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| diff --git a/docs/api.rst b/docs/api.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000..8bb26b9 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/api.rst @@ -0,0 +1,211 @@ +Application Programming Interface +================================= + +In the introduction we had a quick glance over the basic API used to communicate +with a camera. Now we will go into more detail and explain required background +to understand the execution model. + + +Instantiating cameras +--------------------- + +We have already seen how to instantiate a camera object from a name. If +you have more than one camera connected to a machine, you will most +likely want the user decide which to use. To do so, you can enumerate +all camera strings with ``uca_plugin_manager_get_available_cameras``:: + +        GList *types; + +        types = uca_camera_get_available_cameras (manager); + +        for (GList *it = g_list_first; it != NULL; it = g_list_next (it)) +            g_print ("%s\n", (gchar *) it->data); + +        /* free the strings and the list */ +        g_list_foreach (types, (GFunc) g_free, NULL); +        g_list_free (types); + + +Errors +------ + +All public API functions take a location of a pointer to a ``GError`` +structure as a last argument. You can pass in a ``NULL`` value, in which +case you cannot be notified about exceptional behavior. On the other +hand, if you pass in a pointer to a ``GError``, it must be initialized +with ``NULL`` so that you do not accidentally overwrite and miss an +error occurred earlier. + +Read more about ``GError``\ s in the official GLib +`documentation <http://developer.gnome.org/glib/stable/glib-Error-Reporting.html>`__. + + +Recording +--------- + +Recording frames is independent of actually grabbing them and is started +with ``uca_camera_start_recording``. You should always stop the +recording with ``ufo_camera_stop_recording`` when you finished. When the +recording has started, you can grab frames synchronously as described +earlier. In this mode, a block to ``uca_camera_grab`` blocks until a +frame is read from the camera. Grabbing might block indefinitely, when +the camera is not functioning correctly or it is not triggered +automatically. + + +Triggering +---------- + +``libuca`` supports three trigger modes through the "trigger-mode" +property: + +1. ``UCA_CAMERA_TRIGGER_AUTO``: Exposure is triggered by the camera +   itself. +2. ``UCA_CAMERA_TRIGGER_INTERNAL``: Exposure is triggered via software. +3. ``UCA_CAMERA_TRIGGER_EXTERNAL``: Exposure is triggered by an external +   hardware mechanism. + +With ``UCA_CAMERA_TRIGGER_INTERNAL`` you have to trigger with +``uca_camera_trigger``:: + +        /* thread A */ +        g_object_set (G_OBJECT (camera), +                      "trigger-mode", UCA_CAMERA_TRIGGER_INTERNAL, +                      NULL); + +        uca_camera_start_recording (camera, NULL); +        uca_camera_grab (camera, &buffer, NULL); +        uca_camera_stop_recording (camera, NULL); + +        /* thread B */ +        uca_camera_trigger (camera, NULL); + + +Grabbing frames asynchronously +------------------------------ + +In some applications, it might make sense to setup asynchronous frame +acquisition, for which you will not be blocked by a call to ``libuca``:: + +    static void +    callback (gpointer buffer, gpointer user_data) +    { +        /* +         * Do something useful with the buffer and the string we have got. +         */ +    } + +    static void +    setup_async (UcaCamera *camera) +    { +        gchar *s = g_strdup ("lorem ipsum"); + +        g_object_set (G_OBJECT (camera), +                      "transfer-asynchronously", TRUE, +                      NULL); + +        uca_camera_set_grab_func (camera, callback, s); +        uca_camera_start_recording (camera, NULL); + +        /* +         * We will return here and `callback` will be called for each newo +         * new frame. +         */ +    } + + +Bindings +-------- + +.. highlight:: python + +Since version 1.1, libuca generates GObject introspection meta data if +``g-ir-scanner`` and ``g-ir-compiler`` can be found. When the XML +description ``Uca-x.y.gir`` and the typelib ``Uca-x.y.typelib`` are +installed, GI-aware languages can access libuca and create and modify +cameras, for example in Python:: + +    from gi.repository import Uca + +    pm = Uca.PluginManager() + +    # List all cameras +    print(pm.get_available_cameras()) + +    # Load a camera +    cam = pm.get_camerav('pco', []) + +    # You can read and write properties in two ways +    cam.set_properties(exposure_time=0.05) +    cam.props.roi_width = 1024 + +Note, that the naming of classes and properties depends on the GI +implementation of the target language. For example with Python, the +namespace prefix ``uca_`` becomes the module name ``Uca`` and dashes +separating property names become underscores. + +Integration with Numpy is relatively straightforward. The most important +thing is to get the data pointer from a Numpy array to pass it to +``uca_camera_grab``:: + +    import numpy as np + +    def create_array_from(camera): +        """Create a suitably sized Numpy array and return it together with the +        arrays data pointer""" +        bits = camera.props.sensor_bitdepth +        dtype = np.uint16 if bits > 8 else np.uint8 +        a = np.zeros((cam.props.roi_height, cam.props.roi_width), dtype=dtype) +        return a, a.