED     | AF_TRIGGER    | ACTIVE_SCAN        | Start new sweep  |
    744  *|                    |               |                    | Lens now moving  |
    745  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    746  *| NOT_FOCUSED_LOCKED | AF_CANCEL     | INACTIVE           | Cancel/reset AF  |
    747  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    748  *| NOT_FOCUSED_LOCKED | AF_TRIGGER    | ACTIVE_SCAN        | Start new sweep  |
    749  *|                    |               |                    | Lens now moving  |
    750  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    751  *| All states         | mode change   | INACTIVE           |                  |
    752  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    753  *
    754  *                            mode = AF_MODE_CONTINUOUS_VIDEO
    755  *| state              | trans. cause  | new state          | notes            |
    756  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    757  *| INACTIVE           | HAL initiates | PASSIVE_SCAN       | Start AF scan    |
    758  *|                    | new scan      |                    | Lens now moving  |
    759  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    760  *| INACTIVE           | AF_TRIGGER    | NOT_FOCUSED_LOCKED | AF state query   |
    761  *|                    |               |                    | Lens now locked  |
    762  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    763  *| PASSIVE_SCAN       | HAL completes | PASSIVE_FOCUSED    | End AF scan      |
    764  *|                    | current scan  |                    | Lens now locked  |
    765  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    766  *| PASSIVE_SCAN       | HAL fails     | PASSIVE_UNFOCUSED  | End AF scan      |
    767  *|                    | current scan  |                    | Lens now locked  |
    768  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    769  *| PASSIVE_SCAN       | AF_TRIGGER    | FOCUSED_LOCKED     | Immediate trans. |
    770  *|                    |               |                    | if focus is good |
    771  *|                    |               |                    | Lens now locked  |
    772  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    773  *| PASSIVE_SCAN       | AF_TRIGGER    | NOT_FOCUSED_LOCKED | Immediate trans. |
    774  *|                    |               |                    | if focus is bad  |
    775  *|                    |               |                    | Lens now locked  |
    776  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    777  *| PASSIVE_SCAN       | AF_CANCEL     | INACTIVE           | Reset lens       |
    778  *|                    |               |                    | position         |
    779  *|                    |               |                    | Lens now locked  |
    780  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    781  *| PASSIVE_FOCUSED    | HAL initiates | PASSIVE_SCAN       | Start AF scan    |
    782  *|                    | new scan      |                    | Lens now moving  |
    783  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    784  *| PASSIVE_UNFOCUSED  | HAL initiates | PASSIVE_SCAN       | Start AF scan    |
    785  *|                    | new scan      |                    | Lens now moving  |
    786  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    787  *| PASSIVE_FOCUSED    | AF_TRIGGER    | FOCUSED_LOCKED     | Immediate trans. |
    788  *|                    |               |                    | Lens now locked  |
    789  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    790  *| PASSIVE_UNFOCUSED  | AF_TRIGGER    | NOT_FOCUSED_LOCKED | Immediate trans. |
    791  *|                    |               |                    | Lens now locked  |
    792  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    793  *| FOCUSED_LOCKED     | AF_TRIGGER    | FOCUSED_LOCKED     | No effect        |
    794  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    795  *| FOCUSED_LOCKED     | AF_CANCEL     | INACTIVE           | Restart AF scan  |
    796  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    797  *| NOT_FOCUSED_LOCKED | AF_TRIGGER    | NOT_FOCUSED_LOCKED | No effect        |
    798  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    799  *| NOT_FOCUSED_LOCKED | AF_CANCEL     | INACTIVE           | Restart AF scan  |
    800  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    801  *
    802  *                            mode = AF_MODE_CONTINUOUS_PICTURE
    803  *| state              | trans. cause  | new state          | notes            |
    804  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    805  *| INACTIVE           | HAL initiates | PASSIVE_SCAN       | Start AF scan    |
    806  *|                    | new scan      |                    | Lens now moving  |
    807  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    808  *| INACTIVE           | AF_TRIGGER    | NOT_FOCUSED_LOCKED | AF state query   |
    809  *|                    |               |                    | Lens now locked  |
    810  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    811  *| PASSIVE_SCAN       | HAL completes | PASSIVE_FOCUSED    | End AF scan      |
    812  *|                    | current scan  |                    | Lens now locked  |
    813  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    814  *| PASSIVE_SCAN       | HAL fails     | PASSIVE_UNFOCUSED  | End AF scan      |
    815  *|                    | current scan  |                    | Lens now locked  |
    816  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    817  *| PASSIVE_SCAN       | AF_TRIGGER    | FOCUSED_LOCKED     | Eventual trans.  |
    818  *|                    |               |                    | once focus good  |
    819  *|                    |               |                    | Lens now locked  |
    820  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    821  *| PASSIVE_SCAN       | AF_TRIGGER    | NOT_FOCUSED_LOCKED | Eventual trans.  |
    822  *|                    |               |                    | if cannot focus  |
    823  *|                    |               |                    | Lens now locked  |
    824  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    825  *| PASSIVE_SCAN       | AF_CANCEL     | INACTIVE           | Reset lens       |
    826  *|                    |               |                    | position         |
    827  *|                    |               |                    | Lens now locked  |
    828  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    829  *| PASSIVE_FOCUSED    | HAL initiates | PASSIVE_SCAN       | Start AF scan    |
    830  *|                    | new scan      |                    | Lens now moving  |
    831  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    832  *| PASSIVE_UNFOCUSED  | HAL initiates | PASSIVE_SCAN       | Start AF scan    |
    833  *|                    | new scan      |                    | Lens now moving  |
    834  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    835  *| PASSIVE_FOCUSED    | AF_TRIGGER    | FOCUSED_LOCKED     | Immediate trans. |
    836  *|                    |               |                    | Lens now locked  |
    837  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    838  *| PASSIVE_UNFOCUSED  | AF_TRIGGER    | NOT_FOCUSED_LOCKED | Immediate trans. |
    839  *|                    |               |                    | Lens now locked  |
    840  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    841  *| FOCUSED_LOCKED     | AF_TRIGGER    | FOCUSED_LOCKED     | No effect        |
    842  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    843  *| FOCUSED_LOCKED     | AF_CANCEL     | INACTIVE           | Restart AF scan  |
    844  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    845  *| NOT_FOCUSED_LOCKED | AF_TRIGGER    | NOT_FOCUSED_LOCKED | No effect        |
    846  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    847  *| NOT_FOCUSED_LOCKED | AF_CANCEL     | INACTIVE           | Restart AF scan  |
    848  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    849  *
    850  * S4.6. AE and AWB state machines
    851  *
    852  *   The AE and AWB state machines are mostly identical. AE has additional
    853  *   FLASH_REQUIRED and PRECAPTURE states. So rows below that refer to those two
    854  *   states should be ignored for the AWB state machine.
    855  *
    856  *                  when enabling AE/AWB or changing AE/AWB mode
    857  *| state              | trans. cause  | new state          | notes            |
    858  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    859  *| Any                |  mode change  | INACTIVE           |                  |
    860  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    861  *
    862  *                            mode = AE_MODE_OFF / AWB mode not AUTO
    863  *| state              | trans. cause  | new state          | notes            |
    864  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    865  *| INACTIVE           |               | INACTIVE           | AE/AWB disabled  |
    866  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    867  *
    868  *                            mode = AE_MODE_ON_* / AWB_MODE_AUTO
    869  *| state              | trans. cause  | new state          | notes            |
    870  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    871  *| INACTIVE           | HAL initiates | SEARCHING          |                  |
    872  *|                    | AE/AWB scan   |                    |                  |
    873  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    874  *| INACTIVE           | AE/AWB_LOCK   | LOCKED             | values locked    |
    875  *|                    | on            |                    |                  |
    876  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    877  *| SEARCHING          | HAL finishes  | CONVERGED          | good values, not |
    878  *|                    | AE/AWB scan   |                    | changing         |
    879  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    880  *| SEARCHING          | HAL finishes  | FLASH_REQUIRED     | converged but too|
    881  *|                    | AE scan       |                    | dark w/o flash   |
    882  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    883  *| SEARCHING          | AE/AWB_LOCK   | LOCKED             | values locked    |
    884  *|                    | on            |                    |                  |
    885  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    886  *| CONVERGED          | HAL initiates | SEARCHING          | values locked    |
    887  *|                    | AE/AWB scan   |                    |                  |
    888  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    889  *| CONVERGED          | AE/AWB_LOCK   | LOCKED             | values locked    |
    890  *|                    | on            |                    |                  |
    891  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    892  *| FLASH_REQUIRED     | HAL initiates | SEARCHING          | values locked    |
    893  *|                    | AE/AWB scan   |                    |                  |
    894  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    895  *| FLASH_REQUIRED     | AE/AWB_LOCK   | LOCKED             | values locked    |
    896  *|                    | on            |                    |                  |
    897  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    898  *| LOCKED             | AE/AWB_LOCK   | SEARCHING          | values not good  |
    899  *|                    | off           |                    | after unlock     |
    900  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    901  *| LOCKED             | AE/AWB_LOCK   | CONVERGED          | values good      |
    902  *|                    | off           |                    | after unlock     |
    903  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    904  *| LOCKED             | AE_LOCK       | FLASH_REQUIRED     | exposure good,   |
    905  *|                    | off           |                    | but too dark     |
    906  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    907  *| All AE states      | PRECAPTURE_   | PRECAPTURE         | Start precapture |
    908  *|                    | START         |                    | sequence         |
    909  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    910  *| PRECAPTURE         | Sequence done.| CONVERGED          | Ready for high-  |
    911  *|                    | AE_LOCK off   |                    | quality capture  |
    912  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    913  *| PRECAPTURE         | Sequence done.| LOCKED             | Ready for high-  |
    914  *|                    | AE_LOCK on    |                    | quality capture  |
    915  *+--------------------+---------------+--------------------+------------------+
    916  *
    917  */
    918 
    919 /**
    920  * S5. Cropping:
    921  *
    922  * Cropping of the full pixel array (for digital zoom and other use cases where
    923  * a smaller FOV is desirable) is communicated through the
    924  * ANDROID_SCALER_CROP_REGION setting. This is a per-request setting, and can
    925  * change on a per-request basis, which is critical for implementing smooth
    926  * digital zoom.
    927  *
    928  * The region is defined as a rectangle (x, y, width, height), with (x, y)
    929  * describing the top-left corner of the rectangle. The rectangle is defined on
    930  * the coordinate system of the sensor active pixel array, with (0,0) being the
    931  * top-left pixel of the active pixel array. Therefore, the width and height
    932  * cannot be larger than the dimensions reported in the
    933  * ANDROID_SENSOR_ACTIVE_PIXEL_ARRAY static info field. The minimum allowed
    934  * width and height are reported by the HAL through the
    935  * ANDROID_SCALER_MAX_DIGITAL_ZOOM static info field, which describes the
    936  * maximum supported zoom factor. Therefore, the minimum crop region width and
    937  * height are:
    938  *
    939  * {width, height} =
    940  *    { floor(ANDROID_SENSOR_ACTIVE_PIXEL_ARRAY[0] /
    941  *        ANDROID_SCALER_MAX_DIGITAL_ZOOM),
    942  *      floor(ANDROID_SENSOR_ACTIVE_PIXEL_ARRAY[1] /
    943  *        ANDROID_SCALER_MAX_DIGITAL_ZOOM) }
    944  *
    945  * If the crop region needs to fulfill specific requirements (for example, it
    946  * needs to start on even coordinates, and its width/height needs to be even),
    947  * the HAL must do the necessary rounding and write out the final crop region
    948  * used in the output result metadata. Similarly, if the HAL implements video
    949  * stabilization, it must adjust the result crop region to describe the region
    950  * actually included in the output after video stabilization is applied. In
    951  * general, a camera-using application must be able to determine the field of
    952  * view it is receiving based on the crop region, the dimensions of the image
    953  * sensor, and the lens focal length.
    954  *
    955  * It is assumed that the cropping is applied after raw to other color space
    956  * conversion. Raw streams (RAW16 and RAW_OPAQUE) don't have this conversion stage,
    957  * and are not croppable. Therefore, the crop region must be ignored by the HAL
    958  * for raw streams.
    959  *
    960  * Since the crop region applies to all non-raw streams, which may have different aspect
    961  * ratios than the crop region, the exact sensor region used for each stream may
    962  * be smaller than the crop region. Specifically, each stream should maintain
    963  * square pixels and its aspect ratio by minimally further cropping the defined
    964  * crop region. If the stream's aspect ratio is wider than the crop region, the
    965  * stream should be further cropped vertically, and if the stream's aspect ratio
    966  * is narrower than the crop region, the stream should be further cropped
    967  * horizontally.
    968  *
    969  * In all cases, the stream crop must be centered within the full crop region,
    970  * and each stream is only either cropped horizontally or vertical relative to
    971  * the full crop region, never both.
    972  *
    973  * For example, if two streams are defined, a 640x480 stream (4:3 aspect), and a
    974  * 1280x720 stream (16:9 aspect), below demonstrates the expected output regions
    975  * for each stream for a few sample crop regions, on a hypothetical 3 MP (2000 x
    976  * 1500 pixel array) sensor.
