Zoran 22 KB

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  1. Frequently Asked Questions:
  2. ===========================
  3. subject: unified zoran driver (zr360x7, zoran, buz, dc10(+), dc30(+), lml33)
  4. website: http://mjpeg.sourceforge.net/driver-zoran/
  5. 1. What cards are supported
  6. 1.1 What the TV decoder can do an what not
  7. 1.2 What the TV encoder can do an what not
  8. 2. How do I get this damn thing to work
  9. 3. What mainboard should I use (or why doesn't my card work)
  10. 4. Programming interface
  11. 5. Applications
  12. 6. Concerning buffer sizes, quality, output size etc.
  13. 7. It hangs/crashes/fails/whatevers! Help!
  14. 8. Maintainers/Contacting
  15. 9. License
  16. ===========================
  17. 1. What cards are supported
  18. Iomega Buz, Linux Media Labs LML33/LML33R10, Pinnacle/Miro
  19. DC10/DC10+/DC30/DC30+ and related boards (available under various names).
  20. Iomega Buz:
  21. * Zoran zr36067 PCI controller
  22. * Zoran zr36060 MJPEG codec
  23. * Philips saa7111 TV decoder
  24. * Philips saa7185 TV encoder
  25. Drivers to use: videodev, i2c-core, i2c-algo-bit,
  26. videocodec, saa7111, saa7185, zr36060, zr36067
  27. Inputs/outputs: Composite and S-video
  28. Norms: PAL, SECAM (720x576 @ 25 fps), NTSC (720x480 @ 29.97 fps)
  29. Card number: 7
  30. Linux Media Labs LML33:
  31. * Zoran zr36067 PCI controller
  32. * Zoran zr36060 MJPEG codec
  33. * Brooktree bt819 TV decoder
  34. * Brooktree bt856 TV encoder
  35. Drivers to use: videodev, i2c-core, i2c-algo-bit,
  36. videocodec, bt819, bt856, zr36060, zr36067
  37. Inputs/outputs: Composite and S-video
  38. Norms: PAL (720x576 @ 25 fps), NTSC (720x480 @ 29.97 fps)
  39. Card number: 5
  40. Linux Media Labs LML33R10:
  41. * Zoran zr36067 PCI controller
  42. * Zoran zr36060 MJPEG codec
  43. * Philips saa7114 TV decoder
  44. * Analog Devices adv7170 TV encoder
  45. Drivers to use: videodev, i2c-core, i2c-algo-bit,
  46. videocodec, saa7114, adv7170, zr36060, zr36067
  47. Inputs/outputs: Composite and S-video
  48. Norms: PAL (720x576 @ 25 fps), NTSC (720x480 @ 29.97 fps)
  49. Card number: 6
  50. Pinnacle/Miro DC10(new):
  51. * Zoran zr36057 PCI controller
  52. * Zoran zr36060 MJPEG codec
  53. * Philips saa7110a TV decoder
  54. * Analog Devices adv7176 TV encoder
  55. Drivers to use: videodev, i2c-core, i2c-algo-bit,
  56. videocodec, saa7110, adv7175, zr36060, zr36067
  57. Inputs/outputs: Composite, S-video and Internal
  58. Norms: PAL, SECAM (768x576 @ 25 fps), NTSC (640x480 @ 29.97 fps)
  59. Card number: 1
  60. Pinnacle/Miro DC10+:
  61. * Zoran zr36067 PCI controller
  62. * Zoran zr36060 MJPEG codec
  63. * Philips saa7110a TV decoder
  64. * Analog Devices adv7176 TV encoder
  65. Drivers to use: videodev, i2c-core, i2c-algo-bit,
  66. videocodec, sa7110, adv7175, zr36060, zr36067
  67. Inputs/outputs: Composite, S-video and Internal
  68. Norms: PAL, SECAM (768x576 @ 25 fps), NTSC (640x480 @ 29.97 fps)
  69. Card number: 2
  70. Pinnacle/Miro DC10(old): *
  71. * Zoran zr36057 PCI controller
  72. * Zoran zr36050 MJPEG codec
  73. * Zoran zr36016 Video Front End or Fuji md0211 Video Front End (clone?)