__array_interface__['data'][0] + +    # Suppose 'camera' is a already available, you would get the camera data like +    # this: +    a, buf = create_array_from(camera) +    camera.start_recording() +    camera.grab(buf) + +    # Now data is in 'a' and we can use Numpy functions on it +    print(np.mean(a)) + +    camera.stop_recording() + + +Integrating new cameras +======================= + +A new camera is integrated by +`sub-classing <http://developer.gnome.org/gobject/stable/howto-gobject.html>`__ +``UcaCamera`` and implement all virtual methods. The simplest way is to +take the ``mock`` camera and rename all occurences. Note, that if you +class is going to be called ``FooBar``, the upper case variant is +``FOO_BAR`` and the lower case variant is ``foo_bar``. + +In order to fully implement a camera, you need to override at least the +following virtual methods: + +-  ``start_recording``: Take suitable actions so that a subsequent call +   to ``grab`` delivers an image or blocks until one is exposed. +-  ``stop_recording``: Stop recording so that subsequent calls to +   ``grab`` fail. +-  ``grab``: Return an image from the camera or block until one is +   ready. + + +Asynchronous operation +---------------------- + +When the camera supports asynchronous acquisition and announces it with +a true boolean value for ``"transfer-asynchronously"``, a mechanism must +be setup up during ``start_recording`` so that for each new frame the +grab func callback is called. + + +Cameras with internal memory +---------------------------- + +Cameras such as the pco.dimax record into their own on-board memory +rather than streaming directly to the host PC. In this case, both +``start_recording`` and ``stop_recording`` initiate and end acquisition +to the on-board memory. To initiate a data transfer, the host calls +``start_readout`` which must be suitably implemented. The actual data +transfer happens either with ``grab`` or asynchronously. diff --git a/docs/cameras.rst b/docs/cameras.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000..0825542 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/cameras.rst @@ -0,0 +1,21 @@ +Supported cameras +================= + +The following cameras are supported: + +-  pco.edge, pco.dimax, pco.4000 (all CameraLink) via +   `libpco <http://ufo.kit.edu/repos/libpco.git/>`__. You need to have +   the SiliconSoftware frame grabber SDK with the ``menable`` kernel +   module installed. +-  PhotonFocus +-  Pylon +-  UFO Camera developed at KIT/IPE. + + +Property documentation +---------------------- + +-  `mock <mock.html>`__ +-  `pco <pco.html>`__ +-  `PhotonFocus <pf.html>`__ +-  `Ufo Camera <ufo.html>`__ diff --git a/docs/index.rst b/docs/index.rst index 0ac412a..223bb5d 100644 --- a/docs/index.rst +++ b/docs/index.rst @@ -1,690 +1,19 @@  Welcome  ======= -libuca is a light-weight camera abstraction library, focused on scientific -cameras used at the ANKA synchrotron. +`libuca`_ is a light-weight camera abstraction library written in C and GObject, +focused on scientific cameras used at the ANKA synchrotron. +.. _libuca: https://github.com/ufo-kit/libuca -Quickstart -========== +Contents +-------- -Installation ------------- +.. toctree:: +    :maxdepth: 2 -Before installing ``libuca`` itself, you should install any drivers and -SDKs needed to access the cameras you want to access through ``libuca``. -Now you have two options: install pre-built packages or build from -source. - - -Installing packages -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -Packages for the core library and all plugins are currently provided for -openSUSE. To install them run ``zypper``: - -:: - -    sudo zypper in libuca-x.y.z-x86_64.rpm -    sudo zypper in uca-plugin-*.rpm - -To install development files such as headers, you have to install the -``libuca-x.y.z-devel.rpm`` package. - - -Building from source -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -Building the library and installing from source is simple and -straightforward. Make sure you have - --  CMake, --  a C compiler, --  GLib and GObject development libraries and --  necessary camera SDKs - -installed. - -For the base system, install :: - -    [Debian] sudo apt-get install libglib2.0 cmake gcc -    [openSUSE] sudo zypper in glib2-devel cmake gcc - -In case you want to use the graphical user interface you also need the -Gtk+ development libraries:: - -    [Debian] sudo apt-get install libgtk+2.0-dev -    [openSUSE] sudo zypper in gtk2-devel - -To generate bindings for third-party languages, you have to install :: - -    [Debian] sudo apt-get install gobject-introspection -    [openSUSE] sudo zypper in gobject-introspection-devel - - -Fetching the sources -^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ - -Untar the distribution :: - -    untar xfz libuca-x.y.z.tar.gz - -or clone the repository :: - -    git clone http://ufo.kit.edu/git/libuca - -and create a new, empty build directory inside:: - -    cd libuca/ -    mkdir build - - -Configuring and building -^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ - -Now you need to create the Makefile with CMake. Go into the build -directory and point CMake to the ``libuca`` top-level directory:: - -    cd build/ -    cmake .. - -As long as the last line reads "Build files have been written to", the -configuration stage is successful. In this case you can build ``libuca`` -with :: - -    make - -and install with :: - -    sudo make install - -If an *essential* dependency could not be found, the configuration stage -will stop and build files will not be written. If a *non-essential* -dependency (such as a certain camera SDK) is not found, the -configuration stage will continue but that particular camera support not -built. - -If you want to customize the build process you can pass several -variables to CMake:: - -    cmake .. -DPREFIX=/usr -DLIBDIR=/usr/lib64 - -The former tells CMake to install into ``/usr`` instead of -``/usr/local`` and the latter that we want to install the libraries and -plugins into the ``lib64`` subdir instead of the default ``lib`` subdir -as it is common on SUSE