    977  *
    978  * Crop region: (500, 375, 1000, 750) (4:3 aspect ratio)
    979  *
    980  *   640x480 stream crop: (500, 375, 1000, 750) (equal to crop region)
    981  *   1280x720 stream crop: (500, 469, 1000, 562) (marked with =)
    982  *
    983  * 0                   1000               2000
    984  * +---------+---------+---------+----------+
    985  * | Active pixel array                     |
    986  * |                                        |
    987  * |                                        |
    988  * +         +-------------------+          + 375
    989  * |         |                   |          |
    990  * |         O===================O          |
    991  * |         I 1280x720 stream   I          |
    992  * +         I                   I          + 750
    993  * |         I                   I          |
    994  * |         O===================O          |
    995  * |         |                   |          |
    996  * +         +-------------------+          + 1125
    997  * |          Crop region, 640x480 stream   |
    998  * |                                        |
    999  * |                                        |
   1000  * +---------+---------+---------+----------+ 1500
   1001  *
   1002  * Crop region: (500, 375, 1333, 750) (16:9 aspect ratio)
   1003  *
   1004  *   640x480 stream crop: (666, 375, 1000, 750) (marked with =)
   1005  *   1280x720 stream crop: (500, 375, 1333, 750) (equal to crop region)
   1006  *
   1007  * 0                   1000               2000
   1008  * +---------+---------+---------+----------+
   1009  * | Active pixel array                     |
   1010  * |                                        |
   1011  * |                                        |
   1012  * +         +---O==================O---+   + 375
   1013  * |         |   I 640x480 stream   I   |   |
   1014  * |         |   I                  I   |   |
   1015  * |         |   I                  I   |   |
   1016  * +         |   I                  I   |   + 750
   1017  * |         |   I                  I   |   |
   1018  * |         |   I                  I   |   |
   1019  * |         |   I                  I   |   |
   1020  * +         +---O==================O---+   + 1125
   1021  * |          Crop region, 1280x720 stream  |
   1022  * |                                        |
   1023  * |                                        |
   1024  * +---------+---------+---------+----------+ 1500
   1025  *
   1026  * Crop region: (500, 375, 750, 750) (1:1 aspect ratio)
   1027  *
   1028  *   640x480 stream crop: (500, 469, 750, 562) (marked with =)
   1029  *   1280x720 stream crop: (500, 543, 750, 414) (marged with #)
   1030  *
   1031  * 0                   1000               2000
   1032  * +---------+---------+---------+----------+
   1033  * | Active pixel array                     |
   1034  * |                                        |
   1035  * |                                        |
   1036  * +         +--------------+               + 375
   1037  * |         O==============O               |
   1038  * |         ################               |
   1039  * |         #              #               |
   1040  * +         #              #               + 750
   1041  * |         #              #               |
   1042  * |         ################ 1280x720      |
   1043  * |         O==============O 640x480       |
   1044  * +         +--------------+               + 1125
   1045  * |          Crop region                   |
   1046  * |                                        |
   1047  * |                                        |
   1048  * +---------+---------+---------+----------+ 1500
   1049  *
   1050  * And a final example, a 1024x1024 square aspect ratio stream instead of the
   1051  * 480p stream:
   1052  *
   1053  * Crop region: (500, 375, 1000, 750) (4:3 aspect ratio)
   1054  *
   1055  *   1024x1024 stream crop: (625, 375, 750, 750) (marked with #)
   1056  *   1280x720 stream crop: (500, 469, 1000, 562) (marked with =)
   1057  *
   1058  * 0                   1000               2000
   1059  * +---------+---------+---------+----------+
   1060  * | Active pixel array                     |
   1061  * |                                        |
   1062  * |              1024x1024 stream          |
   1063  * +         +--###############--+          + 375
   1064  * |         |  #             #  |          |
   1065  * |         O===================O          |
   1066  * |         I 1280x720 stream   I          |
   1067  * +         I                   I          + 750
   1068  * |         I                   I          |
   1069  * |         O===================O          |
   1070  * |         |  #             #  |          |
   1071  * +         +--###############--+          + 1125
   1072  * |          Crop region                   |
   1073  * |                                        |
   1074  * |                                        |
   1075  * +---------+---------+---------+----------+ 1500
   1076  *
   1077  */
   1078 
   1079 /**
   1080  * S6. Error management:
   1081  *
   1082  * Camera HAL device ops functions that have a return value will all return
   1083  * -ENODEV / NULL in case of a serious error. This means the device cannot
   1084  * continue operation, and must be closed by the framework. Once this error is
   1085  * returned by some method, or if notify() is called with ERROR_DEVICE, only
   1086  * the close() method can be called successfully. All other methods will return
   1087  * -ENODEV / NULL.
   1088  *
   1089  * If a device op is called in the wrong sequence, for example if the framework
   1090  * calls configure_streams() is called before initialize(), the device must
   1091  * return -ENOSYS from the call, and do nothing.
   1092  *
   1093  * Transient errors in image capture must be reported through notify() as follows:
   1094  *
   1095  * - The failure of an entire capture to occur must be reported by the HAL by
   1096  *   calling notify() with ERROR_REQUEST. Individual errors for the result
   1097  *   metadata or the output buffers must not be reported in this case.
   1098  *
   1099  * - If the metadata for a capture cannot be produced, but some image buffers
   1100  *   were filled, the HAL must call notify() with ERROR_RESULT.
   1101  *
   1102  * - If an output image buffer could not be filled, but either the metadata was
   1103  *   produced or some other buffers were filled, the HAL must call notify() with
   1104  *   ERROR_BUFFER for each failed buffer.
   1105  *
   1106  * In each of these transient failure cases, the HAL must still call
   1107  * process_capture_result, with valid output and input (if an input buffer was
   1108  * submitted) buffer_handle_t. If the result metadata could not be produced, it
   1109  * should be NULL. If some buffers could not be filled, they must be returned with
   1110  * process_capture_result in the error state, their release fences must be set to
   1111  * the acquire fences passed by the framework, or -1 if they have been waited on by
   1112  * the HAL already.
   1113  *
   1114  * Invalid input arguments result in -EINVAL from the appropriate methods. In
   1115  * that case, the framework must act as if that call had never been made.
   1116  *
   1117  */
   1118 
   1119 /**
   1120  * S7. Key Performance Indicator (KPI) glossary:
   1121  *
   1122  * This includes some critical definitions that are used by KPI metrics.
   1123  *
   1124  * Pipeline Latency:
   1125  *  For a given capture request, the duration from the framework calling
   1126  *  process_capture_request to the HAL sending capture result and all buffers
   1127  *  back by process_capture_result call. To make the Pipeline Latency measure
   1128  *  independent of frame rate, it is measured by frame count.
   1129  *
   1130  *  For example, when frame rate is 30 (fps), the frame duration (time interval
   1131  *  between adjacent frame capture time) is 33 (ms).
   1132  *  If it takes 5 frames for framework to get the result and buffers back for
   1133  *  a given request, then the Pipeline Latency is 5 (frames), instead of
   1134  *  5 x 33 = 165 (ms).
   1135  *
   1136  *  The Pipeline Latency is determined by android.request.pipelineDepth and
   1137  *  android.request.pipelineMaxDepth, see their definitions for more details.
   1138  *
   1139  */
   1140 
   1141 /**
   1142  * S8. Sample Use Cases:
   1143  *
   1144  * This includes some typical use case examples the camera HAL may support.
   1145  *
   1146  * S8.1 Zero Shutter Lag (ZSL) with CAMERA3_STREAM_BIDIRECTIONAL stream.
   1147  *
   1148  *   For this use case, the bidirectional stream will be used by the framework as follows:
   1149  *
   1150  *   1. The framework includes a buffer from this stream as output buffer in a
   1151  *      request as normal.
   1152  *
   1153  *   2. Once the HAL device returns a filled output buffer to the framework,
   1154  *      the framework may do one of two things with the filled buffer:
   1155  *
   1156  *   2. a. The framework uses the filled data, and returns the now-used buffer
   1157  *         to the stream queue for reuse. This behavior exactly matches the
   1158  *         OUTPUT type of stream.
   1159  *
   1160  *   2. b. The framework wants to reprocess the filled data, and uses the
   1161  *         buffer as an input buffer for a request. Once the HAL device has
   1162  *         used the reprocessing buffer, it then returns it to the
   1163  *         framework. The framework then returns the now-used buffer to the
   1164  *         stream queue for reuse.
   1165  *
   1166  *   3. The HAL device will be given the buffer again as an output buffer for
   1167  *        a request at some future point.
   1168  *
   1169  *   For ZSL use case, the pixel format for bidirectional stream will be
   1170  *   HAL_PIXEL_FORMAT_RAW_OPAQUE or HAL_PIXEL_FORMAT_IMPLEMENTATION_DEFINED if it
   1171  *   is listed in android.scaler.availableInputOutputFormatsMap. When
   1172  *   HAL_PIXEL_FORMAT_IMPLEMENTATION_DEFINED is used, the gralloc
   1173  *   usage flags for the consumer endpoint will be set to GRALLOC_USAGE_HW_CAMERA_ZSL.
   1174  *   A configuration stream list that has BIDIRECTIONAL stream used as input, will
   1175  *   usually also have a distinct OUTPUT stream to get the reprocessing data. For example,
   1176  *   for the ZSL use case, the stream list might be configured with the following:
   1177  *
   1178  *     - A HAL_PIXEL_FORMAT_RAW_OPAQUE bidirectional stream is used
   1179  *       as input.
   1180  *     - And a HAL_PIXEL_FORMAT_BLOB (JPEG) output stream.
   1181  *
   1182  * S8.2 ZSL (OPAQUE) reprocessing with CAMERA3_STREAM_INPUT stream.
   1183  *
   1184  * CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_3:
   1185  *   When OPAQUE_REPROCESSING capability is supported by the camera device, the INPUT stream
   1186  *   can be used for application/framework implemented use case like Zero Shutter Lag (ZSL).
   1187  *   This kind of stream will be used by the framework as follows:
   1188  *
   1189  *   1. Application/framework configures an opaque (RAW or YUV based) format output stream that is
   1190  *      used to produce the ZSL output buffers. The stream pixel format will be
   1191  *      HAL_PIXEL_FORMAT_IMPLEMENTATION_DEFINED.
   1192  *
   1193  *   2. Application/framework configures an opaque format input stream that is used to
   1194  *      send the reprocessing ZSL buffers to the HAL. The stream pixel format will
   1195  *      also be HAL_PIXEL_FORMAT_IMPLEMENTATION_DEFINED.
   1196  *
   1197  *   3. Application/framework configures a YUV/JPEG output stream that is used to receive the
   1198  *      reprocessed data. The stream pixel format will be YCbCr_420/HAL_PIXEL_FORMAT_BLOB.
   1199  *
   1200  *   4. Application/framework picks a ZSL buffer from the ZSL output stream when a ZSL capture is
   1201  *      issued by the application, and sends the data back as an input buffer in a
   1202  *      reprocessing request, then sends to the HAL for reprocessing.
   1203  *
   1204  *   5. The HAL sends back the output YUV/JPEG result to framework.
   1205  *
   1206  *   The HAL can select the actual opaque buffer format and configure the ISP pipeline
   1207  *   appropriately based on the HAL_PIXEL_FORMAT_IMPLEMENTATION_DEFINED format and
   1208  *   the gralloc usage flag GRALLOC_USAGE_HW_CAMERA_ZSL.
   1209 
   1210  * S8.3 YUV reprocessing with CAMERA3_STREAM_INPUT stream.
   1211  *
   1212  *   When YUV reprocessing is supported by the HAL, the INPUT stream
   1213  *   can be used for the YUV reprocessing use cases like lucky-shot and image fusion.
   1214  *   This kind of stream will be used by the framework as follows:
   1215  *
   1216  *   1. Application/framework configures an YCbCr_420 format output stream that is
   1217  *      used to produce the output buffers.
   1218  *
   1219  *   2. Application/framework configures an YCbCr_420 format input stream that is used to
   1220  *      send the reprocessing YUV buffers to the HAL.
   1221  *
   1222  *   3. Application/framework configures a YUV/JPEG output stream that is used to receive the
   1223  *      reprocessed data. The stream pixel format will be YCbCr_420/HAL_PIXEL_FORMAT_BLOB.
   1224  *
   1225  *   4. Application/framework processes the output buffers (could be as simple as picking
   1226  *      an output buffer directly) from the output stream when a capture is issued, and sends
   1227  *      the data back as an input buffer in a reprocessing request, then sends to the HAL
   1228  *      for reprocessing.
   1229  *
   1230  *   5. The HAL sends back the output YUV/JPEG result to framework.
   1231  *
   1232  */
   1233 
   1234 /**
   1235  *   S9. Notes on Controls and Metadata
   1236  *
   1237  *   This section contains notes about the interpretation and usage of various metadata tags.
   1238  *
   1239  *   S9.1 HIGH_QUALITY and FAST modes.
   1240  *
   1241  *   Many camera post-processing blocks may be listed as having HIGH_QUALITY,
   1242  *   FAST, and OFF operating modes. These blocks will typically also have an
   1243  *   'available modes' tag representing which of these operating modes are
   1244  *   available on a given device. The general policy regarding implementing
   1245  *   these modes is as follows:
   1246  *
   1247  *   1. Operating mode controls of hardware blocks that cannot be disabled
   1248  *      must not list OFF in their corresponding 'available modes' tags.
   1249  *
   1250  *   2. OFF will always be included in their corresponding 'available modes'
   1251  *      tag if it is possible to disable that hardware block.
   1252  *
   1253  *   3. FAST must always be included in the 'available modes' tags for all
   1254  *      post-processing blocks supported on the device.  If a post-processing
   1255  *      block also has a slower and higher quality operating mode that does
   1256  *      not meet the framerate requirements for FAST mode, HIGH_QUALITY should
   1257  *      be included in the 'available modes' tag to represent this operating
   1258  *      mode.
   1259  */
   1260 
   1261 /**
   1262  *   S10. Reprocessing flow and controls
   1263  *
   1264  *   This section describes the OPAQUE and YUV reprocessing flow and controls. OPAQUE reprocessing
   1265  *   uses an opaque format that is not directly application-visible, and the application can
   1266  *   only select some of the output buffers and send back to HAL for reprocessing, while YUV
   1267  *   reprocessing gives the application opportunity to process the buffers before reprocessing.
   1268  *
   1269  *   S8 gives the stream configurations for the typical reprocessing uses cases,
   1270  *   this section specifies the buffer flow and controls in more details.
   1271  *
   1272  *   S10.1 OPAQUE (typically for ZSL use case) reprocessing flow and controls
   1273  *
   1274  *   For OPAQUE reprocessing (e.g. ZSL) use case, after the application creates the specific
   1275  *   output and input streams, runtime buffer flow and controls are specified as below:
   1276  *
   1277  *   1. Application starts output streaming by sending repeating requests for output
   1278  *      opaque buffers and preview. The buffers are held by an application
   1279  *      maintained circular buffer. The requests are based on CAMERA3_TEMPLATE_ZERO_SHUTTER_LAG
   1280  *      capture template, which should have all necessary settings that guarantee output
   1281  *      frame rate is not slowed down relative to sensor output frame rate.