  74. * Micronas vpx3220a TV decoder
  75. * mse3000 TV encoder or Analog Devices adv7176 TV encoder *
  76. Drivers to use: videodev, i2c-core, i2c-algo-bit,
  77. videocodec, vpx3220, mse3000/adv7175, zr36050, zr36016, zr36067
  78. Inputs/outputs: Composite, S-video and Internal
  79. Norms: PAL, SECAM (768x576 @ 25 fps), NTSC (640x480 @ 29.97 fps)
  80. Card number: 0
  81. Pinnacle/Miro DC30: *
  82. * Zoran zr36057 PCI controller
  83. * Zoran zr36050 MJPEG codec
  84. * Zoran zr36016 Video Front End
  85. * Micronas vpx3225d/vpx3220a/vpx3216b TV decoder
  86. * Analog Devices adv7176 TV encoder
  87. Drivers to use: videodev, i2c-core, i2c-algo-bit,
  88. videocodec, vpx3220/vpx3224, adv7175, zr36050, zr36016, zr36067
  89. Inputs/outputs: Composite, S-video and Internal
  90. Norms: PAL, SECAM (768x576 @ 25 fps), NTSC (640x480 @ 29.97 fps)
  91. Card number: 3
  92. Pinnacle/Miro DC30+: *
  93. * Zoran zr36067 PCI controller
  94. * Zoran zr36050 MJPEG codec
  95. * Zoran zr36016 Video Front End
  96. * Micronas vpx3225d/vpx3220a/vpx3216b TV decoder
  97. * Analog Devices adv7176 TV encoder
  98. Drivers to use: videodev, i2c-core, i2c-algo-bit,
  99. videocodec, vpx3220/vpx3224, adv7175, zr36050, zr36015, zr36067
  100. Inputs/outputs: Composite, S-video and Internal
  101. Norms: PAL, SECAM (768x576 @ 25 fps), NTSC (640x480 @ 29.97 fps)
  102. Card number: 4
  103. Note: No module for the mse3000 is available yet
  104. Note: No module for the vpx3224 is available yet
  105. Note: use encoder=X or decoder=X for non-default i2c chips (see i2c-id.h)
  106. ===========================
  107. 1.1 What the TV decoder can do an what not
  108. The best know TV standards are NTSC/PAL/SECAM. but for decoding a frame that
  109. information is not enough. There are several formats of the TV standards.
  110. And not every TV decoder is able to handle every format. Also the every
  111. combination is supported by the driver. There are currently 11 different
  112. tv broadcast formats all aver the world.
  113. The CCIR defines parameters needed for broadcasting the signal.
  114. The CCIR has defined different standards: A,B,D,E,F,G,D,H,I,K,K1,L,M,N,...
  115. The CCIR says not much about about the colorsystem used !!!
  116. And talking about a colorsystem says not to much about how it is broadcast.
  117. The CCIR standards A,E,F are not used any more.
  118. When you speak about NTSC, you usually mean the standard: CCIR - M using
  119. the NTSC colorsystem which is used in the USA, Japan, Mexico, Canada
  120. and a few others.
  121. When you talk about PAL, you usually mean: CCIR - B/G using the PAL
  122. colorsystem which is used in many Countries.
  123. When you talk about SECAM, you mean: CCIR - L using the SECAM Colorsystem
  124. which is used in France, and a few others.
  125. There the other version of SECAM, CCIR - D/K is used in Bulgaria, China,
  126. Slovakai, Hungary, Korea (Rep.), Poland, Rumania and a others.
  127. The CCIR - H uses the PAL colorsystem (sometimes SECAM) and is used in
  128. Egypt, Libya, Sri Lanka, Syrain Arab. Rep.
  129. The CCIR - I uses the PAL colorsystem, and is used in Great Britain, Hong Kong,
  130. Ireland, Nigeria, South Africa.
  131. The CCIR - N uses the PAL colorsystem and PAL frame size but the NTSC framerate,
  132. and is used in Argentinia, Uruguay, an a few others
  133. We do not talk about how the audio is broadcast !
  134. A rather good sites about the TV standards are:
  135. http://www.sony.jp/ServiceArea/Voltage_map/
  136. http://info.electronicwerkstatt.de/bereiche/fernsehtechnik/frequenzen_und_normen/Fernsehnormen/
  137. and http://www.cabl.com/restaurant/channel.html
  138. Other weird things around: NTSC 4.43 is a modificated NTSC, which is mainly
  139. used in PAL VCR's that are able to play back NTSC. PAL 60 seems to be the same
  140. as NTSC 4.43 . The Datasheets also talk about NTSC 44, It seems as if it would
  141. be the same as NTSC 4.43.