systems. - - -First look at the API ---------------------- - -.. highlight:: c - -The API for accessing cameras is straightforward. First you need to -include the necessary header files:: - -    #include <glib-object.h> -    #include <uca/uca-plugin-manager.h> -    #include <uca/uca-camera.h> - -Then you need to setup the type system:: - -    int -    main (int argc, char *argv[]) -    { -        UcaPluginManager *manager; -        UcaCamera *camera; -        GError *error = NULL; /* this _must_ be set to NULL */ - -        g_type_init (); - -Now you can instantiate new camera *objects*. Each camera is identified -by a human-readable string, in this case we want to access any pco -camera that is supported by -`libpco <http://ufo.kit.edu/repos/libpco.git/>`__. To instantiate a -camera we have to create a plugin manager first:: - -        manager = uca_plugin_manager_new (); -        camera = uca_plugin_manager_get_camera (manager, "pco", &error); - -Errors are indicated with a returned value ``NULL`` and ``error`` set to -a value other than ``NULL``:: - -        if (camera == NULL) { -            g_error ("Initialization: %s", error->message); -            return 1; -        } - -You should always remove the -`reference <http://developer.gnome.org/gobject/stable/gobject-memory.html#gobject-memory-refcount>`__ -from the camera object when not using it in order to free all associated -resources:: - -        g_object_unref (camera); -        return 0; -    } - -Compile this program with :: - -    cc `pkg-config --cflags --libs libuca glib-2.0` foo.c -o foo - -Now, run ``foo`` and verify that no errors occur. - - -Grabbing frames -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -To synchronously grab frames, first start the camera:: - -        uca_camera_start_recording (camera, &error); -        g_assert_no_error (error); - -Now, you have to allocate a suitably sized buffer and pass it to -``uca_camera_grab``:: - -        gpointer buffer = g_malloc0 (640 * 480 * 2); - -        uca_camera_grab (camera, buffer, &error); - -You have to make sure that the buffer is large enough by querying the -size of the region of interest and the number of bits that are -transferred. - - -Getting and setting camera parameters -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -Because camera parameters vary tremendously between different vendors -and products, they are realized with so-called GObject *properties*, a -mechanism that maps string keys to typed and access restricted values. -To get a value, you use the ``g_object_get`` function and provide memory -where the result is stored:: - -        guint roi_width; -        gdouble exposure_time; - -        g_object_get (G_OBJECT(camera), -                      "roi-width", &roi_width, -                      "exposure-time", &exposure_time, -                      /* The NULL marks the end! */ -                      NULL -                      ); - -        g_print ("Width of the region of interest: %d\n", roi_width); -        g_print ("Exposure time: %3.5s\n", exposure_time); - -In a similar way, properties are set with ``g_object_set``:: - -        guint roi_width = 512; -        gdouble exposure_time = 0.001; - -        g_object_set (G_OBJECT (camera), -                      "roi-width", roi_width, -                      "exposure-time", exposure_time, -                      NULL); - -Each property can be associated with a physical unit. To query for the -unit call ``uca_camera_get_unit`` and pass a property name. The function -will then return a value from the ``UcaUnit`` enum. - -Several essential camera parameters *must* be implemented by all -cameras. To get a list of them consult the API reference for -```UcaCamera`` <http://ufo.kit.edu/extra/libuca/reference/UcaCamera.html#UcaCamera.properties>`__. -For camera specific parameters you need to consult the corresponding API -reference for ``UfoFooCamera``. The latest nightly built reference can -be found `here <http://ufo.kit.edu/extra/libuca/reference/>`__. - - -Supported cameras -================= - -The following cameras are supported: - --  pco.edge, pco.dimax, pco.4000 (all CameraLink) via -   `libpco <http://ufo.kit.edu/repos/libpco.git/>`__. You need to have -   the SiliconSoftware frame grabber SDK with the ``menable`` kernel -   module installed. --  PhotonFocus --  Pylon --  UFO Camera developed at KIT/IPE. - - -Property documentation ----------------------- - --  `mock <mock.html>`__ --  `pco <pco.html>`__ --  `PhotonFocus <pf.html>`__ --  `Ufo Camera <ufo.html>`__ - - -More API -======== - -In the `last section <#first-look-at-the-api>`__, we had a quick glance -over the basic API used to communicate with the camera. Now we will go -into more detail. - - -Instantiating cameras ---------------------- - -We have already seen how to instantiate a camera object from a name. If -you have more than one camera connected to a machine, you will most -likely want the user decide which to use. To do so, you can enumerate -all camera strings with ``uca_plugin_manager_get_available_cameras``:: - -        GList *types; - -        types = uca_camera_get_available_cameras (manager); - -        for (GList *it = g_list_first; it != NULL; it = g_list_next (it)) -            g_print ("%s\n", (gchar *) it->data); - -        /* free the strings and the list */ -        g_list_foreach (types, (GFunc) g_free, NULL); -        g_list_free (types); - - -Errors ------- - -All public API functions take a location of a pointer to a ``GError`` -structure as a last argument. You can pass in a ``NULL`` value, in which -case you cannot be notified about exceptional behavior. On the other -hand, if you pass in a pointer to a ``GError``, it must be initialized -with ``NULL`` so that you do not accidentally overwrite and miss an -error occurred