   1282  *
   1283  *   2. When a capture is issued, the application selects one output buffer based
   1284  *      on application buffer selection logic, e.g. good AE and AF statistics etc.
   1285  *      Application then creates an reprocess request based on the capture result associated
   1286  *      with this selected buffer. The selected output buffer is now added to this reprocess
   1287  *      request as an input buffer, the output buffer of this reprocess request should be
   1288  *      either JPEG output buffer or YUV output buffer, or both, depending on the application
   1289  *      choice.
   1290  *
   1291  *   3. Application then alters the reprocess settings to get best image quality. The HAL must
   1292  *      support and only support below controls if the HAL support OPAQUE_REPROCESSING capability:
   1293  *          - android.jpeg.* (if JPEG buffer is included as one of the output)
   1294  *          - android.noiseReduction.mode (change to HIGH_QUALITY if it is supported)
   1295  *          - android.edge.mode (change to HIGH_QUALITY if it is supported)
   1296  *       All other controls must be ignored by the HAL.
   1297  *   4. HAL processed the input buffer and return the output buffers in the capture results
   1298  *      as normal.
   1299  *
   1300  *   S10.2 YUV reprocessing flow and controls
   1301  *
   1302  *   The YUV reprocessing buffer flow is similar as OPAQUE reprocessing, with below difference:
   1303  *
   1304  *   1. Application may want to have finer granularity control of the intermediate YUV images
   1305  *      (before reprocessing). For example, application may choose
   1306  *          - android.noiseReduction.mode == MINIMAL
   1307  *      to make sure the no YUV domain noise reduction has applied to the output YUV buffers,
   1308  *      then it can do its own advanced noise reduction on them. For OPAQUE reprocessing case, this
   1309  *      doesn't matter, as long as the final reprocessed image has the best quality.
   1310  *   2. Application may modify the YUV output buffer data. For example, for image fusion use
   1311  *      case, where multiple output images are merged together to improve the signal-to-noise
   1312  *      ratio (SNR). The input buffer may be generated from multiple buffers by the application.
   1313  *      To avoid excessive amount of noise reduction and insufficient amount of edge enhancement
   1314  *      being applied to the input buffer, the application can hint the HAL  how much effective
   1315  *      exposure time improvement has been done by the application, then the HAL can adjust the
   1316  *      noise reduction and edge enhancement paramters to get best reprocessed image quality.
   1317  *      Below tag can be used for this purpose:
   1318  *          - android.reprocess.effectiveExposureFactor
   1319  *      The value would be exposure time increase factor applied to the original output image,
   1320  *      for example, if there are N image merged, the exposure time increase factor would be up
   1321  *      to sqrt(N). See this tag spec for more details.
   1322  *
   1323  *   S10.3 Reprocessing pipeline characteristics
   1324  *
   1325  *   Reprocessing pipeline has below different characteristics comparing with normal output
   1326  *   pipeline:
   1327  *
   1328  *   1. The reprocessing result can be returned ahead of the pending normal output results. But
   1329  *      the FIFO ordering must be maintained for all reprocessing results. For example, there are
   1330  *      below requests (A stands for output requests, B stands for reprocessing requests)
   1331  *      being processed by the HAL:
   1332  *          A1, A2, A3, A4, B1, A5, B2, A6...
   1333  *      result of B1 can be returned before A1-A4, but result of B2 must be returned after B1.
   1334  *   2. Single input rule: For a given reprocessing request, all output buffers must be from the
   1335  *      input buffer, rather than sensor output. For example, if a reprocess request include both
   1336  *      JPEG and preview buffers, all output buffers must be produced from the input buffer
   1337  *      included by the reprocessing request, rather than sensor. The HAL must not output preview
   1338  *      buffers from sensor, while output JPEG buffer from the input buffer.
   1339  *   3. Input buffer will be from camera output directly (ZSL case) or indirectly(image fusion
   1340  *      case). For the case where buffer is modified, the size will remain same. The HAL can
   1341  *      notify CAMERA3_MSG_ERROR_REQUEST if buffer from unknown source is sent.
   1342  *   4. Result as reprocessing request: The HAL can expect that a reprocessing request is a copy
   1343  *      of one of the output results with minor allowed setting changes. The HAL can notify
   1344  *      CAMERA3_MSG_ERROR_REQUEST if a request from unknown source is issued.
   1345  *   5. Output buffers may not be used as inputs across the configure stream boundary, This is
   1346  *      because an opaque stream like the ZSL output stream may have different actual image size
   1347  *      inside of the ZSL buffer to save power and bandwidth for smaller resolution JPEG capture.
   1348  *      The HAL may notify CAMERA3_MSG_ERROR_REQUEST if this case occurs.
   1349  *   6. HAL Reprocess requests error reporting during flush should follow the same rule specified
   1350  *      by flush() method.
   1351  *
   1352  */
   1353 
   1354 __BEGIN_DECLS
   1355 
   1356 struct camera3_device;
   1357 
   1358 /**********************************************************************
   1359  *
   1360  * Camera3 stream and stream buffer definitions.
   1361  *
   1362  * These structs and enums define the handles and contents of the input and
   1363  * output streams connecting the HAL to various framework and application buffer
   1364  * consumers. Each stream is backed by a gralloc buffer queue.
   1365  *
   1366  */
   1367 
   1368 /**
   1369  * camera3_stream_type_t:
   1370  *
   1371  * The type of the camera stream, which defines whether the camera HAL device is
   1372  * the producer or the consumer for that stream, and how the buffers of the
   1373  * stream relate to the other streams.
   1374  */
   1375 typedef enum camera3_stream_type {
   1376     /**
   1377      * This stream is an output stream; the camera HAL device will be
   1378      * responsible for filling buffers from this stream with newly captured or
   1379      * reprocessed image data.
   1380      */
   1381     CAMERA3_STREAM_OUTPUT = 0,
   1382 
   1383     /**
   1384      * This stream is an input stream; the camera HAL device will be responsible
   1385      * for reading buffers from this stream and sending them through the camera
   1386      * processing pipeline, as if the buffer was a newly captured image from the
   1387      * imager.
   1388      *
   1389      * The pixel format for input stream can be any format reported by
   1390      * android.scaler.availableInputOutputFormatsMap. The pixel format of the
   1391      * output stream that is used to produce the reprocessing data may be any
   1392      * format reported by android.scaler.availableStreamConfigurations. The
   1393      * supported input/output stream combinations depends the camera device
   1394      * capabilities, see android.scaler.availableInputOutputFormatsMap for
   1395      * stream map details.
   1396      *
   1397      * This kind of stream is generally used to reprocess data into higher
   1398      * quality images (that otherwise would cause a frame rate performance
   1399      * loss), or to do off-line reprocessing.
   1400      *
   1401      * CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_3:
   1402      *    The typical use cases are OPAQUE (typically ZSL) and YUV reprocessing,
   1403      *    see S8.2, S8.3 and S10 for more details.
   1404      */
   1405     CAMERA3_STREAM_INPUT = 1,
   1406 
   1407     /**
   1408      * This stream can be used for input and output. Typically, the stream is
   1409      * used as an output stream, but occasionally one already-filled buffer may
   1410      * be sent back to the HAL device for reprocessing.
   1411      *
   1412      * This kind of stream is meant generally for Zero Shutter Lag (ZSL)
   1413      * features, where copying the captured image from the output buffer to the
   1414      * reprocessing input buffer would be expensive. See S8.1 for more details.
   1415      *
   1416      * Note that the HAL will always be reprocessing data it produced.
   1417      *
   1418      */
   1419     CAMERA3_STREAM_BIDIRECTIONAL = 2,
   1420 
   1421     /**
   1422      * Total number of framework-defined stream types
   1423      */
   1424     CAMERA3_NUM_STREAM_TYPES
   1425 
   1426 } camera3_stream_type_t;
   1427 
   1428 /**
   1429  * camera3_stream_rotation_t:
   1430  *
   1431  * The required counterclockwise rotation of camera stream.
   1432  */
   1433 typedef enum camera3_stream_rotation {
   1434     /* No rotation */
   1435     CAMERA3_STREAM_ROTATION_0 = 0,
   1436 
   1437     /* Rotate by 90 degree counterclockwise */
   1438     CAMERA3_STREAM_ROTATION_90 = 1,
   1439 
   1440     /* Rotate by 180 degree counterclockwise */
   1441     CAMERA3_STREAM_ROTATION_180 = 2,
   1442 
   1443     /* Rotate by 270 degree counterclockwise */
   1444     CAMERA3_STREAM_ROTATION_270 = 3
   1445 } camera3_stream_rotation_t;
   1446 
   1447 /**
   1448  * camera3_stream_configuration_mode_t:
   1449  *
   1450  * This defines the general operation mode for the HAL (for a given stream configuration), where
   1451  * modes besides NORMAL have different semantics, and usually limit the generality of the API in
   1452  * exchange for higher performance in some particular area.
   1453  */
   1454 typedef enum camera3_stream_configuration_mode {
   1455     /**
   1456      * Normal stream configuration operation mode. This is the default camera operation mode,
   1457      * where all semantics of HAL APIs and metadata controls apply.
   1458      */
   1459     CAMERA3_STREAM_CONFIGURATION_NORMAL_MODE = 0,
   1460 
   1461     /**
   1462      * Special constrained high speed operation mode for devices that can not support high
   1463      * speed output in NORMAL mode. All streams in this configuration are operating at high speed
   1464      * mode and have different characteristics and limitations to achieve high speed output.
   1465      * The NORMAL mode can still be used for high speed output if the HAL can support high speed
   1466      * output while satisfying all the semantics of HAL APIs and metadata controls. It is
   1467      * recommended for the HAL to support high speed output in NORMAL mode (by advertising the high
   1468      * speed FPS ranges in android.control.aeAvailableTargetFpsRanges) if possible.
   1469      *
   1470      * This mode has below limitations/requirements:
   1471      *
   1472      *   1. The HAL must support up to 2 streams with sizes reported by
   1473      *      android.control.availableHighSpeedVideoConfigurations.
   1474      *   2. In this mode, the HAL is expected to output up to 120fps or higher. This mode must
   1475      *      support the targeted FPS range and size configurations reported by
   1476      *      android.control.availableHighSpeedVideoConfigurations.
   1477      *   3. The HAL must support HAL_PIXEL_FORMAT_IMPLEMENTATION_DEFINED output stream format.
   1478      *   4. To achieve efficient high speed streaming, the HAL may have to aggregate
   1479      *      multiple frames together and send to camera device for processing where the request
   1480      *      controls are same for all the frames in this batch (batch mode). The HAL must support
   1481      *      max batch size and the max batch size requirements defined by
   1482      *      android.control.availableHighSpeedVideoConfigurations.
   1483      *   5. In this mode, the HAL must override aeMode, awbMode, and afMode to ON, ON, and
   1484      *      CONTINUOUS_VIDEO, respectively. All post-processing block mode controls must be
   1485      *      overridden to be FAST. Therefore, no manual control of capture and post-processing
   1486      *      parameters is possible. All other controls operate the same as when
   1487      *      android.control.mode == AUTO. This means that all other android.control.* fields
   1488      *      must continue to work, such as
   1489      *
   1490      *      android.control.aeTargetFpsRange
   1491      *      android.control.aeExposureCompensation
   1492      *      android.control.aeLock
   1493      *      android.control.awbLock
   1494      *      android.control.effectMode
   1495      *      android.control.aeRegions
   1496      *      android.control.afRegions
   1497      *      android.control.awbRegions
   1498      *      android.control.afTrigger
   1499      *      android.control.aePrecaptureTrigger
   1500      *
   1501      *      Outside of android.control.*, the following controls must work:
   1502      *
   1503      *      android.flash.mode (TORCH mode only, automatic flash for still capture will not work
   1504      *      since aeMode is ON)
   1505      *      android.lens.opticalStabilizationMode (if it is supported)
   1506      *      android.scaler.cropRegion
   1507      *      android.statistics.faceDetectMode (if it is supported)
   1508      *   6. To reduce the amount of data passed across process boundaries at
   1509      *      high frame rate, within one batch, camera framework only propagates
   1510      *      the last shutter notify and the last capture results (including partial
   1511      *      results and final result) to the app. The shutter notifies and capture
   1512      *      results for the other requests in the batch are derived by
   1513      *      the camera framework. As a result, the HAL can return empty metadata
   1514      *      except for the last result in the batch.
   1515      *
   1516      * For more details about high speed stream requirements, see
   1517      * android.control.availableHighSpeedVideoConfigurations and CONSTRAINED_HIGH_SPEED_VIDEO
   1518      * capability defined in android.request.availableCapabilities.
   1519      *
   1520      * This mode only needs to be supported by HALs that include CONSTRAINED_HIGH_SPEED_VIDEO in
   1521      * the android.request.availableCapabilities static metadata.
   1522      */
   1523     CAMERA3_STREAM_CONFIGURATION_CONSTRAINED_HIGH_SPEED_MODE = 1,
   1524 
   1525     /**
   1526      * First value for vendor-defined stream configuration modes.
   1527      */
   1528     CAMERA3_VENDOR_STREAM_CONFIGURATION_MODE_START = 0x8000
   1529 } camera3_stream_configuration_mode_t;
   1530 
   1531 /**
   1532  * camera3_stream_t:
   1533  *
   1534  * A handle to a single camera input or output stream. A stream is defined by
   1535  * the framework by its buffer resolution and format, and additionally by the
   1536  * HAL with the gralloc usage flags and the maximum in-flight buffer count.
   1537  *
   1538  * The stream structures are owned by the framework, but pointers to a
   1539  * camera3_stream passed into the HAL by configure_streams() are valid until the
   1540  * end of the first subsequent configure_streams() call that _does not_ include
   1541  * that camera3_stream as an argument, or until the end of the close() call.
   1542  *
   1543  * All camera3_stream framework-controlled members are immutable once the
   1544  * camera3_stream is passed into configure_streams().  The HAL may only change
   1545  * the HAL-controlled parameters during a configure_streams() call, except for
   1546  * the contents of the private pointer.
   1547  *
   1548  * If a configure_streams() call returns a non-fatal error, all active streams
   1549  * remain valid as if configure_streams() had not been called.