  142. NTSC Combs seems to be a decoder mode where the decoder uses a comb filter
  143. to split coma and luma instead of a Delay line.
  144. But I did not defiantly find out what NTSC Comb is.
  145. Philips saa7111 TV decoder
  146. was introduced in 1997, is used in the BUZ and
  147. can handle: PAL B/G/H/I, PAL N, PAL M, NTSC M, NTSC N, NTSC 4.43 and SECAM
  148. Philips saa7110a TV decoder
  149. was introduced in 1995, is used in the Pinnacle/Miro DC10(new), DC10+ and
  150. can handle: PAL B/G, NTSC M and SECAM
  151. Philips saa7114 TV decoder
  152. was introduced in 2000, is used in the LML33R10 and
  153. can handle: PAL B/G/D/H/I/N, PAL N, PAL M, NTSC M, NTSC 4.43 and SECAM
  154. Brooktree bt819 TV decoder
  155. was introduced in 1996, and is used in the LML33 and
  156. can handle: PAL B/D/G/H/I, NTSC M
  157. Micronas vpx3220a TV decoder
  158. was introduced in 1996, is used in the DC30 and DC30+ and
  159. can handle: PAL B/G/H/I, PAL N, PAL M, NTSC M, NTSC 44, PAL 60, SECAM,NTSC Comb
  160. ===========================
  161. 1.2 What the TV encoder can do an what not
  162. The TV encoder are doing the "same" as the decoder, but in the oder direction.
  163. You feed them digital data and the generate a Composite or SVHS signal.
  164. For information about the colorsystems and TV norm take a look in the
  165. TV decoder section.
  166. Philips saa7185 TV Encoder
  167. was introduced in 1996, is used in the BUZ
  168. can generate: PAL B/G, NTSC M
  169. Brooktree bt856 TV Encoder
  170. was introduced in 1994, is used in the LML33
  171. can generate: PAL B/D/G/H/I/N, PAL M, NTSC M, PAL-N (Argentina)
  172. Analog Devices adv7170 TV Encoder
  173. was introduced in 2000, is used in the LML300R10
  174. can generate: PAL B/D/G/H/I/N, PAL M, NTSC M, PAL 60
  175. Analog Devices adv7175 TV Encoder
  176. was introduced in 1996, is used in the DC10, DC10+, DC10 old, DC30, DC30+
  177. can generate: PAL B/D/G/H/I/N, PAL M, NTSC M
  178. ITT mse3000 TV encoder
  179. was introduced in 1991, is used in the DC10 old
  180. can generate: PAL , NTSC , SECAM
  181. The adv717x, should be able to produce PAL N. But you find nothing PAL N
  182. specific in the registers. Seem that you have to reuse a other standard
  183. to generate PAL N, maybe it would work if you use the PAL M settings.
  184. ==========================
  185. 2. How do I get this damn thing to work
  186. Load zr36067.o. If it can't autodetect your card, use the card=X insmod
  187. option with X being the card number as given in the previous section.
  188. To have more than one card, use card=X1[,X2[,X3,[X4[..]]]]
  189. To automate this, add the following to your /etc/modprobe.conf:
  190. options zr36067 card=X1[,X2[,X3[,X4[..]]]]
  191. alias char-major-81-0 zr36067
  192. One thing to keep in mind is that this doesn't load zr36067.o itself yet. It
  193. just automates loading. If you start using xawtv, the device won't load on
  194. some systems, since you're trying to load modules as a user, which is not
  195. allowed ("permission denied"). A quick workaround is to add 'Load "v4l"' to
  196. XF86Config-4 when you use X by default, or to run 'v4l-conf -c <device>' in
  197. one of your startup scripts (normally rc.local) if you don't use X. Both
  198. make sure that the modules are loaded on startup, under the root account.
  199. ===========================
  200. 3. What mainboard should I use (or why doesn't my card work)
  201. <insert lousy disclaimer here>. In short: good=SiS/Intel, bad=VIA.