earlier. - -Read more about ``GError``\ s in the official GLib -`documentation <http://developer.gnome.org/glib/stable/glib-Error-Reporting.html>`__. - - -Recording ---------- - -Recording frames is independent of actually grabbing them and is started -with ``uca_camera_start_recording``. You should always stop the -recording with ``ufo_camera_stop_recording`` when you finished. When the -recording has started, you can grab frames synchronously as described -earlier. In this mode, a block to ``uca_camera_grab`` blocks until a -frame is read from the camera. Grabbing might block indefinitely, when -the camera is not functioning correctly or it is not triggered -automatically. - - -Triggering ----------- - -``libuca`` supports three trigger modes through the "trigger-mode" -property: - -1. ``UCA_CAMERA_TRIGGER_AUTO``: Exposure is triggered by the camera -   itself. -2. ``UCA_CAMERA_TRIGGER_INTERNAL``: Exposure is triggered via software. -3. ``UCA_CAMERA_TRIGGER_EXTERNAL``: Exposure is triggered by an external -   hardware mechanism. - -With ``UCA_CAMERA_TRIGGER_INTERNAL`` you have to trigger with -``uca_camera_trigger``:: - -        /* thread A */ -        g_object_set (G_OBJECT (camera), -                      "trigger-mode", UCA_CAMERA_TRIGGER_INTERNAL, -                      NULL); - -        uca_camera_start_recording (camera, NULL); -        uca_camera_grab (camera, &buffer, NULL); -        uca_camera_stop_recording (camera, NULL); - -        /* thread B */ -        uca_camera_trigger (camera, NULL); - - -Grabbing frames asynchronously ------------------------------- - -In some applications, it might make sense to setup asynchronous frame -acquisition, for which you will not be blocked by a call to ``libuca``:: - -    static void -    callback (gpointer buffer, gpointer user_data) -    { -        /* -         * Do something useful with the buffer and the string we have got. -         */ -    } - -    static void -    setup_async (UcaCamera *camera) -    { -        gchar *s = g_strdup ("lorem ipsum"); - -        g_object_set (G_OBJECT (camera), -                      "transfer-asynchronously", TRUE, -                      NULL); - -        uca_camera_set_grab_func (camera, callback, s); -        uca_camera_start_recording (camera, NULL); - -        /* -         * We will return here and `callback` will be called for each newo -         * new frame. -         */ -    } - - -Bindings -======== - -.. highlight:: python - -Since version 1.1, libuca generates GObject introspection meta data if -``g-ir-scanner`` and ``g-ir-compiler`` can be found. When the XML -description ``Uca-x.y.gir`` and the typelib ``Uca-x.y.typelib`` are -installed, GI-aware languages can access libuca and create and modify -cameras, for example in Python:: - -    from gi.repository import Uca - -    pm = Uca.PluginManager() - -    # List all cameras -    print(pm.get_available_cameras()) - -    # Load a camera -    cam = pm.get_camerav('pco', []) - -    # You can read and write properties in two ways -    cam.set_properties(exposure_time=0.05) -    cam.props.roi_width = 1024 - -Note, that the naming of classes and properties depends on the GI -implementation of the target language. For example with Python, the -namespace prefix ``uca_`` becomes the module name ``Uca`` and dashes -separating property names become underscores. - -Integration with Numpy is relatively straightforward. The most important -thing is to get the data pointer from a Numpy array to pass it to -``uca_camera_grab``:: - -    import numpy as np - -    def create_array_from(camera): -        """Create a suitably sized Numpy array and return it together with the -        arrays data pointer""" -        bits = camera.props.sensor_bitdepth -        dtype = np.uint16 if bits > 8 else np.uint8 -        a = np.zeros((cam.props.roi_height, cam.props.roi_width), dtype=dtype) -        return a, a.__array_interface__['data'][0] - -    # Suppose 'camera' is a already available, you would get the camera data like -    # this: -    a, buf = create_array_from(camera) -    camera.start_recording() -    camera.grab(buf) - -    # Now data is in 'a' and we can use Numpy functions on it -    print(np.mean(a)) - -    camera.stop_recording() - - -Integrating new cameras -======================= - -A new camera is integrated by -`sub-classing <http://developer.gnome.org/gobject/stable/howto-gobject.html>`__ -``UcaCamera`` and implement all virtual methods. The simplest way is to -take the ``mock`` camera and rename all occurences. Note, that if you -class is going to be called ``FooBar``, the upper case variant is -``FOO_BAR`` and the lower case variant is ``foo_bar``. - -In order to fully implement a camera, you need to override at least the -following virtual methods: - --  ``start_recording``: Take suitable actions so that a subsequent call -   to ``grab`` delivers an image or blocks until one is exposed. --  ``stop_recording``: Stop recording so that subsequent calls to -   ``grab`` fail. --  ``grab``: Return an image from the camera or block until one is -   ready. - - -Asynchronous operation ----------------------- - -When the camera supports asynchronous acquisition and announces it with -a true boolean value for ``"transfer-asynchronously"``, a mechanism must -be setup up during ``start_recording`` so that for each new frame the -grab func callback is called. - - -Cameras with internal memory ----------------------------- - -Cameras such as the pco.dimax record into their own on-board memory -rather than streaming directly to the host PC. In this case, both -``start_recording`` and ``stop_recording`` initiate and end acquisition -to the on-board memory. To initiate a data transfer, the host calls -``start_readout`` which must be suitably implemented. The actual data -transfer happens