   1550  *
   1551  * The endpoint of the stream is not visible to the camera HAL device.
   1552  * In DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_1, this was changed to share consumer usage flags
   1553  * on streams where the camera is a producer (OUTPUT and BIDIRECTIONAL stream
   1554  * types) see the usage field below.
   1555  */
   1556 typedef struct camera3_stream {
   1557 
   1558     /*****
   1559      * Set by framework before configure_streams()
   1560      */
   1561 
   1562     /**
   1563      * The type of the stream, one of the camera3_stream_type_t values.
   1564      */
   1565     int stream_type;
   1566 
   1567     /**
   1568      * The width in pixels of the buffers in this stream
   1569      */
   1570     uint32_t width;
   1571 
   1572     /**
   1573      * The height in pixels of the buffers in this stream
   1574      */
   1575     uint32_t height;
   1576 
   1577     /**
   1578      * The pixel format for the buffers in this stream. Format is a value from
   1579      * the HAL_PIXEL_FORMAT_* list in system/core/include/system/graphics.h, or
   1580      * from device-specific headers.
   1581      *
   1582      * If HAL_PIXEL_FORMAT_IMPLEMENTATION_DEFINED is used, then the platform
   1583      * gralloc module will select a format based on the usage flags provided by
   1584      * the camera device and the other endpoint of the stream.
   1585      *
   1586      * <= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_1:
   1587      *
   1588      * The camera HAL device must inspect the buffers handed to it in the
   1589      * subsequent register_stream_buffers() call to obtain the
   1590      * implementation-specific format details, if necessary.
   1591      *
   1592      * >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_2:
   1593      *
   1594      * register_stream_buffers() won't be called by the framework, so the HAL
   1595      * should configure the ISP and sensor pipeline based purely on the sizes,
   1596      * usage flags, and formats for the configured streams.
   1597      */
   1598     int format;
   1599 
   1600     /*****
   1601      * Set by HAL during configure_streams().
   1602      */
   1603 
   1604     /**
   1605      * The gralloc usage flags for this stream, as needed by the HAL. The usage
   1606      * flags are defined in gralloc.h (GRALLOC_USAGE_*), or in device-specific
   1607      * headers.
   1608      *
   1609      * For output streams, these are the HAL's producer usage flags. For input
   1610      * streams, these are the HAL's consumer usage flags. The usage flags from
   1611      * the producer and the consumer will be combined together and then passed
   1612      * to the platform gralloc HAL module for allocating the gralloc buffers for
   1613      * each stream.
   1614      *
   1615      * Version information:
   1616      *
   1617      * == CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_0:
   1618      *
   1619      *   No initial value guaranteed when passed via configure_streams().
   1620      *   HAL may not use this field as input, and must write over this field
   1621      *   with its usage flags.
   1622      *
   1623      * >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_1:
   1624      *
   1625      *   For stream_type OUTPUT and BIDIRECTIONAL, when passed via
   1626      *   configure_streams(), the initial value of this is the consumer's
   1627      *   usage flags.  The HAL may use these consumer flags to decide stream
   1628      *   configuration.
   1629      *   For stream_type INPUT, when passed via configure_streams(), the initial
   1630      *   value of this is 0.
   1631      *   For all streams passed via configure_streams(), the HAL must write
   1632      *   over this field with its usage flags.
   1633      *
   1634      *   From Android O, the usage flag for an output stream may be bitwise
   1635      *   combination of usage flags for multiple consumers, for the purpose of
   1636      *   sharing one camera stream between those consumers. The HAL must fail
   1637      *   configure_streams call with -EINVAL if the combined flags cannot be
   1638      *   supported due to imcompatible buffer format, dataSpace, or other hardware
   1639      *   limitations.
   1640      */
   1641     uint32_t usage;
   1642 
   1643     /**
   1644      * The maximum number of buffers the HAL device may need to have dequeued at
   1645      * the same time. The HAL device may not have more buffers in-flight from
   1646      * this stream than this value.
   1647      */
   1648     uint32_t max_buffers;
   1649 
   1650     /**
   1651      * A handle to HAL-private information for the stream. Will not be inspected
   1652      * by the framework code.
   1653      */
   1654     void *priv;
   1655 
   1656     /**
   1657      * A field that describes the contents of the buffer. The format and buffer
   1658      * dimensions define the memory layout and structure of the stream buffers,
   1659      * while dataSpace defines the meaning of the data within the buffer.
   1660      *
   1661      * For most formats, dataSpace defines the color space of the image data.
   1662      * In addition, for some formats, dataSpace indicates whether image- or
   1663      * depth-based data is requested.  See system/core/include/system/graphics.h
   1664      * for details of formats and valid dataSpace values for each format.
   1665      *
   1666      * Version information:
   1667      *
   1668      * < CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_3:
   1669      *
   1670      *   Not defined and should not be accessed. dataSpace should be assumed to
   1671      *   be HAL_DATASPACE_UNKNOWN, and the appropriate color space, etc, should
   1672      *   be determined from the usage flags and the format.
   1673      *
   1674      * = CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_3:
   1675      *
   1676      *   Always set by the camera service. HAL must use this dataSpace to
   1677      *   configure the stream to the correct colorspace, or to select between
   1678      *   color and depth outputs if supported. The dataspace values are the
   1679      *   legacy definitions in graphics.h
   1680      *
   1681      * >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_4:
   1682      *
   1683      *   Always set by the camera service. HAL must use this dataSpace to
   1684      *   configure the stream to the correct colorspace, or to select between
   1685      *   color and depth outputs if supported. The dataspace values are set
   1686      *   using the V0 dataspace definitions in graphics.h
   1687      */
   1688     android_dataspace_t data_space;
   1689 
   1690     /**
   1691      * The required output rotation of the stream, one of
   1692      * the camera3_stream_rotation_t values. This must be inspected by HAL along
   1693      * with stream width and height. For example, if the rotation is 90 degree
   1694      * and the stream width and height is 720 and 1280 respectively, camera service
   1695      * will supply buffers of size 720x1280, and HAL should capture a 1280x720 image
   1696      * and rotate the image by 90 degree counterclockwise. The rotation field is
   1697      * no-op when the stream type is input. Camera HAL must ignore the rotation
   1698      * field for an input stream.
   1699      *
   1700      * <= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_2:
   1701      *
   1702      *    Not defined and must not be accessed. HAL must not apply any rotation
   1703      *    on output images.
   1704      *
   1705      * >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_3:
   1706      *
   1707      *    Always set by camera service. HAL must inspect this field during stream
   1708      *    configuration and returns -EINVAL if HAL cannot perform such rotation.
   1709      *    HAL must always support CAMERA3_STREAM_ROTATION_0, so a
   1710      *    configure_streams() call must not fail for unsupported rotation if
   1711      *    rotation field of all streams is CAMERA3_STREAM_ROTATION_0.
   1712      *
   1713      */
   1714     int rotation;
   1715 
   1716     /**
   1717      * The physical camera id this stream belongs to.
   1718      *
   1719      * <= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERISON_3_4:
   1720      *
   1721      *    Not defined and must not be accessed.
   1722      *
   1723      * >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERISON_3_5:
   1724      *
   1725      *    Always set by camera service. If the camera device is not a logical
   1726      *    multi camera, or if the camera is a logical multi camera but the stream
   1727      *    is not a physical output stream, this field will point to a 0-length
   1728      *    string.
   1729      *
   1730      *    A logical multi camera is a camera device backed by multiple physical
   1731      *    cameras that are also exposed to the application. And for a logical
   1732      *    multi camera, a physical output stream is an output stream specifically
   1733      *    requested on an underlying physical camera.
   1734      *
   1735      *    For an input stream, this field is guaranteed to be a 0-length string.
   1736      */
   1737     const char* physical_camera_id;
   1738 
   1739     /* reserved for future use */
   1740     void *reserved[6];
   1741 
   1742 } camera3_stream_t;
   1743 
   1744 /**
   1745  * camera3_stream_configuration_t:
   1746  *
   1747  * A structure of stream definitions, used by configure_streams(). This
   1748  * structure defines all the output streams and the reprocessing input
   1749  * stream for the current camera use case.
   1750  */
   1751 typedef struct camera3_stream_configuration {
   1752     /**
   1753      * The total number of streams requested by the framework.  This includes
   1754      * both input and output streams. The number of streams will be at least 1,
   1755      * and there will be at least one output-capable stream.
   1756      */
   1757     uint32_t num_streams;
   1758 
   1759     /**
   1760      * An array of camera stream pointers, defining the input/output
   1761      * configuration for the camera HAL device.
   1762      *
   1763      * At most one input-capable stream may be defined (INPUT or BIDIRECTIONAL)
   1764      * in a single configuration.
   1765      *
   1766      * At least one output-capable stream must be defined (OUTPUT or
   1767      * BIDIRECTIONAL).
   1768      */
   1769     camera3_stream_t **streams;
   1770 
   1771     /**
   1772      * >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_3:
   1773      *
   1774      * The operation mode of streams in this configuration, one of the value
   1775      * defined in camera3_stream_configuration_mode_t.  The HAL can use this
   1776      * mode as an indicator to set the stream property (e.g.,
   1777      * camera3_stream->max_buffers) appropriately. For example, if the
   1778      * configuration is
   1779      * CAMERA3_STREAM_CONFIGURATION_CONSTRAINED_HIGH_SPEED_MODE, the HAL may
   1780      * want to set aside more buffers for batch mode operation (see
   1781      * android.control.availableHighSpeedVideoConfigurations for batch mode
   1782      * definition).
   1783      *
   1784      */
   1785     uint32_t operation_mode;
   1786 
   1787     /**
   1788      * >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_5:
   1789      *
   1790      * The session metadata buffer contains the initial values of
   1791      * ANDROID_REQUEST_AVAILABLE_SESSION_KEYS. This field is optional
   1792      * and camera clients can choose to ignore it, in which case it will
   1793      * be set to NULL. If parameters are present, then Hal should examine
   1794      * the parameter values and configure its internal camera pipeline
   1795      * accordingly.
   1796      */
   1797     const camera_metadata_t *session_parameters;
   1798 } camera3_stream_configuration_t;
   1799 
   1800 /**
   1801  * camera3_buffer_status_t:
   1802  *
   1803  * The current status of a single stream buffer.
   1804  */
   1805 typedef enum camera3_buffer_status {
   1806     /**
   1807      * The buffer is in a normal state, and can be used after waiting on its
   1808      * sync fence.
   1809      */
   1810     CAMERA3_BUFFER_STATUS_OK = 0,
   1811 
   1812     /**
   1813      * The buffer does not contain valid data, and the data in it should not be
   1814      * used. The sync fence must still be waited on before reusing the buffer.
   1815      */
   1816     CAMERA3_BUFFER_STATUS_ERROR = 1
   1817 
   1818 } camera3_buffer_status_t;
   1819 
   1820 /**
   1821  * camera3_stream_buffer_t:
   1822  *
   1823  * A single buffer from a camera3 stream. It includes a handle to its parent
   1824  * stream, the handle to the gralloc buffer itself, and sync fences
   1825  *
   1826  * The buffer does not specify whether it is to be used for input or output;
   1827  * that is determined by its parent stream type and how the buffer is passed to
   1828  * the HAL device.
   1829  */
   1830 typedef struct camera3_stream_buffer {
   1831     /**
   1832      * The handle of the stream this buffer is associated with
   1833      */
   1834     camera3_stream_t *stream;
   1835 
   1836     /**
   1837      * The native handle to the buffer
   1838      */
   1839     buffer_handle_t *buffer;
   1840 
   1841     /**
   1842      * Current state of the buffer, one of the camera3_buffer_status_t
   1843      * values. The framework will not pass buffers to the HAL that are in an
   1844      * error state. In case a buffer could not be filled by the HAL, it must
   1845      * have its status set to CAMERA3_BUFFER_STATUS_ERROR when returned to the
   1846      * framework with process_capture_result().
   1847      */
   1848     int status;
   1849 
   1850     /**
   1851      * The acquire sync fence for this buffer. The HAL must wait on this fence
   1852      * fd before attempting to read from or write to this buffer.
   1853      *
   1854      * The framework may be set to -1 to indicate that no waiting is necessary
   1855      * for this buffer.
   1856      *
   1857      * When the HAL returns an output buffer to the framework with
   1858      * process_capture_result(), the acquire_fence must be set to -1. If the HAL
   1859      * never waits on the acquire_fence due to an error in filling a buffer,
   1860      * when calling process_capture_result() the HAL must set the release_fence
   1861      * of the buffer to be the acquire_fence passed to it by the framework. This
   1862      * will allow the framework to wait on the fence before reusing the buffer.
   1863      *
   1864      * For input buffers, the HAL must not change the acquire_fence field during
   1865      * the process_capture_request() call.
   1866      *
   1867      * >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_2:
   1868      *
   1869      * When the HAL returns an input buffer to the framework with
   1870      * process_capture_result(), the acquire_fence must be set to -1. If the HAL
   1871      * never waits on input buffer acquire fence due to an error, the sync
   1872      * fences should be handled similarly to the way they are handled for output
   1873      * buffers.
   1874      */
   1875      int acquire_fence;
   1876 
   1877     /**
   1878      * The release sync fence for this buffer. The HAL must set this fence when
   1879      * returning buffers to the framework, or write -1 to indicate that no
   1880      * waiting is required for this buffer.
   1881      *
   1882      * For the output buffers, the fences must be set in the output_buffers
   1883      * array passed to process_capture_result().
   1884      *
   1885      * <= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_1:
   1886      *
   1887      * For the input buffer, the release fence must be set by the
   1888      * process_capture_request() call.
   1889      *
   1890      * >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_2:
   1891      *
   1892      * For the input buffer, the fences must be set in the input_buffer
   1893      * passed to process_capture_result().
   1894      *
   1895      * After signaling the release_fence for this buffer, the HAL
   1896      * should not make any further attempts to access this buffer as the
   1897      * ownership has been fully transferred back to the framework.
   1898      *
   1899      * If a fence of -1 was specified then the ownership of this buffer
   1900      * is transferred back immediately upon the call of process_capture_result.