  202. Experience tells us that people with a Buz, on average, have more problems
  203. than users with a DC10+/LML33. Also, it tells us that people owning a VIA-
  204. based mainboard (ktXXX, MVP3) have more problems than users with a mainboard
  205. based on a different chipset. Here's some notes from Andrew Stevens:
  206. --
  207. Here's my experience of using LML33 and Buz on various motherboards:
  208. VIA MVP3
  209. Forget it. Pointless. Doesn't work.
  210. Intel 430FX (Pentium 200)
  211. LML33 perfect, Buz tolerable (3 or 4 frames dropped per movie)
  212. Intel 440BX (early stepping)
  213. LML33 tolerable. Buz starting to get annoying (6-10 frames/hour)
  214. Intel 440BX (late stepping)
  215. Buz tolerable, LML3 almost perfect (occasional single frame drops)
  216. SiS735
  217. LML33 perfect, Buz tolerable.
  218. VIA KT133(*)
  219. LML33 starting to get annoying, Buz poor enough that I have up.
  220. Both 440BX boards were dual CPU versions.
  221. --
  222. Bernhard Praschinger later added:
  223. --
  224. AMD 751
  225. Buz perfect-tolerable
  226. AMD 760
  227. Buz perfect-tolerable
  228. --
  229. In general, people on the user mailinglist won't give you much of a chance
  230. if you have a VIA-based motherboard. They may be cheap, but sometimes, you'd
  231. rather want to spend some more money on better boards. In general, VIA
  232. mainboard's IDE/PCI performance will also suck badly compared to others.
  233. You'll noticed the DC10+/DC30+ aren't mentioned anywhere in the overview.
  234. Basically, you can assume that if the Buz works, the LML33 will work too. If
  235. the LML33 works, the DC10+/DC30+ will work too. They're most tolerant to
  236. different mainboard chipsets from all of the supported cards.
  237. If you experience timeouts during capture, buy a better mainboard or lower
  238. the quality/buffersize during capture (see 'Concerning buffer sizes, quality,
  239. output size etc.'). If it hangs, there's little we can do as of now. Check
  240. your IRQs and make sure the card has its own interrupts.
  241. ===========================
  242. 4. Programming interface
  243. This driver conforms to video4linux and video4linux2, both can be used to
  244. use the driver. Since video4linux didn't provide adequate calls to fully
  245. use the cards' features, we've introduced several programming extensions,
  246. which are currently officially accepted in the 2.4.x branch of the kernel.
  247. These extensions are known as the v4l/mjpeg extensions. See zoran.h for
  248. details (structs/ioctls).
  249. Information - video4linux:
  250. http://roadrunner.swansea.linux.org.uk/v4lapi.shtml
  251. Documentation/video4linux/API.html
  252. /usr/include/linux/videodev.h
  253. Information - video4linux/mjpeg extensions:
  254. ./zoran.h
  255. (also see below)
  256. Information - video4linux2:
  257. http://www.thedirks.org/v4l2/
  258. /usr/include/linux/videodev2.h
  259. http://www.bytesex.org/v4l/
  260. More information on the video4linux/mjpeg extensions, by Serguei
  261. Miridonovi and Rainer Johanni:
  262. --
  263. The ioctls for that interface are as follows:
  264. BUZIOC_G_PARAMS
  265. BUZIOC_S_PARAMS
  266. Get and set the parameters of the buz. The user should always do a
  267. BUZIOC_G_PARAMS (with a struct buz_params) to obtain the default
  268. settings, change what he likes and then make a BUZIOC_S_PARAMS call.
  269. BUZIOC_REQBUFS
  270. Before being able to capture/playback, the user has to request
  271. the buffers he is wanting to use. Fill the structure
  272. zoran_requestbuffers with the size (recommended: 256*1024) and
  273. the number (recommended 32 up to 256). There are no such restrictions
  274. as for the Video for Linux buffers, you should LEAVE SUFFICIENT
  275. MEMORY for your system however, else strange things will happen ....
  276. On return, the zoran_requestbuffers structure contains number and
  277. size of the actually allocated buffers.
  278. You should use these numbers for doing a mmap of the buffers
  279. into the user space.
  280. The BUZIOC_REQBUFS ioctl also makes it happen, that the next mmap
  281. maps the MJPEG buffer instead of the V4L buffers.
  282. BUZIOC_QBUF_CAPT
  283. BUZIOC_QBUF_PLAY
  284. Queue a buffer for capture or playback. The first call also starts
  285. streaming capture. When streaming capture is going on, you may
  286. only queue further buffers or issue syncs until streaming
  287. capture is switched off again with a argument of -1 to
  288. a BUZIOC_QBUF_CAPT/BUZIOC_QBUF_PLAY ioctl.