either with ``grab`` or asynchronously. - - -Tools -===== - -Several tools are available to ensure ``libuca`` works as expected. All -of them are located in ``build/test/`` and some of them are installed -with ``make installed``. - - -``uca-grab`` -- grabbing frames -------------------------------- - -Grab with frames with :: - -    $ uca-grab --num-frames=10 camera-model - -store them on disk as ``frames.tif`` if ``libtiff`` is installed, -otherwise as ``frame-00000.raw``, ``frame-000001.raw``. The raw format -is a memory dump of the frames, so you might want to use -`ImageJ <http://rsbweb.nih.gov/ij/>`__ to view them. You can also -specify the output filename or filename prefix with the ``-o/--output`` -option:: - -    $ uca-grab -n 10 --output=foobar.tif camera-model - -Instead of reading exactly *n* frames, you can also specify a duration -in fractions of seconds:: - -    $ uca-grab --duration=0.25 camera-model - - -``uca-camera-control`` -- simple graphical user interface ---------------------------------------------------------- - -Shows the frames and displays them on screen. Moreover, you can change -the camera properties in a side pane. - - -``uca-benchmark`` -- check bandwidth ------------------------------------- - -Measure the memory bandwidth by taking subsequent frames and averaging -the grabbing time: - -:: - -    $ ./benchmark mock -    # --- General information --- -    # Sensor size: 640x480 -    # ROI size: 640x480 -    # Exposure time: 0.000010s -    # type      n_frames  n_runs    frames/s        MiB/s -      sync      100       3         29848.98        8744.82 -      async     100       3         15739.43        4611.16 - - -The GObject Tango device -======================== - -UcaDevice is a generic Tango Device that wraps ``libuca`` in order to -make libuca controlled cameras available as Tango devices. - - -Architecture ------------- - -UcaDevice is derived from GObjectDevice and adds libuca specific features like -start/stop recording etc.  The most important feature is *acquisition control*. -UcaDevice is responsible for controlling acquisition of images from libuca. The -last aquired image can be accessed by reading attribute ``SingleImage``. -UcaDevice is most useful together with ImageDevice. If used together, UcaDevice -sends each aquired image to ImageDevice, which in turn does configured -post-processing like flipping, rotating or writing the image to disk. - - -Attributes -~~~~~~~~~~ - -Besides the dynamic attributes translated from libuca properties -UcaDevice has the following attributes: - --  ``NumberOfImages (Tango::DevLong)``: how many images should be -   acquired? A value of -1 means unlimited *(read/write)* --  ``ImageCounter (Tango::DevULong)``: current number of acquired images -   *(read-only)* --  ``CameraName (Tango::DevString)``: name of libuca object type -   *(read-only)* --  ``SingleImage (Tango::DevUChar)``: holds the last acquired image - - -Acquisition Control -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -In UcaDevice acquisition control is mostly implemented by two -``yat4tango::DeviceTasks``: *AcquisitionTask* and *GrabTask*. -*GrabTask*'s only responsibility is to call ``grab`` on ``libuca`` -synchronously and post the data on to AcquisitionTask. - -*AcquisitionTask* is responsible for starting and stopping GrabTask and -for passing image data on to ``ImageDevice`` (if exisiting) and to -``UcaDevice`` for storage in attribute ``SingleImage``. It counts how -many images have been acquired and checks this number against the -configured ``NumberOfImages``. If the desired number is reached, it -stops GrabTask, calls ``stop_recording`` on ``libuca`` and sets the -Tango state to STANDBY. - - -Plugins -~~~~~~~ - -As different cameras have different needs, plugins are used for special -implementations. Plugins also makes UcaDevice and Tango Servers based on -it more flexible and independent of libuca implementation. - -* PCO: The Pco plugin implements additional checks when writing ROI values. -* Pylon: The Pylon plugin sets default values for ``roi-width`` and -  ``roi-height`` from libuca properties ``roi-width-default`` and -  ``roi-height-default``. - - -Installation ------------- - -Detailed installation depends on the manifestation of UcaDevice. All -manifestations depend on the following libraries: - --  YAT --  YAT4Tango --  Tango --  GObjectDevice --  ImageDevice - - -Build -~~~~~ - -:: - -    export PKG_CONFIG_PATH=/usr/lib/pkgconfig -    export PYLON_ROOT=/usr/pylon -    export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$PYLON_ROOT/lib64:$PYLON_ROOT/genicam/bin/Linux64_x64 -    git clone git@iss-repo:UcaDevice.git -    cd UcaDevice -    mkdir build -    cd build -    cmake .. -    make - - -Setup in Tango Database / Jive -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -Before ``ds_UcaDevice`` can be started, it has to be registered manually -in the Tango database. With ``Jive`` the following steps are necessary: - -1. Register Server Menu *Tools* → Server Wizard Server name → ds\_UcaDevice -   Instance name → my\_server *(name can be chosen freely)* Next Cancel - -2.  Register Classes and Instances In tab *Server*: context menu on -    ds\_UcaDevice → my\_server → Add Class Class: UcaDevice Devices: -    ``iss/name1/name2`` Register server same for class ImageDevice - -3. Start server :: - -    export TANGO_HOST=anka-tango:100xx -    export UCA_DEVICE_PLUGINS_DIR=/usr/lib(64) -    ds_UcaDevice pco my_server - -4. Setup properties for UcaDevice context menu on device → Device wizard -   Property StorageDevice: *address of previously registered ImageDevice -   instance* - -5. Setup properties for ImageDevice context menu on device → Device wizard -   PixelSize: how many bytes per pixel for the images of this camera? -   GrabbingDevice: *address of previously registered UcaDevice instance* - -6. Finish restart ds_UcaDevice - -FAQ ---- - -*UcaDevice refuses to start up...?