   1901      */
   1902     int release_fence;
   1903 
   1904 } camera3_stream_buffer_t;
   1905 
   1906 /**
   1907  * camera3_stream_buffer_set_t:
   1908  *
   1909  * The complete set of gralloc buffers for a stream. This structure is given to
   1910  * register_stream_buffers() to allow the camera HAL device to register/map/etc
   1911  * newly allocated stream buffers.
   1912  *
   1913  * >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_2:
   1914  *
   1915  * Deprecated (and not used). In particular,
   1916  * register_stream_buffers is also deprecated and will never be invoked.
   1917  *
   1918  */
   1919 typedef struct camera3_stream_buffer_set {
   1920     /**
   1921      * The stream handle for the stream these buffers belong to
   1922      */
   1923     camera3_stream_t *stream;
   1924 
   1925     /**
   1926      * The number of buffers in this stream. It is guaranteed to be at least
   1927      * stream->max_buffers.
   1928      */
   1929     uint32_t num_buffers;
   1930 
   1931     /**
   1932      * The array of gralloc buffer handles for this stream. If the stream format
   1933      * is set to HAL_PIXEL_FORMAT_IMPLEMENTATION_DEFINED, the camera HAL device
   1934      * should inspect the passed-in buffers to determine any platform-private
   1935      * pixel format information.
   1936      */
   1937     buffer_handle_t **buffers;
   1938 
   1939 } camera3_stream_buffer_set_t;
   1940 
   1941 /**
   1942  * camera3_jpeg_blob:
   1943  *
   1944  * Transport header for compressed JPEG buffers in output streams.
   1945  *
   1946  * To capture JPEG images, a stream is created using the pixel format
   1947  * HAL_PIXEL_FORMAT_BLOB. The buffer size for the stream is calculated by the
   1948  * framework, based on the static metadata field android.jpeg.maxSize. Since
   1949  * compressed JPEG images are of variable size, the HAL needs to include the
   1950  * final size of the compressed image using this structure inside the output
   1951  * stream buffer. The JPEG blob ID field must be set to CAMERA3_JPEG_BLOB_ID.
   1952  *
   1953  * Transport header should be at the end of the JPEG output stream buffer. That
   1954  * means the jpeg_blob_id must start at byte[buffer_size -
   1955  * sizeof(camera3_jpeg_blob)], where the buffer_size is the size of gralloc buffer.
   1956  * Any HAL using this transport header must account for it in android.jpeg.maxSize
   1957  * The JPEG data itself starts at the beginning of the buffer and should be
   1958  * jpeg_size bytes long.
   1959  */
   1960 typedef struct camera3_jpeg_blob {
   1961     uint16_t jpeg_blob_id;
   1962     uint32_t jpeg_size;
   1963 } camera3_jpeg_blob_t;
   1964 
   1965 enum {
   1966     CAMERA3_JPEG_BLOB_ID = 0x00FF
   1967 };
   1968 
   1969 /**********************************************************************
   1970  *
   1971  * Message definitions for the HAL notify() callback.
   1972  *
   1973  * These definitions are used for the HAL notify callback, to signal
   1974  * asynchronous events from the HAL device to the Android framework.
   1975  *
   1976  */
   1977 
   1978 /**
   1979  * camera3_msg_type:
   1980  *
   1981  * Indicates the type of message sent, which specifies which member of the
   1982  * message union is valid.
   1983  *
   1984  */
   1985 typedef enum camera3_msg_type {
   1986     /**
   1987      * An error has occurred. camera3_notify_msg.message.error contains the
   1988      * error information.
   1989      */
   1990     CAMERA3_MSG_ERROR = 1,
   1991 
   1992     /**
   1993      * The exposure of a given request or processing a reprocess request has
   1994      * begun. camera3_notify_msg.message.shutter contains the information
   1995      * the capture.
   1996      */
   1997     CAMERA3_MSG_SHUTTER = 2,
   1998 
   1999     /**
   2000      * Number of framework message types
   2001      */
   2002     CAMERA3_NUM_MESSAGES
   2003 
   2004 } camera3_msg_type_t;
   2005 
   2006 /**
   2007  * Defined error codes for CAMERA_MSG_ERROR
   2008  */
   2009 typedef enum camera3_error_msg_code {
   2010     /**
   2011      * A serious failure occured. No further frames or buffer streams will
   2012      * be produced by the device. Device should be treated as closed. The
   2013      * client must reopen the device to use it again. The frame_number field
   2014      * is unused.
   2015      */
   2016     CAMERA3_MSG_ERROR_DEVICE = 1,
   2017 
   2018     /**
   2019      * An error has occurred in processing a request. No output (metadata or
   2020      * buffers) will be produced for this request. The frame_number field
   2021      * specifies which request has been dropped. Subsequent requests are
   2022      * unaffected, and the device remains operational.
   2023      */
   2024     CAMERA3_MSG_ERROR_REQUEST = 2,
   2025 
   2026     /**
   2027      * An error has occurred in producing an output result metadata buffer
   2028      * for a request, but output stream buffers for it will still be
   2029      * available. Subsequent requests are unaffected, and the device remains
   2030      * operational.  The frame_number field specifies the request for which
   2031      * result metadata won't be available.
   2032      */
   2033     CAMERA3_MSG_ERROR_RESULT = 3,
   2034 
   2035     /**
   2036      * An error has occurred in placing an output buffer into a stream for a
   2037      * request. The frame metadata and other buffers may still be
   2038      * available. Subsequent requests are unaffected, and the device remains
   2039      * operational. The frame_number field specifies the request for which the
   2040      * buffer was dropped, and error_stream contains a pointer to the stream
   2041      * that dropped the frame.
   2042      */
   2043     CAMERA3_MSG_ERROR_BUFFER = 4,
   2044 
   2045     /**
   2046      * Number of error types
   2047      */
   2048     CAMERA3_MSG_NUM_ERRORS
   2049 
   2050 } camera3_error_msg_code_t;
   2051 
   2052 /**
   2053  * camera3_error_msg_t:
   2054  *
   2055  * Message contents for CAMERA3_MSG_ERROR
   2056  */
   2057 typedef struct camera3_error_msg {
   2058     /**
   2059      * Frame number of the request the error applies to. 0 if the frame number
   2060      * isn't applicable to the error.
   2061      */
   2062     uint32_t frame_number;
   2063 
   2064     /**
   2065      * Pointer to the stream that had a failure. NULL if the stream isn't
   2066      * applicable to the error.
   2067      */
   2068     camera3_stream_t *error_stream;
   2069 
   2070     /**
   2071      * The code for this error; one of the CAMERA_MSG_ERROR enum values.
   2072      */
   2073     int error_code;
   2074 
   2075 } camera3_error_msg_t;
   2076 
   2077 /**
   2078  * camera3_shutter_msg_t:
   2079  *
   2080  * Message contents for CAMERA3_MSG_SHUTTER
   2081  */
   2082 typedef struct camera3_shutter_msg {
   2083     /**
   2084      * Frame number of the request that has begun exposure or reprocessing.
   2085      */
   2086     uint32_t frame_number;
   2087 
   2088     /**
   2089      * Timestamp for the start of capture. For a reprocess request, this must
   2090      * be input image's start of capture. This must match the capture result
   2091      * metadata's sensor exposure start timestamp.
   2092      */
   2093     uint64_t timestamp;
   2094 
   2095 } camera3_shutter_msg_t;
   2096 
   2097 /**
   2098  * camera3_notify_msg_t:
   2099  *
   2100  * The message structure sent to camera3_callback_ops_t.notify()
   2101  */
   2102 typedef struct camera3_notify_msg {
   2103 
   2104     /**
   2105      * The message type. One of camera3_notify_msg_type, or a private extension.
   2106      */
   2107     int type;
   2108 
   2109     union {
   2110         /**
   2111          * Error message contents. Valid if type is CAMERA3_MSG_ERROR
   2112          */
   2113         camera3_error_msg_t error;
   2114 
   2115         /**
   2116          * Shutter message contents. Valid if type is CAMERA3_MSG_SHUTTER
   2117          */
   2118         camera3_shutter_msg_t shutter;
   2119 
   2120         /**
   2121          * Generic message contents. Used to ensure a minimum size for custom
   2122          * message types.
   2123          */
   2124         uint8_t generic[32];
   2125     } message;
   2126 
   2127 } camera3_notify_msg_t;
   2128 
   2129 /**********************************************************************
   2130  *
   2131  * Capture request/result definitions for the HAL process_capture_request()
   2132  * method, and the process_capture_result() callback.
   2133  *
   2134  */
   2135 
   2136 /**
   2137  * camera3_request_template_t:
   2138  *
   2139  * Available template types for
   2140  * camera3_device_ops.construct_default_request_settings()
   2141  */
   2142 typedef enum camera3_request_template {
   2143     /**
   2144      * Standard camera preview operation with 3A on auto.
   2145      */
   2146     CAMERA3_TEMPLATE_PREVIEW = 1,
   2147 
   2148     /**
   2149      * Standard camera high-quality still capture with 3A and flash on auto.
   2150      */
   2151     CAMERA3_TEMPLATE_STILL_CAPTURE = 2,
   2152 
   2153     /**
   2154      * Standard video recording plus preview with 3A on auto, torch off.
   2155      */
   2156     CAMERA3_TEMPLATE_VIDEO_RECORD = 3,
   2157 
   2158     /**
   2159      * High-quality still capture while recording video. Application will
   2160      * include preview, video record, and full-resolution YUV or JPEG streams in
   2161      * request. Must not cause stuttering on video stream. 3A on auto.
   2162      */
   2163     CAMERA3_TEMPLATE_VIDEO_SNAPSHOT = 4,
   2164 
   2165     /**
   2166      * Zero-shutter-lag mode. Application will request preview and
   2167      * full-resolution data for each frame, and reprocess it to JPEG when a
   2168      * still image is requested by user. Settings should provide highest-quality
   2169      * full-resolution images without compromising preview frame rate. 3A on
   2170      * auto.
   2171      */
   2172     CAMERA3_TEMPLATE_ZERO_SHUTTER_LAG = 5,
   2173 
   2174     /**
   2175      * A basic template for direct application control of capture
   2176      * parameters. All automatic control is disabled (auto-exposure, auto-white
   2177      * balance, auto-focus), and post-processing parameters are set to preview
   2178      * quality. The manual capture parameters (exposure, sensitivity, etc.)
   2179      * are set to reasonable defaults, but should be overridden by the
   2180      * application depending on the intended use case.
   2181      */
   2182     CAMERA3_TEMPLATE_MANUAL = 6,
   2183 
   2184     /* Total number of templates */
   2185     CAMERA3_TEMPLATE_COUNT,
   2186 
   2187     /**
   2188      * First value for vendor-defined request templates
   2189      */
   2190     CAMERA3_VENDOR_TEMPLATE_START = 0x40000000
   2191 
   2192 } camera3_request_template_t;
   2193 
   2194 /**
   2195  * camera3_capture_request_t:
   2196  *
   2197  * A single request for image capture/buffer reprocessing, sent to the Camera
   2198  * HAL device by the framework in process_capture_request().
   2199  *
   2200  * The request contains the settings to be used for this capture, and the set of
   2201  * output buffers to write the resulting image data in. It may optionally
   2202  * contain an input buffer, in which case the request is for reprocessing that
   2203  * input buffer instead of capturing a new image with the camera sensor. The
   2204  * capture is identified by the frame_number.
   2205  *
   2206  * In response, the camera HAL device must send a camera3_capture_result
   2207  * structure asynchronously to the framework, using the process_capture_result()
   2208  * callback.
   2209  */
   2210 typedef struct camera3_capture_request {
   2211     /**
   2212      * The frame number is an incrementing integer set by the framework to
   2213      * uniquely identify this capture. It needs to be returned in the result
   2214      * call, and is also used to identify the request in asynchronous
   2215      * notifications sent to camera3_callback_ops_t.notify().
   2216      */
   2217     uint32_t frame_number;
   2218 
   2219     /**
   2220      * The settings buffer contains the capture and processing parameters for
   2221      * the request. As a special case, a NULL settings buffer indicates that the
   2222      * settings are identical to the most-recently submitted capture request. A
   2223      * NULL buffer cannot be used as the first submitted request after a
   2224      * configure_streams() call.
   2225      */
   2226     const camera_metadata_t *settings;
   2227 
   2228     /**
   2229      * The input stream buffer to use for this request, if any.
   2230      *
   2231      * If input_buffer is NULL, then the request is for a new capture from the
   2232      * imager. If input_buffer is valid, the request is for reprocessing the
   2233      * image contained in input_buffer.
   2234      *
   2235      * In the latter case, the HAL must set the release_fence of the
   2236      * input_buffer to a valid sync fence, or to -1 if the HAL does not support
   2237      * sync, before process_capture_request() returns.
   2238      *
   2239      * The HAL is required to wait on the acquire sync fence of the input buffer
   2240      * before accessing it.
   2241      *
   2242      * <= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_1:
   2243      *
   2244      * Any input buffer included here will have been registered with the HAL
   2245      * through register_stream_buffers() before its inclusion in a request.
   2246      *
   2247      * >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_2:
   2248      *
   2249      * The buffers will not have been pre-registered with the HAL.
   2250      * Subsequent requests may reuse buffers, or provide entirely new buffers.
   2251      */
   2252     camera3_stream_buffer_t *input_buffer;
   2253 
   2254     /**
   2255      * The number of output buffers for this capture request. Must be at least
   2256      * 1.
   2257      */
   2258     uint32_t num_output_buffers;
   2259 
   2260     /**
   2261      * An array of num_output_buffers stream buffers, to be filled with image
   2262      * data from this capture/reprocess. The HAL must wait on the acquire fences
   2263      * of each stream buffer before writing to them.
   2264      *
   2265      * The HAL takes ownership of the actual buffer_handle_t entries in
   2266      * output_buffers; the framework does not access them until they are
   2267      * returned in a camera3_capture_result_t.
   2268      *
   2269      * <= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_1:
   2270      *
   2271      * All the buffers included  here will have been registered with the HAL
   2272      * through register_stream_buffers() before their inclusion in a request.
   2273      *
   2274      * >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_2:
   2275      *
   2276      * Any or all of the buffers included here may be brand new in this
   2277      * request (having never before seen by the HAL).