  289. BUZIOC_SYNC
  290. Issue this ioctl when all buffers are queued. This ioctl will
  291. block until the first buffer becomes free for saving its
  292. data to disk (after BUZIOC_QBUF_CAPT) or for reuse (after BUZIOC_QBUF_PLAY).
  293. BUZIOC_G_STATUS
  294. Get the status of the input lines (video source connected/norm).
  295. For programming example, please, look at lavrec.c and lavplay.c code in
  296. lavtools-1.2p2 package (URL: http://www.cicese.mx/~mirsev/DC10plus/)
  297. and the 'examples' directory in the original Buz driver distribution.
  298. Additional notes for software developers:
  299. The driver returns maxwidth and maxheight parameters according to
  300. the current TV standard (norm). Therefore, the software which
  301. communicates with the driver and "asks" for these parameters should
  302. first set the correct norm. Well, it seems logically correct: TV
  303. standard is "more constant" for current country than geometry
  304. settings of a variety of TV capture cards which may work in ITU or
  305. square pixel format. Remember that users now can lock the norm to
  306. avoid any ambiguity.
  307. --
  308. Please note that lavplay/lavrec are also included in the MJPEG-tools
  309. (http://mjpeg.sf.net/).
  310. ===========================
  311. 5. Applications
  312. Applications known to work with this driver:
  313. TV viewing:
  314. * xawtv
  315. * kwintv
  316. * probably any TV application that supports video4linux or video4linux2.
  317. MJPEG capture/playback:
  318. * mjpegtools/lavtools (or Linux Video Studio)
  319. * gstreamer
  320. * mplayer
  321. General raw capture:
  322. * xawtv
  323. * gstreamer
  324. * probably any application that supports video4linux or video4linux2
  325. Video editing:
  326. * Cinelerra
  327. * MainActor
  328. * mjpegtools (or Linux Video Studio)
  329. ===========================
  330. 6. Concerning buffer sizes, quality, output size etc.
  331. The zr36060 can do 1:2 JPEG compression. This is really the theoretical
  332. maximum that the chipset can reach. The driver can, however, limit compression
  333. to a maximum (size) of 1:4. The reason for this is that some cards (e.g. Buz)
  334. can't handle 1:2 compression without stopping capture after only a few minutes.
  335. With 1:4, it'll mostly work. If you have a Buz, use 'low_bitrate=1' to go into
  336. 1:4 max. compression mode.
  337. 100% JPEG quality is thus 1:2 compression in practice. So for a full PAL frame
  338. (size 720x576). The JPEG fields are stored in YUY2 format, so the size of the
  339. fields are 720x288x16/2 bits/field (2 fields/frame) = 207360 bytes/field x 2 =
  340. 414720 bytes/frame (add some more bytes for headers and DHT (huffman)/DQT
  341. (quantization) tables, and you'll get to something like 512kB per frame for
  342. 1:2 compression. For 1:4 compression, you'd have frames of half this size.
  343. Some additional explanation by Martin Samuelsson, which also explains the
  344. importance of buffer sizes:
  345. --
  346. > Hmm, I do not think it is really that way. With the current (downloaded
  347. > at 18:00 Monday) driver I get that output sizes for 10 sec:
  348. > -q 50 -b 128 : 24.283.332 Bytes
  349. > -q 50 -b 256 : 48.442.368
  350. > -q 25 -b 128 : 24.655.992
  351. > -q 25 -b 256 : 25.859.820
  352. I woke up, and can't go to sleep again. I'll kill some time explaining why
  353. this doesn't look strange to me.
  354. Let's do some math using a width of 704 pixels. I'm not sure whether the Buz
  355. actually use that number or not, but that's not too important right now.
  356. 704x288 pixels, one field, is 202752 pixels. Divided by 64 pixels per block;
  357. 3168 blocks per field. Each pixel consist of two bytes; 128 bytes per block;
  358. 1024 bits per block. 100% in the new driver mean 1:2 compression; the maximum
  359. output becomes 512 bits per block. Actually 510, but 512 is simpler to use
  360. for calculations.
  361. Let's say that we specify d1q50. We thus want 256 bits per block; times 3168
  362. becomes 811008 bits; 101376 bytes per field. We're talking raw bits and bytes
  363. here, so we don't need to do any fancy corrections for bits-per-pixel or such
  364. things. 101376 bytes per field.
  365. d1 video contains two fields per frame. Those sum up to 202752 bytes per
  366. frame, and one of those frames goes into each buffer.
