summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/Documentation/design/ae.rst
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorPaul Elder <paul.elder@ideasonboard.com>2025-01-13 15:59:43 -0600
committerLaurent Pinchart <laurent.pinchart@ideasonboard.com>2025-01-20 21:36:40 +0200
commit85cb179f289d29d05babf7b2a0fdcfed5d94ba54 (patch)
treefafcdbc26e8889e10e185e75ae409a3018752b08 /Documentation/design/ae.rst
parenta533bd004bcebcfa484bdb96ee905694237c9afa (diff)
controls: Redefine AeEnable
In the redesign of the AE-related controls, the AeEnable control was intended to be removed in favor of more specific sub-controls for analogue gain and exposure time. However this will cause problems if aperture sub-controls are introduced, and an application from a pre-aperture era uses a camera that supports aperture. If there is no AeEnable control, then a pre-aperture era application might set analogue gain and exposure time to manual, while aperture silently stays auto since that's the default mode. Thus aperture would be uncontrollable by the application. With an AeEnable control, then a pre-aperture era application can set AeEnable to manual, and under the hood all three of analogue gain and exposure time and aperture will be set to manual. The application won't be able to set the manual aperture, however. Although the above scenario is expected to be rare, the scenario with an AeEnable control seems less detrimental. With an AeEnable control at least the aperture would be static at a reasonably usable value, whereas without an AeEnable the aperture would be more-or-less uncontrolable and could go to extreme values as the AEGC algorithm tries to compensate for the manual analogue gain and exposure time values. Thus we redefine the AeEnable control, available only as a control and not in metadata. It will be preprocessed by the Camera class so that the relevant sub-controls are set. No pipline handler nor IPA shall act on the AeEnable control. The IPA still has to report the control as available, however. Signed-off-by: Paul Elder <paul.elder@ideasonboard.com> Reviewed-by: Laurent Pinchart <laurent.pinchart@ideasonboard.com> Reviewed-by: Stefan Klug <stefan.klug@ideasonboard.com> Signed-off-by: Laurent Pinchart <laurent.pinchart@ideasonboard.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/design/ae.rst')
-rw-r--r--Documentation/design/ae.rst23
1 files changed, 17 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/design/ae.rst b/Documentation/design/ae.rst
index 9d5bb507..df9b1fa7 100644
--- a/Documentation/design/ae.rst
+++ b/Documentation/design/ae.rst
@@ -185,6 +185,10 @@ A diagram of our solution:
0: Auto
1: Manual
+ AeEnable
+ - True -> ExposureTimeMode:Auto + AnalogueGainMode:Auto
+ - False -> ExposureTimeMode:Manual + AnalogueGainMode:Manual
+
The diagram is divided in four sections horizontally:
@@ -225,10 +229,14 @@ This simulates an auto -> locked -> manual or auto -> manual state transition,
and makes it impossible to do the nonsensical manual -> locked state
transition.
-We specifically do not have a "master AE control" like the old AeEnable. This
-is because we have the individual mode controls, and if we had a master AE
-control it would be a "control that sets other controls", which could easily
-get out of control.
+AeEnable still exists to allow applications to set the mode of all the
+sub-controls at once. Besides being for convenience, this will also be useful
+when we eventually implement an aperture control. This is because applications
+that will be made before aperture will have been available would still be able
+to set aperture mode to auto or manual, as opposed to having the aperture stuck
+at auto while the application really wanted manual. Although the aperture would
+still be stuck at an uncontrollable value, at least it would be at a static
+usable value as opposed to varying via the AEGC algorithm.
With this solution, the earlier example would become:
@@ -277,9 +285,12 @@ and gain:
- AeState
+- AeEnable
+
Auto-exposure and auto-gain can be enabled and disabled separately using the
-ExposureTimeMode and AnalogueGainMode controls respectively. There is no
-overarching AeEnable control.
+ExposureTimeMode and AnalogueGainMode controls respectively. The AeEnable
+control can also be used, as it sets both of the modes simultaneously. The
+AeEnable control is not returned in metadata.
When the respective mode is set to auto, the respective value that is computed
by the AEGC algorithm is applied to the image sensor. Any value that is