   2278      */
   2279     const camera3_stream_buffer_t *output_buffers;
   2280 
   2281     /**
   2282      * <= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERISON_3_4:
   2283      *
   2284      *    Not defined and must not be accessed.
   2285      *
   2286      * >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_5:
   2287      *    The number of physical camera settings to be applied. If 'num_physcam_settings'
   2288      *    equals 0 or a physical device is not included, then Hal must decide the
   2289      *    specific physical device settings based on the default 'settings'.
   2290      */
   2291     uint32_t num_physcam_settings;
   2292 
   2293     /**
   2294      * <= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERISON_3_4:
   2295      *
   2296      *    Not defined and must not be accessed.
   2297      *
   2298      * >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_5:
   2299      *    The physical camera ids. The array will contain 'num_physcam_settings'
   2300      *    camera id strings for all physical devices that have specific settings.
   2301      *    In case some id is invalid, the process capture request must fail and return
   2302      *    -EINVAL.
   2303      */
   2304     const char **physcam_id;
   2305 
   2306     /**
   2307      * <= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERISON_3_4:
   2308      *
   2309      *    Not defined and must not be accessed.
   2310      *
   2311      * >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_5:
   2312      *    The capture settings for the physical cameras. The array will contain
   2313      *    'num_physcam_settings' settings for invididual physical devices. In
   2314      *    case the settings at some particular index are empty, the process capture
   2315      *    request must fail and return -EINVAL.
   2316      */
   2317     const camera_metadata_t **physcam_settings;
   2318 
   2319 } camera3_capture_request_t;
   2320 
   2321 /**
   2322  * camera3_capture_result_t:
   2323  *
   2324  * The result of a single capture/reprocess by the camera HAL device. This is
   2325  * sent to the framework asynchronously with process_capture_result(), in
   2326  * response to a single capture request sent to the HAL with
   2327  * process_capture_request(). Multiple process_capture_result() calls may be
   2328  * performed by the HAL for each request.
   2329  *
   2330  * Each call, all with the same frame
   2331  * number, may contain some subset of the output buffers, and/or the result
   2332  * metadata. The metadata may only be provided once for a given frame number;
   2333  * all other calls must set the result metadata to NULL.
   2334  *
   2335  * The result structure contains the output metadata from this capture, and the
   2336  * set of output buffers that have been/will be filled for this capture. Each
   2337  * output buffer may come with a release sync fence that the framework will wait
   2338  * on before reading, in case the buffer has not yet been filled by the HAL.
   2339  *
   2340  * >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_2:
   2341  *
   2342  * The metadata may be provided multiple times for a single frame number. The
   2343  * framework will accumulate together the final result set by combining each
   2344  * partial result together into the total result set.
   2345  *
   2346  * If an input buffer is given in a request, the HAL must return it in one of
   2347  * the process_capture_result calls, and the call may be to just return the input
   2348  * buffer, without metadata and output buffers; the sync fences must be handled
   2349  * the same way they are done for output buffers.
   2350  *
   2351  *
   2352  * Performance considerations:
   2353  *
   2354  * Applications will also receive these partial results immediately, so sending
   2355  * partial results is a highly recommended performance optimization to avoid
   2356  * the total pipeline latency before sending the results for what is known very
   2357  * early on in the pipeline.
   2358  *
   2359  * A typical use case might be calculating the AF state halfway through the
   2360  * pipeline; by sending the state back to the framework immediately, we get a
   2361  * 50% performance increase and perceived responsiveness of the auto-focus.
   2362  *
   2363  */
   2364 typedef struct camera3_capture_result {
   2365     /**
   2366      * The frame number is an incrementing integer set by the framework in the
   2367      * submitted request to uniquely identify this capture. It is also used to
   2368      * identify the request in asynchronous notifications sent to
   2369      * camera3_callback_ops_t.notify().
   2370     */
   2371     uint32_t frame_number;
   2372 
   2373     /**
   2374      * The result metadata for this capture. This contains information about the
   2375      * final capture parameters, the state of the capture and post-processing
   2376      * hardware, the state of the 3A algorithms, if enabled, and the output of
   2377      * any enabled statistics units.
   2378      *
   2379      * Only one call to process_capture_result() with a given frame_number may
   2380      * include the result metadata. All other calls for the same frame_number
   2381      * must set this to NULL.
   2382      *
   2383      * If there was an error producing the result metadata, result must be an
   2384      * empty metadata buffer, and notify() must be called with ERROR_RESULT.
   2385      *
   2386      * >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_2:
   2387      *
   2388      * Multiple calls to process_capture_result() with a given frame_number
   2389      * may include the result metadata.
   2390      *
   2391      * Partial metadata submitted should not include any metadata key returned
   2392      * in a previous partial result for a given frame. Each new partial result
   2393      * for that frame must also set a distinct partial_result value.
   2394      *
   2395      * If notify has been called with ERROR_RESULT, all further partial
   2396      * results for that frame are ignored by the framework.
   2397      */
   2398     const camera_metadata_t *result;
   2399 
   2400     /**
   2401      * The number of output buffers returned in this result structure. Must be
   2402      * less than or equal to the matching capture request's count. If this is
   2403      * less than the buffer count in the capture request, at least one more call
   2404      * to process_capture_result with the same frame_number must be made, to
   2405      * return the remaining output buffers to the framework. This may only be
   2406      * zero if the structure includes valid result metadata or an input buffer
   2407      * is returned in this result.
   2408      */
   2409     uint32_t num_output_buffers;
   2410 
   2411     /**
   2412      * The handles for the output stream buffers for this capture. They may not
   2413      * yet be filled at the time the HAL calls process_capture_result(); the
   2414      * framework will wait on the release sync fences provided by the HAL before
   2415      * reading the buffers.
   2416      *
   2417      * The HAL must set the stream buffer's release sync fence to a valid sync
   2418      * fd, or to -1 if the buffer has already been filled.
   2419      *
   2420      * If the HAL encounters an error while processing the buffer, and the
   2421      * buffer is not filled, the buffer's status field must be set to
   2422      * CAMERA3_BUFFER_STATUS_ERROR. If the HAL did not wait on the acquire fence
   2423      * before encountering the error, the acquire fence should be copied into
   2424      * the release fence, to allow the framework to wait on the fence before
   2425      * reusing the buffer.
   2426      *
   2427      * The acquire fence must be set to -1 for all output buffers.  If
   2428      * num_output_buffers is zero, this may be NULL. In that case, at least one
   2429      * more process_capture_result call must be made by the HAL to provide the
   2430      * output buffers.
   2431      *
   2432      * When process_capture_result is called with a new buffer for a frame,
   2433      * all previous frames' buffers for that corresponding stream must have been
   2434      * already delivered (the fences need not have yet been signaled).
   2435      *
   2436      * >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_2:
   2437      *
   2438      * Gralloc buffers for a frame may be sent to framework before the
   2439      * corresponding SHUTTER-notify.
   2440      *
   2441      * Performance considerations:
   2442      *
   2443      * Buffers delivered to the framework will not be dispatched to the
   2444      * application layer until a start of exposure timestamp has been received
   2445      * via a SHUTTER notify() call. It is highly recommended to
   2446      * dispatch that call as early as possible.
   2447      */
   2448      const camera3_stream_buffer_t *output_buffers;
   2449 
   2450      /**
   2451       * >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_2:
   2452       *
   2453       * The handle for the input stream buffer for this capture. It may not
   2454       * yet be consumed at the time the HAL calls process_capture_result(); the
   2455       * framework will wait on the release sync fences provided by the HAL before
   2456       * reusing the buffer.
   2457       *
   2458       * The HAL should handle the sync fences the same way they are done for
   2459       * output_buffers.
   2460       *
   2461       * Only one input buffer is allowed to be sent per request. Similarly to
   2462       * output buffers, the ordering of returned input buffers must be
   2463       * maintained by the HAL.
   2464       *
   2465       * Performance considerations:
   2466       *
   2467       * The input buffer should be returned as early as possible. If the HAL
   2468       * supports sync fences, it can call process_capture_result to hand it back
   2469       * with sync fences being set appropriately. If the sync fences are not
   2470       * supported, the buffer can only be returned when it is consumed, which
   2471       * may take long time; the HAL may choose to copy this input buffer to make
   2472       * the buffer return sooner.
   2473       */
   2474       const camera3_stream_buffer_t *input_buffer;
   2475 
   2476      /**
   2477       * >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_2:
   2478       *
   2479       * In order to take advantage of partial results, the HAL must set the
   2480       * static metadata android.request.partialResultCount to the number of
   2481       * partial results it will send for each frame.
   2482       *
   2483       * Each new capture result with a partial result must set
   2484       * this field (partial_result) to a distinct inclusive value between
   2485       * 1 and android.request.partialResultCount.
   2486       *
   2487       * HALs not wishing to take advantage of this feature must not
   2488       * set an android.request.partialResultCount or partial_result to a value
   2489       * other than 1.
   2490       *
   2491       * This value must be set to 0 when a capture result contains buffers only
   2492       * and no metadata.
   2493       */
   2494      uint32_t partial_result;
   2495 
   2496      /**
   2497       * >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_5:
   2498       *
   2499       * Specifies the number of physical camera metadata this capture result
   2500       * contains. It must be equal to the number of physical cameras being
   2501       * requested from.
   2502       *
   2503       * If the current camera device is not a logical multi-camera, or the
   2504       * corresponding capture_request doesn't request on any physical camera,
   2505       * this field must be 0.
   2506       */
   2507      uint32_t num_physcam_metadata;
   2508 
   2509      /**
   2510       * >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_5:
   2511       *
   2512       * An array of strings containing the physical camera ids for the returned
   2513       * physical camera metadata. The length of the array is
   2514       * num_physcam_metadata.
   2515       */
   2516      const char **physcam_ids;
   2517 
   2518      /**
   2519       * >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_5:
   2520       *
   2521       * The array of physical camera metadata for the physical cameras being
   2522       * requested upon. This array should have a 1-to-1 mapping with the
   2523       * physcam_ids. The length of the array is num_physcam_metadata.
   2524       */
   2525      const camera_metadata_t **physcam_metadata;
   2526 
   2527 } camera3_capture_result_t;
   2528 
   2529 /**********************************************************************
   2530  *
   2531  * Callback methods for the HAL to call into the framework.
   2532  *
   2533  * These methods are used to return metadata and image buffers for a completed
   2534  * or failed captures, and to notify the framework of asynchronous events such
   2535  * as errors.
   2536  *
   2537  * The framework will not call back into the HAL from within these callbacks,
   2538  * and these calls will not block for extended periods.
   2539  *
   2540  */
   2541 typedef struct camera3_callback_ops {
   2542 
   2543     /**
   2544      * process_capture_result:
   2545      *
   2546      * Send results from a completed capture to the framework.
   2547      * process_capture_result() may be invoked multiple times by the HAL in
   2548      * response to a single capture request. This allows, for example, the
   2549      * metadata and low-resolution buffers to be returned in one call, and
   2550      * post-processed JPEG buffers in a later call, once it is available. Each
   2551      * call must include the frame number of the request it is returning
   2552      * metadata or buffers for.
   2553      *
   2554      * A component (buffer or metadata) of the complete result may only be
   2555      * included in one process_capture_result call. A buffer for each stream,
   2556      * and the result metadata, must be returned by the HAL for each request in
   2557      * one of the process_capture_result calls, even in case of errors producing
   2558      * some of the output. A call to process_capture_result() with neither
   2559      * output buffers or result metadata is not allowed.
   2560      *
   2561      * The order of returning metadata and buffers for a single result does not
   2562      * matter, but buffers for a given stream must be returned in FIFO order. So
   2563      * the buffer for request 5 for stream A must always be returned before the
   2564      * buffer for request 6 for stream A. This also applies to the result
   2565      * metadata; the metadata for request 5 must be returned before the metadata
   2566      * for request 6.
   2567      *
   2568      * However, different streams are independent of each other, so it is
   2569      * acceptable and expected that the buffer for request 5 for stream A may be
   2570      * returned after the buffer for request 6 for stream B is. And it is
   2571      * acceptable that the result metadata for request 6 for stream B is
   2572      * returned before the buffer for request 5 for stream A is.
   2573      *
   2574      * The HAL retains ownership of result structure, which only needs to be
   2575      * valid to access during this call. The framework will copy whatever it
   2576      * needs before this call returns.
   2577      *
   2578      * The output buffers do not need to be filled yet; the framework will wait
   2579      * on the stream buffer release sync fence before reading the buffer
   2580      * data. Therefore, this method should be called by the HAL as soon as
   2581      * possible, even if some or all of the output buffers are still in
   2582      * being filled. The HAL must include valid release sync fences into each
   2583      * output_buffers stream buffer entry, or -1 if that stream buffer is
   2584      * already filled.
   2585      *
   2586      * If the result buffer cannot be constructed for a request, the HAL should
   2587      * return an empty metadata buffer, but still provide the output buffers and
   2588      * their sync fences. In addition, notify() must be called with an
   2589      * ERROR_RESULT message.
   2590      *
   2591      * If an output buffer cannot be filled, its status field must be set to
   2592      * STATUS_ERROR. In addition, notify() must be called with a ERROR_BUFFER
   2593      * message.
   2594      *
   2595      * If the entire capture has failed, then this method still needs to be
   2596      * called to return the output buffers to the framework. All the buffer
   2597      * statuses should be STATUS_ERROR, and the result metadata should be an
   2598      * empty buffer. In addition, notify() must be called with a ERROR_REQUEST
   2599      * message. In this case, individual ERROR_RESULT/ERROR_BUFFER messages
   2600      * should not be sent.
   2601      *
   2602      * Performance requirements:
   2603      *
   2604      * This is a non-blocking call. The framework will return this call in 5ms.
   2605      *
   2606      * The pipeline latency (see S7 for definition) should be less than or equal to
   2607      * 4 frame intervals, and must be less than or equal to 8 frame intervals.
   2608      *
   2609      */
   2610     void (*process_capture_result)(const struct camera3_callback_ops *,
   2611             const camera3_capture_result_t *result);
   2612 
   2613     /**
   2614      * notify:
   2615      *
   2616      * Asynchronous notification callback from the HAL, fired for various
   2617      * reasons. Only for information independent of frame capture, or that
   2618      * require specific timing. The ownership of the message structure remains
   2619      * with the HAL, and the msg only needs to be valid for the duration of this
   2620      * call.
