Hi!
> > If so then the Video4Linux2 API is still the best way to implement the
> > protocol to pass data between the user-space programs and the driver.
> > The V4L2 API doesn't says that the camera must be far away from the
> > processor, it can work for USB webcams, for Firewire video camera, PCI
> > TV tuners, and probably also for your device. Using the V4L2 not only
> > has the advantage of being a well tested API for communicating video
> > related information with the user-space but it also buys you the fact
> > that any program available on Linux for video should be able to directly
> > detect and use the captor!
>
> Sorry, but no. The camera has been designed to be used in industrial
> control applications, such as quality assurance. Think of an automated
> inspection of a certain product, where the inspection is integrated
> into the production process. Faulty products are sorted out. For this to
> work it is absolutely necessary to get the maximum speed (image frames
> per second) out of the hardware, so image acquisition and processing
> must be carried out in parallel. The way to achieve this is have the
> driver manage a queue of image buffers to fill, so it will continue
> grabbing images even if no read operation is currently pending. Also,
> the ability to attach user-specific context information to every buffer
> is essential.
Well, I guess v4l api will need to be improved, then. That is still
not a reason to introduce completely new api...
--
Thanks for all the (sleeping) penguins.
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