* Most likely there is no instance -registered for class UcaDevice. Register an instance for this class and -it should work. - -*Why does UcaDevice depend on ImageDevice?* UcaDevice pushes each new -Frame to ImageDevice. Polling is not only less efficient but also prone -to errors, e.g. missed/double frames and so on. Perhaps we could use the -Tango-Event-System here! - -Open Questions, Missing Features etc. -------------------------------------- - -* *Why do we need to specify ``Storage`` for UcaDevice and ``GrabbingDevice`` -  for ImageDevice?* - -  ImageDevice needs the Tango-Address of UcaDevice to mirror all Attributes and -  Commands and to forward them to it. UcaDevice needs the Tango-Address of -  ImageDevice to push a new frame on reception. A more convenient solution could -  be using conventions for the device names, e.g. of the form -  ``$prefix/$instance_name/uca`` and ``$prefix/$instance_name/image``.  That way -  we could get rid of the two Device-Properties and an easier installation -  without the process of registering the classes and instances in ``Jive``. - -* *Why does UcaDevice dynamically link to GObjectDevice?* - -  There is no good reason for it. Packaging and installing would be easier if we -  linked statically to ``GObjectDevice`` because we would hide this dependency. -  Having a separate ``GObjectDevice`` is generally a nice feature to make -  ``GObjects`` available in Tango. However, there is currently no GObjectDevice -  in use other than in the context of UcaDevice. - -* *Why must the plugin name be given as a command line parameter instead of a -  Device-Property?* - -  There is no good reason for it. UcaDevice would be easier to use, if the -  plugin was configured in the Tango database as a Device-Property for the -  respective server instance. +    quickstart +    cameras +    api +    tools +    tango diff --git a/docs/quickstart.rst b/docs/quickstart.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000..59cb01e --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/quickstart.rst @@ -0,0 +1,228 @@ +Quickstart +========== + +Installation +------------ + +Before installing ``libuca`` itself, you should install any drivers and +SDKs needed to access the cameras you want to access through ``libuca``. +Now you have two options: install pre-built packages or build from +source. + + +Installing packages +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Packages for the core library and all plugins are currently provided for +openSUSE. To install them run ``zypper``: + +:: + +    sudo zypper in libuca-x.y.z-x86_64.rpm +    sudo zypper in uca-plugin-*.rpm + +To install development files such as headers, you have to install the +``libuca-x.y.z-devel.rpm`` package. + + +Building from source +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Building the library and installing from source is simple and +straightforward. Make sure you have + +-  CMake, +-  a C compiler, +-  GLib and GObject development libraries and +-  necessary camera SDKs + +installed. + +For the base system, install :: + +    [Debian] sudo apt-get install libglib2.0 cmake gcc +    [openSUSE] sudo zypper in glib2-devel cmake gcc + +In case you want to use the graphical user interface you also need the +Gtk+ development libraries:: + +    [Debian] sudo apt-get install libgtk+2.0-dev +    [openSUSE] sudo zypper in gtk2-devel + +To generate bindings for third-party languages, you have to install :: + +    [Debian] sudo apt-get install gobject-introspection +    [openSUSE] sudo zypper in gobject-introspection-devel + + +Fetching the sources +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +Untar the distribution :: + +    untar xfz libuca-x.y.z.tar.gz + +or clone the repository :: + +    git clone http://ufo.kit.edu/git/libuca + +and create a new, empty build directory inside:: + +    cd libuca/ +    mkdir build + + +Configuring and building +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +Now you need to create the Makefile with CMake. Go into the build +directory and point CMake to the ``libuca`` top-level directory:: + +    cd build/ +    cmake .. + +As long as the last line reads "Build files have been written to", the +configuration stage is successful. In this case you can build ``libuca`` +with :: + +    make + +and install with :: + +    sudo make install + +If an *essential* dependency could not be found, the configuration stage +will stop and build files will not be written. If a *non-essential* +dependency (such as a certain camera SDK) is not found, the +configuration stage will continue but that particular camera support not +built. + +If you want to customize the build process you can pass several +variables to CMake:: + +    cmake .. -DPREFIX=/usr -DLIBDIR=/usr/lib64 + +The former tells CMake to install into ``/usr`` instead of +``/usr/local`` and the latter that we want to install the libraries and +plugins into the ``lib64`` subdir instead of the default ``lib`` subdir +as it is common on SUSE systems. + + +Usage +----- + +.. highlight:: c + +The API for accessing cameras is straightforward. First you need to +include the necessary header files:: + +    #include <glib-object.h> +    #include <uca/uca-plugin-manager.h> +    #include <uca/uca-camera.h> + +Then you need to setup the type system:: + +    int +    main (int argc, char *argv[]) +    { +        UcaPluginManager *manager; +        UcaCamera *camera; +        GError *error = NULL; /* this _must_ be set to NULL */ + +        g_type_init (); + +Now you can instantiate new camera *objects*. Each camera is identified +by a human-readable string, in this case we want to access