   2621      *
   2622      * Multiple threads may call notify() simultaneously.
   2623      *
   2624      * <= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_1:
   2625      *
   2626      * The notification for the start of exposure for a given request must be
   2627      * sent by the HAL before the first call to process_capture_result() for
   2628      * that request is made.
   2629      *
   2630      * >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_2:
   2631      *
   2632      * Buffers delivered to the framework will not be dispatched to the
   2633      * application layer until a start of exposure timestamp (or input image's
   2634      * start of exposure timestamp for a reprocess request) has been received
   2635      * via a SHUTTER notify() call. It is highly recommended to dispatch this
   2636      * call as early as possible.
   2637      *
   2638      * ------------------------------------------------------------------------
   2639      * Performance requirements:
   2640      *
   2641      * This is a non-blocking call. The framework will return this call in 5ms.
   2642      */
   2643     void (*notify)(const struct camera3_callback_ops *,
   2644             const camera3_notify_msg_t *msg);
   2645 
   2646 } camera3_callback_ops_t;
   2647 
   2648 /**********************************************************************
   2649  *
   2650  * Camera device operations
   2651  *
   2652  */
   2653 typedef struct camera3_device_ops {
   2654 
   2655     /**
   2656      * initialize:
   2657      *
   2658      * One-time initialization to pass framework callback function pointers to
   2659      * the HAL. Will be called once after a successful open() call, before any
   2660      * other functions are called on the camera3_device_ops structure.
   2661      *
   2662      * Performance requirements:
   2663      *
   2664      * This should be a non-blocking call. The HAL should return from this call
   2665      * in 5ms, and must return from this call in 10ms.
   2666      *
   2667      * Return values:
   2668      *
   2669      *  0:     On successful initialization
   2670      *
   2671      * -ENODEV: If initialization fails. Only close() can be called successfully
   2672      *          by the framework after this.
   2673      */
   2674     int (*initialize)(const struct camera3_device *,
   2675             const camera3_callback_ops_t *callback_ops);
   2676 
   2677     /**********************************************************************
   2678      * Stream management
   2679      */
   2680 
   2681     /**
   2682      * configure_streams:
   2683      *
   2684      * CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_0 only:
   2685      *
   2686      * Reset the HAL camera device processing pipeline and set up new input and
   2687      * output streams. This call replaces any existing stream configuration with
   2688      * the streams defined in the stream_list. This method will be called at
   2689      * least once after initialize() before a request is submitted with
   2690      * process_capture_request().
   2691      *
   2692      * The stream_list must contain at least one output-capable stream, and may
   2693      * not contain more than one input-capable stream.
   2694      *
   2695      * The stream_list may contain streams that are also in the currently-active
   2696      * set of streams (from the previous call to configure_stream()). These
   2697      * streams will already have valid values for usage, max_buffers, and the
   2698      * private pointer.
   2699      *
   2700      * If such a stream has already had its buffers registered,
   2701      * register_stream_buffers() will not be called again for the stream, and
   2702      * buffers from the stream can be immediately included in input requests.
   2703      *
   2704      * If the HAL needs to change the stream configuration for an existing
   2705      * stream due to the new configuration, it may rewrite the values of usage
   2706      * and/or max_buffers during the configure call.
   2707      *
   2708      * The framework will detect such a change, and will then reallocate the
   2709      * stream buffers, and call register_stream_buffers() again before using
   2710      * buffers from that stream in a request.
   2711      *
   2712      * If a currently-active stream is not included in stream_list, the HAL may
   2713      * safely remove any references to that stream. It will not be reused in a
   2714      * later configure() call by the framework, and all the gralloc buffers for
   2715      * it will be freed after the configure_streams() call returns.
   2716      *
   2717      * The stream_list structure is owned by the framework, and may not be
   2718      * accessed once this call completes. The address of an individual
   2719      * camera3_stream_t structure will remain valid for access by the HAL until
   2720      * the end of the first configure_stream() call which no longer includes
   2721      * that camera3_stream_t in the stream_list argument. The HAL may not change
   2722      * values in the stream structure outside of the private pointer, except for
   2723      * the usage and max_buffers members during the configure_streams() call
   2724      * itself.
   2725      *
   2726      * If the stream is new, the usage, max_buffer, and private pointer fields
   2727      * of the stream structure will all be set to 0. The HAL device must set
   2728      * these fields before the configure_streams() call returns. These fields
   2729      * are then used by the framework and the platform gralloc module to
   2730      * allocate the gralloc buffers for each stream.
   2731      *
   2732      * Before such a new stream can have its buffers included in a capture
   2733      * request, the framework will call register_stream_buffers() with that
   2734      * stream. However, the framework is not required to register buffers for
   2735      * _all_ streams before submitting a request. This allows for quick startup
   2736      * of (for example) a preview stream, with allocation for other streams
   2737      * happening later or concurrently.
   2738      *
   2739      * ------------------------------------------------------------------------
   2740      * CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_1 only:
   2741      *
   2742      * Reset the HAL camera device processing pipeline and set up new input and
   2743      * output streams. This call replaces any existing stream configuration with
   2744      * the streams defined in the stream_list. This method will be called at
   2745      * least once after initialize() before a request is submitted with
   2746      * process_capture_request().
   2747      *
   2748      * The stream_list must contain at least one output-capable stream, and may
   2749      * not contain more than one input-capable stream.
   2750      *
   2751      * The stream_list may contain streams that are also in the currently-active
   2752      * set of streams (from the previous call to configure_stream()). These
   2753      * streams will already have valid values for usage, max_buffers, and the
   2754      * private pointer.
   2755      *
   2756      * If such a stream has already had its buffers registered,
   2757      * register_stream_buffers() will not be called again for the stream, and
   2758      * buffers from the stream can be immediately included in input requests.
   2759      *
   2760      * If the HAL needs to change the stream configuration for an existing
   2761      * stream due to the new configuration, it may rewrite the values of usage
   2762      * and/or max_buffers during the configure call.
   2763      *
   2764      * The framework will detect such a change, and will then reallocate the
   2765      * stream buffers, and call register_stream_buffers() again before using
   2766      * buffers from that stream in a request.
   2767      *
   2768      * If a currently-active stream is not included in stream_list, the HAL may
   2769      * safely remove any references to that stream. It will not be reused in a
   2770      * later configure() call by the framework, and all the gralloc buffers for
   2771      * it will be freed after the configure_streams() call returns.
   2772      *
   2773      * The stream_list structure is owned by the framework, and may not be
   2774      * accessed once this call completes. The address of an individual
   2775      * camera3_stream_t structure will remain valid for access by the HAL until
   2776      * the end of the first configure_stream() call which no longer includes
   2777      * that camera3_stream_t in the stream_list argument. The HAL may not change
   2778      * values in the stream structure outside of the private pointer, except for
   2779      * the usage and max_buffers members during the configure_streams() call
   2780      * itself.
   2781      *
   2782      * If the stream is new, max_buffer, and private pointer fields of the
   2783      * stream structure will all be set to 0. The usage will be set to the
   2784      * consumer usage flags. The HAL device must set these fields before the
   2785      * configure_streams() call returns. These fields are then used by the
   2786      * framework and the platform gralloc module to allocate the gralloc
   2787      * buffers for each stream.
   2788      *
   2789      * Before such a new stream can have its buffers included in a capture
   2790      * request, the framework will call register_stream_buffers() with that
   2791      * stream. However, the framework is not required to register buffers for
   2792      * _all_ streams before submitting a request. This allows for quick startup
   2793      * of (for example) a preview stream, with allocation for other streams
   2794      * happening later or concurrently.
   2795      *
   2796      * ------------------------------------------------------------------------
   2797      * >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_2:
   2798      *
   2799      * Reset the HAL camera device processing pipeline and set up new input and
   2800      * output streams. This call replaces any existing stream configuration with
   2801      * the streams defined in the stream_list. This method will be called at
   2802      * least once after initialize() before a request is submitted with
   2803      * process_capture_request().
   2804      *
   2805      * The stream_list must contain at least one output-capable stream, and may
   2806      * not contain more than one input-capable stream.
   2807      *
   2808      * The stream_list may contain streams that are also in the currently-active
   2809      * set of streams (from the previous call to configure_stream()). These
   2810      * streams will already have valid values for usage, max_buffers, and the
   2811      * private pointer.
   2812      *
   2813      * If the HAL needs to change the stream configuration for an existing
   2814      * stream due to the new configuration, it may rewrite the values of usage
   2815      * and/or max_buffers during the configure call.
   2816      *
   2817      * The framework will detect such a change, and may then reallocate the
   2818      * stream buffers before using buffers from that stream in a request.
   2819      *
   2820      * If a currently-active stream is not included in stream_list, the HAL may
   2821      * safely remove any references to that stream. It will not be reused in a
   2822      * later configure() call by the framework, and all the gralloc buffers for
   2823      * it will be freed after the configure_streams() call returns.
   2824      *
   2825      * The stream_list structure is owned by the framework, and may not be
   2826      * accessed once this call completes. The address of an individual
   2827      * camera3_stream_t structure will remain valid for access by the HAL until
   2828      * the end of the first configure_stream() call which no longer includes
   2829      * that camera3_stream_t in the stream_list argument. The HAL may not change
   2830      * values in the stream structure outside of the private pointer, except for
   2831      * the usage and max_buffers members during the configure_streams() call
   2832      * itself.
   2833      *
   2834      * If the stream is new, max_buffer, and private pointer fields of the
   2835      * stream structure will all be set to 0. The usage will be set to the
   2836      * consumer usage flags. The HAL device must set these fields before the
   2837      * configure_streams() call returns. These fields are then used by the
   2838      * framework and the platform gralloc module to allocate the gralloc
   2839      * buffers for each stream.
   2840      *
   2841      * Newly allocated buffers may be included in a capture request at any time
   2842      * by the framework. Once a gralloc buffer is returned to the framework
   2843      * with process_capture_result (and its respective release_fence has been
   2844      * signaled) the framework may free or reuse it at any time.
   2845      *
   2846      * ------------------------------------------------------------------------
   2847      *
   2848      * Preconditions:
   2849      *
   2850      * The framework will only call this method when no captures are being
   2851      * processed. That is, all results have been returned to the framework, and
   2852      * all in-flight input and output buffers have been returned and their
   2853      * release sync fences have been signaled by the HAL. The framework will not
   2854      * submit new requests for capture while the configure_streams() call is
   2855      * underway.
   2856      *
   2857      * Postconditions:
   2858      *
   2859      * The HAL device must configure itself to provide maximum possible output
   2860      * frame rate given the sizes and formats of the output streams, as
   2861      * documented in the camera device's static metadata.
   2862      *
   2863      * Performance requirements:
   2864      *
   2865      * This call is expected to be heavyweight and possibly take several hundred
   2866      * milliseconds to complete, since it may require resetting and
   2867      * reconfiguring the image sensor and the camera processing pipeline.
   2868      * Nevertheless, the HAL device should attempt to minimize the
   2869      * reconfiguration delay to minimize the user-visible pauses during
   2870      * application operational mode changes (such as switching from still
   2871      * capture to video recording).
   2872      *
   2873      * The HAL should return from this call in 500ms, and must return from this
   2874      * call in 1000ms.
   2875      *
   2876      * Return values:
   2877      *
   2878      *  0:      On successful stream configuration
   2879      *
   2880      * -EINVAL: If the requested stream configuration is invalid. Some examples
   2881      *          of invalid stream configurations include:
   2882      *
   2883      *          - Including more than 1 input-capable stream (INPUT or
   2884      *            BIDIRECTIONAL)
   2885      *
   2886      *          - Not including any output-capable streams (OUTPUT or
   2887      *            BIDIRECTIONAL)
   2888      *
   2889      *          - Including streams with unsupported formats, or an unsupported
   2890      *            size for that format.
   2891      *
   2892      *          - Including too many output streams of a certain format.
   2893      *
   2894      *          - Unsupported rotation configuration (only applies to
   2895      *            devices with version >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_3)
   2896      *
   2897      *          - Stream sizes/formats don't satisfy the
   2898      *            camera3_stream_configuration_t->operation_mode requirements for non-NORMAL mode,
   2899      *            or the requested operation_mode is not supported by the HAL.
   2900      *            (only applies to devices with version >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_3)
   2901      *
   2902      *          Note that the framework submitting an invalid stream
   2903      *          configuration is not normal operation, since stream
   2904      *          configurations are checked before configure. An invalid
   2905      *          configuration means that a bug exists in the framework code, or
   2906      *          there is a mismatch between the HAL's static metadata and the
   2907      *          requirements on streams.
   2908      *
   2909      * -ENODEV: If there has been a fatal error and the device is no longer
   2910      *          operational. Only close() can be called successfully by the
   2911      *          framework after this error is returned.
   2912      */
   2913     int (*configure_streams)(const struct camera3_device *,
   2914             camera3_stream_configuration_t *stream_list);
   2915 
   2916     /**
   2917      * register_stream_buffers:
   2918      *
   2919      * >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_2:
   2920      *
   2921      * DEPRECATED. This will not be called and must be set to NULL.
   2922      *
   2923      * <= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_1:
   2924      *
   2925      * Register buffers for a given stream with the HAL device. This method is
   2926      * called by the framework after a new stream is defined by
   2927      * configure_streams, and before buffers from that stream are included in a
   2928      * capture request. If the same stream is listed in a subsequent
   2929      * configure_streams() call, register_stream_buffers will _not_ be called
   2930      * again for that stream.
   2931      *
   2932      * The framework does not need to register buffers for all configured
   2933      * streams before it submits the first capture request. This allows quick
   2934      * startup for preview (or similar use cases) while other streams are still
   2935      * being allocated.
   2936      *
   2937      * This method is intended to allow the HAL device to map or otherwise
   2938      * prepare the buffers for later use. The buffers passed in will already be
   2939      * locked for use. At the end of the call, all the buffers must be ready to
   2940      * be returned to the stream.  The buffer_set argument is only valid for the
   2941      * duration of this call.