  367. But wait a second! -b128 gives 128kB buffers! It's not possible to cram
  368. 202752 bytes of JPEG data into 128kB!
  369. This is what the driver notice and automatically compensate for in your
  370. examples. Let's do some math using this information:
  371. 128kB is 131072 bytes. In this buffer, we want to store two fields, which
  372. leaves 65536 bytes for each field. Using 3168 blocks per field, we get
  373. 20.68686868... available bytes per block; 165 bits. We can't allow the
  374. request for 256 bits per block when there's only 165 bits available! The -q50
  375. option is silently overridden, and the -b128 option takes precedence, leaving
  376. us with the equivalence of -q32.
  377. This gives us a data rate of 165 bits per block, which, times 3168, sums up
  378. to 65340 bytes per field, out of the allowed 65536. The current driver has
  379. another level of rate limiting; it won't accept -q values that fill more than
  380. 6/8 of the specified buffers. (I'm not sure why. "Playing it safe" seem to be
  381. a safe bet. Personally, I think I would have lowered requested-bits-per-block
  382. by one, or something like that.) We can't use 165 bits per block, but have to
  383. lower it again, to 6/8 of the available buffer space: We end up with 124 bits
  384. per block, the equivalence of -q24. With 128kB buffers, you can't use greater
  385. than -q24 at -d1. (And PAL, and 704 pixels width...)
  386. The third example is limited to -q24 through the same process. The second
  387. example, using very similar calculations, is limited to -q48. The only
  388. example that actually grab at the specified -q value is the last one, which
  389. is clearly visible, looking at the file size.
  390. --
  391. Conclusion: the quality of the resulting movie depends on buffer size, quality,
  392. whether or not you use 'low_bitrate=1' as insmod option for the zr36060.c
  393. module to do 1:4 instead of 1:2 compression, etc.
  394. If you experience timeouts, lowering the quality/buffersize or using
  395. 'low_bitrate=1 as insmod option for zr36060.o might actually help, as is
  396. proven by the Buz.
  397. ===========================
  398. 7. It hangs/crashes/fails/whatevers! Help!
  399. Make sure that the card has its own interrupts (see /proc/interrupts), check
  400. the output of dmesg at high verbosity (load zr36067.o with debug=2,
  401. load all other modules with debug=1). Check that your mainboard is favorable
  402. (see question 2) and if not, test the card in another computer. Also see the
  403. notes given in question 3 and try lowering quality/buffersize/capturesize
  404. if recording fails after a period of time.
  405. If all this doesn't help, give a clear description of the problem including
  406. detailed hardware information (memory+brand, mainboard+chipset+brand, which
  407. MJPEG card, processor, other PCI cards that might be of interest), give the
  408. system PnP information (/proc/interrupts, /proc/dma, /proc/devices), and give
  409. the kernel version, driver version, glibc version, gcc version and any other
  410. information that might possibly be of interest. Also provide the dmesg output
  411. at high verbosity. See 'Contacting' on how to contact the developers.
  412. ===========================
  413. 8. Maintainers/Contacting
  414. The driver is currently maintained by Laurent Pinchart and Ronald Bultje
  415. (<laurent.pinchart@skynet.be> and <rbultje@ronald.bitfreak.net>). For bug
  416. reports or questions, please contact the mailinglist instead of the developers
  417. individually. For user questions (i.e. bug reports or how-to questions), send
  418. an email to <mjpeg-users@lists.sf.net>, for developers (i.e. if you want to
  419. help programming), send an email to <mjpeg-developer@lists.sf.net>. See
  420. http://www.sf.net/projects/mjpeg/ for subscription information.
  421. For bug reports, be sure to include all the information as described in
  422. the section 'It hangs/crashes/fails/whatevers! Help!'. Please make sure
  423. you're using the latest version (http://mjpeg.sf.net/driver-zoran/).
  424. Previous maintainers/developers of this driver include Serguei Miridonov
  425. <mirsev@cicese.mx>, Wolfgang Scherr <scherr@net4you.net>, Dave Perks
  426. <dperks@ibm.net> and Rainer Johanni <Rainer@Johanni.de>.
  427. ===========================
  428. 9. License
  429. This driver is distributed under the terms of the General Public License.
  430. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
  431. it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
  432. the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
  433. (at your option) any later version.
  434. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
  435. but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
  436. MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
  437. GNU General Public License for more details.
  438. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
  439. along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
  440. Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
  441. See http://www.gnu.org/ for more information.