any pco +camera that is supported by +`libpco <http://ufo.kit.edu/repos/libpco.git/>`__. To instantiate a +camera we have to create a plugin manager first:: + +        manager = uca_plugin_manager_new (); +        camera = uca_plugin_manager_get_camera (manager, "pco", &error); + +Errors are indicated with a returned value ``NULL`` and ``error`` set to +a value other than ``NULL``:: + +        if (camera == NULL) { +            g_error ("Initialization: %s", error->message); +            return 1; +        } + +You should always remove the +`reference <http://developer.gnome.org/gobject/stable/gobject-memory.html#gobject-memory-refcount>`__ +from the camera object when not using it in order to free all associated +resources:: + +        g_object_unref (camera); +        return 0; +    } + +Compile this program with :: + +    cc `pkg-config --cflags --libs libuca glib-2.0` foo.c -o foo + +Now, run ``foo`` and verify that no errors occur. + + +Grabbing frames +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +To synchronously grab frames, first start the camera:: + +        uca_camera_start_recording (camera, &error); +        g_assert_no_error (error); + +Now, you have to allocate a suitably sized buffer and pass it to +``uca_camera_grab``:: + +        gpointer buffer = g_malloc0 (640 * 480 * 2); + +        uca_camera_grab (camera, buffer, &error); + +You have to make sure that the buffer is large enough by querying the +size of the region of interest and the number of bits that are +transferred. + + +Getting and setting camera parameters +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Because camera parameters vary tremendously between different vendors +and products, they are realized with so-called GObject *properties*, a +mechanism that maps string keys to typed and access restricted values. +To get a value, you use the ``g_object_get`` function and provide memory +where the result is stored:: + +        guint roi_width; +        gdouble exposure_time; + +        g_object_get (G_OBJECT(camera), +                      "roi-width", &roi_width, +                      "exposure-time", &exposure_time, +                      /* The NULL marks the end! */ +                      NULL +                      ); + +        g_print ("Width of the region of interest: %d\n", roi_width); +        g_print ("Exposure time: %3.5s\n", exposure_time); + +In a similar way, properties are set with ``g_object_set``:: + +        guint roi_width = 512; +        gdouble exposure_time = 0.001; + +        g_object_set (G_OBJECT (camera), +                      "roi-width", roi_width, +                      "exposure-time", exposure_time, +                      NULL); + +Each property can be associated with a physical unit. To query for the +unit call ``uca_camera_get_unit`` and pass a property name. The function +will then return a value from the ``UcaUnit`` enum. + +Several essential camera parameters *must* be implemented by all +cameras. To get a list of them consult the API reference for +```UcaCamera`` <http://ufo.kit.edu/extra/libuca/reference/UcaCamera.html#UcaCamera.properties>`__. +For camera specific parameters you need to consult the corresponding API +reference for ``UfoFooCamera``. The latest nightly built reference can +be found `here <http://ufo.kit.edu/extra/libuca/reference/>`__. diff --git a/docs/tango.rst b/docs/tango.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000..fa90b56 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/tango.rst @@ -0,0 +1,162 @@ +The GObject Tango device +======================== + +UcaDevice is a generic Tango Device that wraps ``libuca`` in order to +make libuca controlled cameras available as Tango devices. + + +Architecture +------------ + +UcaDevice is derived from GObjectDevice and adds libuca specific features like +start/stop recording etc.  The most important feature is *acquisition control*. +UcaDevice is responsible for controlling acquisition of images from libuca. The +last aquired image can be accessed by reading attribute ``SingleImage``. +UcaDevice is most useful together with ImageDevice. If used together, UcaDevice +sends each aquired image to ImageDevice, which in turn does configured +post-processing like flipping, rotating or writing the image to disk. + + +Attributes +~~~~~~~~~~ + +Besides the dynamic attributes translated from libuca properties +UcaDevice has the following attributes: + +-  ``NumberOfImages (Tango::DevLong)``: how many images should be +   acquired? A value of -1 means unlimited *(read/write)* +-  ``ImageCounter (Tango::DevULong)``: current number of acquired images +   *(read-only)* +-  ``CameraName (Tango::DevString)``: name of libuca object type +   *(read-only)* +-  ``SingleImage (Tango::DevUChar)``: holds the last acquired image + + +Acquisition Control +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +In UcaDevice acquisition control is mostly implemented by two +``yat4tango::DeviceTasks``: *AcquisitionTask* and *GrabTask*. +*GrabTask*'s only responsibility is to call ``grab`` on ``libuca`` +synchronously and post the data on to AcquisitionTask. + +*AcquisitionTask* is responsible for starting and stopping GrabTask and +for passing image data on to ``ImageDevice`` (if exisiting) and to +``UcaDevice`` for storage in attribute ``SingleImage``. It counts how +many images have been acquired and checks this number against the +configured ``NumberOfImages``. If the desired number is reached, it +stops GrabTask, calls ``stop_recording`` on ``libuca`` and sets the +Tango state to STANDBY. + + +Plugins +~~~~~~~ + +As different cameras have different needs, plugins are used for special +implementations. Plugins also makes UcaDevice and Tango Servers based on +it more flexible and independent of libuca implementation. + +* PCO: The Pco plugin implements additional checks when writing ROI values. +* Pylon: The Pylon plugin sets default values for ``roi-width`` and +  ``roi-height`` from libuca properties ``roi-width-default`` and +  ``roi-height-default``. + + +Installation +------------ + +Detailed installation depends on the manifestation of UcaDevice. All +manifestations depend on the following libraries: + +-  YAT +-  YAT4Tango +-  Tango +-  GObjectDevice +-  ImageDevice + + +Build +~~~~~ + +:: + +    export PKG_CONFIG_PATH=/usr/lib/pkgconfig +    export PYLON_ROOT=/usr/pylon +    export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$PYLON_ROOT/lib64:$PYLON_ROOT/genicam/bin/Linux64_x64 +    git clone git@iss-repo:UcaDevice.git +    cd UcaDevice +    mkdir build +    cd build +    cmake .. +    make + + +Setup in Tango Database / Jive +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Before ``ds_UcaDevice`` can be started, it has to be registered manually +in the Tango database. With ``Jive`` the following steps are necessary: + +1. Register Server Menu *Tools* → Server Wizard Server name → ds\_UcaDevice +   Instance name → my\_server *(name can be chosen freely)* Next Cancel + +2.  Register Classes and Instances In tab *Server*: context menu on +    ds\_UcaDevice → my\_server → Add Class Class: UcaDevice Devices: +    ``iss/name1/name2`` Register server same for class ImageDevice + +3. Start server :: + +    export TANGO_HOST=anka-tango:100xx +    export UCA_DEVICE_PLUGINS_DIR=/usr/lib(64) +    ds_UcaDevice pco my_server + +4. Setup properties for UcaDevice context menu on device → Device wizard +   Property StorageDevice: *address of previously registered ImageDevice +   instance* + +5. Setup properties for ImageDevice context menu on device → Device wizard +   PixelSize: how many bytes per pixel for the images of this camera? +   GrabbingDevice: *address of previously registered UcaDevice instance* + +6. Finish restart ds_UcaDevice + +FAQ +--- + +*UcaDevice refuses to start up...?* Most likely there is no instance +registered for class UcaDevice. Register an instance for this class and +it should work. + +*Why does UcaDevice depend on ImageDevice?* UcaDevice pushes each new +Frame to ImageDevice. Polling is not only less efficient but also prone +to errors, e.g. missed/double frames and so on. Perhaps we could use the +Tango-Event-System here! + +Open Questions, Missing Features etc. +------------------------------------- + +* *Why do we need to specify ``Storage`` for UcaDevice and ``GrabbingDevice`` +  for ImageDevice?* + +  ImageDevice needs the Tango-Address of UcaDevice to mirror all Attributes and +  Commands and to forward them to it. UcaDevice needs the Tango-Address of +  ImageDevice to push a new frame on reception. A more convenient solution could +  be using conventions for the device names, e.g. of the form +  ``$prefix/$instance_name/uca`` and ``$prefix/$instance_name/image``.  That way +  we could get rid of the two Device-Properties and an easier installation +  without the process of registering the classes and instances in ``Jive``. + +* *Why does UcaDevice dynamically link to GObjectDevice?* + +  There is no good reason for it. Packaging and installing would be easier if we +  linked statically to ``GObjectDevice`` because we would hide this dependency. +  Having a separate ``GObjectDevice`` is generally a nice feature to make +  ``GObjects`` available in Tango. However, there is currently no GObjectDevice +  in use other than in the context of UcaDevice. + +* *Why must the plugin name be given as a command line parameter instead of a +  Device-Property?* + +  There is no good reason for it. UcaDevice would be easier to use, if the +  plugin was configured in the Tango database as a Device-Property for the +  respective server instance. diff --git a/docs/tools.rst b/docs/tools.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000..44573eb --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/tools.rst @@ -0,0 +1,53 @@ +Tools +===== + +Several tools are available to ensure ``libuca`` works as expected. All +of them are located in ``build/test/`` and some of them are installed +with ``make installed``. + + +``uca-camera-control`` -- simple graphical user interface +--------------------------------------------------------- + +Records and shows frames. Moreover, you can change the camera properties in a +side pane: + +.. image:: uca-gui.png + + +``uca-grab`` -- grabbing frames +------------------------------- + +Grab with frames with :: + +    $ uca-grab --num-frames=10 camera-model + +store them on disk as ``frames.tif`` if ``libtiff`` is installed, +otherwise as ``frame-00000.raw``, ``frame-000001.raw``. The raw format +is a memory dump of the frames, so you might want to use +`ImageJ <http://rsbweb.nih.gov/ij/>`__ to view them. You can also +specify the output filename or filename prefix with the ``-o/--output`` +option:: + +    $ uca-grab -n 10 --output=foobar.tif camera-model + +Instead of reading exactly *n* frames, you can also specify a duration +in fractions of seconds:: + +    $ uca-grab --duration=0.25 camera-model + + +``uca-benchmark`` -- check bandwidth +------------------------------------ + +Measure the memory bandwidth by taking subsequent frames and averaging +the grabbing time:: + +    $ ./benchmark mock +    # --- General information --- +    # Sensor size: 640x480 +    # ROI size: 640x480 +    # Exposure time: 0.000010s +    # type      n_frames  n_runs    frames/s        MiB/s +      sync      100       3         29848.98        8744.82 +      async     100       3         15739.43        4611.16 diff --git a/docs/uca-gui.png b/docs/uca-gui.pngBinary files differ new file mode 100644 index 0000000..eb60953 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/uca-gui.png | 