   2942      *
   2943      * If the stream format was set to HAL_PIXEL_FORMAT_IMPLEMENTATION_DEFINED,
   2944      * the camera HAL should inspect the passed-in buffers here to determine any
   2945      * platform-private pixel format information.
   2946      *
   2947      * Performance requirements:
   2948      *
   2949      * This should be a non-blocking call. The HAL should return from this call
   2950      * in 1ms, and must return from this call in 5ms.
   2951      *
   2952      * Return values:
   2953      *
   2954      *  0:      On successful registration of the new stream buffers
   2955      *
   2956      * -EINVAL: If the stream_buffer_set does not refer to a valid active
   2957      *          stream, or if the buffers array is invalid.
   2958      *
   2959      * -ENOMEM: If there was a failure in registering the buffers. The framework
   2960      *          must consider all the stream buffers to be unregistered, and can
   2961      *          try to register again later.
   2962      *
   2963      * -ENODEV: If there is a fatal error, and the device is no longer
   2964      *          operational. Only close() can be called successfully by the
   2965      *          framework after this error is returned.
   2966      */
   2967     int (*register_stream_buffers)(const struct camera3_device *,
   2968             const camera3_stream_buffer_set_t *buffer_set);
   2969 
   2970     /**********************************************************************
   2971      * Request creation and submission
   2972      */
   2973 
   2974     /**
   2975      * construct_default_request_settings:
   2976      *
   2977      * Create capture settings for standard camera use cases.
   2978      *
   2979      * The device must return a settings buffer that is configured to meet the
   2980      * requested use case, which must be one of the CAMERA3_TEMPLATE_*
   2981      * enums. All request control fields must be included.
   2982      *
   2983      * The HAL retains ownership of this structure, but the pointer to the
   2984      * structure must be valid until the device is closed. The framework and the
   2985      * HAL may not modify the buffer once it is returned by this call. The same
   2986      * buffer may be returned for subsequent calls for the same template, or for
   2987      * other templates.
   2988      *
   2989      * Performance requirements:
   2990      *
   2991      * This should be a non-blocking call. The HAL should return from this call
   2992      * in 1ms, and must return from this call in 5ms.
   2993      *
   2994      * Return values:
   2995      *
   2996      *   Valid metadata: On successful creation of a default settings
   2997      *                   buffer.
   2998      *
   2999      *   NULL:           In case of a fatal error. After this is returned, only
   3000      *                   the close() method can be called successfully by the
   3001      *                   framework.
   3002      */
   3003     const camera_metadata_t* (*construct_default_request_settings)(
   3004             const struct camera3_device *,
   3005             int type);
   3006 
   3007     /**
   3008      * process_capture_request:
   3009      *
   3010      * Send a new capture request to the HAL. The HAL should not return from
   3011      * this call until it is ready to accept the next request to process. Only
   3012      * one call to process_capture_request() will be made at a time by the
   3013      * framework, and the calls will all be from the same thread. The next call
   3014      * to process_capture_request() will be made as soon as a new request and
   3015      * its associated buffers are available. In a normal preview scenario, this
   3016      * means the function will be called again by the framework almost
   3017      * instantly.
   3018      *
   3019      * The actual request processing is asynchronous, with the results of
   3020      * capture being returned by the HAL through the process_capture_result()
   3021      * call. This call requires the result metadata to be available, but output
   3022      * buffers may simply provide sync fences to wait on. Multiple requests are
   3023      * expected to be in flight at once, to maintain full output frame rate.
   3024      *
   3025      * The framework retains ownership of the request structure. It is only
   3026      * guaranteed to be valid during this call. The HAL device must make copies
   3027      * of the information it needs to retain for the capture processing. The HAL
   3028      * is responsible for waiting on and closing the buffers' fences and
   3029      * returning the buffer handles to the framework.
   3030      *
   3031      * The HAL must write the file descriptor for the input buffer's release
   3032      * sync fence into input_buffer->release_fence, if input_buffer is not
   3033      * NULL. If the HAL returns -1 for the input buffer release sync fence, the
   3034      * framework is free to immediately reuse the input buffer. Otherwise, the
   3035      * framework will wait on the sync fence before refilling and reusing the
   3036      * input buffer.
   3037      *
   3038      * >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_2:
   3039      *
   3040      * The input/output buffers provided by the framework in each request
   3041      * may be brand new (having never before seen by the HAL).
   3042      *
   3043      * ------------------------------------------------------------------------
   3044      * Performance considerations:
   3045      *
   3046      * Handling a new buffer should be extremely lightweight and there should be
   3047      * no frame rate degradation or frame jitter introduced.
   3048      *
   3049      * This call must return fast enough to ensure that the requested frame
   3050      * rate can be sustained, especially for streaming cases (post-processing
   3051      * quality settings set to FAST). The HAL should return this call in 1
   3052      * frame interval, and must return from this call in 4 frame intervals.
   3053      *
   3054      * Return values:
   3055      *
   3056      *  0:      On a successful start to processing the capture request
   3057      *
   3058      * -EINVAL: If the input is malformed (the settings are NULL when not
   3059      *          allowed, invalid physical camera settings,
   3060      *          there are 0 output buffers, etc) and capture processing
   3061      *          cannot start. Failures during request processing should be
   3062      *          handled by calling camera3_callback_ops_t.notify(). In case of
   3063      *          this error, the framework will retain responsibility for the
   3064      *          stream buffers' fences and the buffer handles; the HAL should
   3065      *          not close the fences or return these buffers with
   3066      *          process_capture_result.
   3067      *
   3068      * -ENODEV: If the camera device has encountered a serious error. After this
   3069      *          error is returned, only the close() method can be successfully
   3070      *          called by the framework.
   3071      *
   3072      */
   3073     int (*process_capture_request)(const struct camera3_device *,
   3074             camera3_capture_request_t *request);
   3075 
   3076     /**********************************************************************
   3077      * Miscellaneous methods
   3078      */
   3079 
   3080     /**
   3081      * get_metadata_vendor_tag_ops:
   3082      *
   3083      * Get methods to query for vendor extension metadata tag information. The
   3084      * HAL should fill in all the vendor tag operation methods, or leave ops
   3085      * unchanged if no vendor tags are defined.
   3086      *
   3087      * The definition of vendor_tag_query_ops_t can be found in
   3088      * system/media/camera/include/system/camera_metadata.h.
   3089      *
   3090      * >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_2:
   3091      *    DEPRECATED. This function has been deprecated and should be set to
   3092      *    NULL by the HAL.  Please implement get_vendor_tag_ops in camera_common.h
   3093      *    instead.
   3094      */
   3095     void (*get_metadata_vendor_tag_ops)(const struct camera3_device*,
   3096             vendor_tag_query_ops_t* ops);
   3097 
   3098     /**
   3099      * dump:
   3100      *
   3101      * Print out debugging state for the camera device. This will be called by
   3102      * the framework when the camera service is asked for a debug dump, which
   3103      * happens when using the dumpsys tool, or when capturing a bugreport.
   3104      *
   3105      * The passed-in file descriptor can be used to write debugging text using
   3106      * dprintf() or write(). The text should be in ASCII encoding only.
   3107      *
   3108      * Performance requirements:
   3109      *
   3110      * This must be a non-blocking call. The HAL should return from this call
   3111      * in 1ms, must return from this call in 10ms. This call must avoid
   3112      * deadlocks, as it may be called at any point during camera operation.
   3113      * Any synchronization primitives used (such as mutex locks or semaphores)
   3114      * should be acquired with a timeout.
   3115      */
   3116     void (*dump)(const struct camera3_device *, int fd);
   3117 
   3118     /**
   3119      * flush:
   3120      *
   3121      * Flush all currently in-process captures and all buffers in the pipeline
   3122      * on the given device. The framework will use this to dump all state as
   3123      * quickly as possible in order to prepare for a configure_streams() call.
   3124      *
   3125      * No buffers are required to be successfully returned, so every buffer
   3126      * held at the time of flush() (whether successfully filled or not) may be
   3127      * returned with CAMERA3_BUFFER_STATUS_ERROR. Note the HAL is still allowed
   3128      * to return valid (CAMERA3_BUFFER_STATUS_OK) buffers during this call,
   3129      * provided they are successfully filled.
   3130      *
   3131      * All requests currently in the HAL are expected to be returned as soon as
   3132      * possible.  Not-in-process requests should return errors immediately. Any
   3133      * interruptible hardware blocks should be stopped, and any uninterruptible
   3134      * blocks should be waited on.
   3135      *
   3136      * flush() may be called concurrently to process_capture_request(), with the expectation that
   3137      * process_capture_request will return quickly and the request submitted in that
   3138      * process_capture_request call is treated like all other in-flight requests.  Due to
   3139      * concurrency issues, it is possible that from the HAL's point of view, a
   3140      * process_capture_request() call may be started after flush has been invoked but has not
   3141      * returned yet. If such a call happens before flush() returns, the HAL should treat the new
   3142      * capture request like other in-flight pending requests (see #4 below).
   3143      *
   3144      * More specifically, the HAL must follow below requirements for various cases:
   3145      *
   3146      * 1. For captures that are too late for the HAL to cancel/stop, and will be
   3147      *    completed normally by the HAL; i.e. the HAL can send shutter/notify and
   3148      *    process_capture_result and buffers as normal.
   3149      *
   3150      * 2. For pending requests that have not done any processing, the HAL must call notify
   3151      *    CAMERA3_MSG_ERROR_REQUEST, and return all the output buffers with
   3152      *    process_capture_result in the error state (CAMERA3_BUFFER_STATUS_ERROR).
   3153      *    The HAL must not place the release fence into an error state, instead,
   3154      *    the release fences must be set to the acquire fences passed by the framework,
   3155      *    or -1 if they have been waited on by the HAL already. This is also the path
   3156      *    to follow for any captures for which the HAL already called notify() with
   3157      *    CAMERA3_MSG_SHUTTER but won't be producing any metadata/valid buffers for.
   3158      *    After CAMERA3_MSG_ERROR_REQUEST, for a given frame, only process_capture_results with
   3159      *    buffers in CAMERA3_BUFFER_STATUS_ERROR are allowed. No further notifys or
   3160      *    process_capture_result with non-null metadata is allowed.
   3161      *
   3162      * 3. For partially completed pending requests that will not have all the output
   3163      *    buffers or perhaps missing metadata, the HAL should follow below:
   3164      *
   3165      *    3.1. Call notify with CAMERA3_MSG_ERROR_RESULT if some of the expected result
   3166      *    metadata (i.e. one or more partial metadata) won't be available for the capture.
   3167      *
   3168      *    3.2. Call notify with CAMERA3_MSG_ERROR_BUFFER for every buffer that won't
   3169      *         be produced for the capture.
   3170      *
   3171      *    3.3  Call notify with CAMERA3_MSG_SHUTTER with the capture timestamp before
   3172      *         any buffers/metadata are returned with process_capture_result.
   3173      *
   3174      *    3.4 For captures that will produce some results, the HAL must not call
   3175      *        CAMERA3_MSG_ERROR_REQUEST, since that indicates complete failure.
   3176      *
   3177      *    3.5. Valid buffers/metadata should be passed to the framework as normal.
   3178      *
   3179      *    3.6. Failed buffers should be returned to the framework as described for case 2.
   3180      *         But failed buffers do not have to follow the strict ordering valid buffers do,
   3181      *         and may be out-of-order with respect to valid buffers. For example, if buffers
   3182      *         A, B, C, D, E are sent, D and E are failed, then A, E, B, D, C is an acceptable
   3183      *         return order.
   3184      *
   3185      *    3.7. For fully-missing metadata, calling CAMERA3_MSG_ERROR_RESULT is sufficient, no
   3186      *         need to call process_capture_result with NULL metadata or equivalent.
   3187      *
   3188      * 4. If a flush() is invoked while a process_capture_request() invocation is active, that
   3189      *    process call should return as soon as possible. In addition, if a process_capture_request()
   3190      *    call is made after flush() has been invoked but before flush() has returned, the
   3191      *    capture request provided by the late process_capture_request call should be treated like
   3192      *    a pending request in case #2 above.
   3193      *
   3194      * flush() should only return when there are no more outstanding buffers or
   3195      * requests left in the HAL. The framework may call configure_streams (as
   3196      * the HAL state is now quiesced) or may issue new requests.
   3197      *
   3198      * Note that it's sufficient to only support fully-succeeded and fully-failed result cases.
   3199      * However, it is highly desirable to support the partial failure cases as well, as it
   3200      * could help improve the flush call overall performance.
   3201      *
   3202      * Performance requirements:
   3203      *
   3204      * The HAL should return from this call in 100ms, and must return from this
   3205      * call in 1000ms. And this call must not be blocked longer than pipeline
   3206      * latency (see S7 for definition).
   3207      *
   3208      * Version information:
   3209      *
   3210      *   only available if device version >= CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_1.
   3211      *
   3212      * Return values:
   3213      *
   3214      *  0:      On a successful flush of the camera HAL.
   3215      *
   3216      * -EINVAL: If the input is malformed (the device is not valid).
   3217      *
   3218      * -ENODEV: If the camera device has encountered a serious error. After this
   3219      *          error is returned, only the close() method can be successfully
   3220      *          called by the framework.
   3221      */
   3222     int (*flush)(const struct camera3_device *);
   3223 
   3224     /* reserved for future use */
   3225     void *reserved[8];
   3226 } camera3_device_ops_t;
   3227 
   3228 /**********************************************************************
   3229  *
   3230  * Camera device definition
   3231  *
   3232  */
   3233 typedef struct camera3_device {
   3234     /**
   3235      * common.version must equal CAMERA_DEVICE_API_VERSION_3_0 to identify this
   3236      * device as implementing version 3.0 of the camera device HAL.
   3237      *
   3238      * Performance requirements:
   3239      *
   3240      * Camera open (common.module->common.methods->open) should return in 200ms, and must return
   3241      * in 500ms.
   3242      * Camera close (common.close) should return in 200ms, and must return in 500ms.
   3243      *
   3244      */
   3245     hw_device_t common;
   3246     camera3_device_ops_t *ops;
   3247     void *priv;
   3248 } camera3_device_t;
   3249 
   3250 __END_DECLS
   3251 
   3252 #endif /* #ifdef ANDROID_INCLUDE_CAMERA3_H */
   3253