Thomas Kaiser wrote:
> Hello Anders
> 
> Anders Blomdell wrote:
>  > When I set the RGB/YUV gains to zero, I get:
>  >> 5a ff d8 ff fe 14 1e 00 fd f5 45 7e e8 f8 b8 df 49 57
>  >      ff d8 ff fe 28 3c 01 fc ff 00 45 66 9a 69 a2 95 4d 2a 12 d1 00 a2 b4
>  >
>  > followed by a big number of repeated (0x152c bytes total):
>  >
>  >   02 8a 00 a2 80 28 a0 0a 28
>  >
>  > and ending with:
>  >
>  >   02 8a 00 a2 80 ff d9
>  >
>  > In binary the repeating sequence can be diveded in half:
>  >
>  >   0000 0010 1000 1010 0000 0000 1010 0010 1000
>  >   0000 0010 1000 1010 0000 0000 1010 0010 1000
> 
> That is more less the same sequence I get when I do my saturation stuff 
> (white picture) :-) . As of coincidence, the same Bit pattern is found 
> in the PAC7311 when I do the saturation stuff. And I know the PAC7311 
> stream. That's the reason why I wrote I am 100% sure that this is JPEG 
> ;-) PAC7311 has a special marker between each MCU which has to be 
> removed. I don't see such thing in this stream. So it must be pure JPEG.
> 
>  >
>  > Which approximately adds up to 1200 repetitions of this bitpattern 
> 2*(0x152c -
>  > 23)/9.
>  >
>  > And a 640*480 image divided in 8*8 subframes gives (640*480/(8*8)) 1200
>  > subframes, so now the question is how much info about the Huffman 
> table this
>  > gives us?
> 
> I think nothing :-( , but you found the MCUs :-) As it looks quite the 
> same as on the PAC7311, why not just try the Huffman table from the PAC7311?
Which seems to be encoded in the stream and not defined in the sourcecode (but
I'm tired, so I might well be wrong). Do you think you could extract it somehow?

> 
> The frame header on the PAC7311 is ff ff 00 ff 96 62 + 1 Byte MCU Marker 
> 44, then the JPEG data starts. Look at this:
> ff ff 00 ff 96 62 44 f7 ca 28 01 10 a2 80 11 0a 28 01 10 a2 80 11 0a 28
> Side note: the first 01 10 is the MCU marker 44 embedded in the Bit stream.
> 
> TP8610, first few Bytes with frame header:
> 5a ff d8 ff fe 14 1e 00 fd f5 45 7e e8 f8 b8 df 49 57 ab 0a 28 73 0a 28 
> 02 8a 00 a2 80 28 a0 0a
> 
> Therefor I think this is the start of the stream:
> ab 0a 28 73 0a 28 02 8a 00 a2 80 28 a0 0a
> 
> Don't know why we have 73 in between :-(
> 
> Hope this one helps....
/Anders
-- 
Anders Blomdell                  Email: anders.blomd...@control.lth.se
Department of Automatic Control
Lund University                  Phone:    +46 46 222 4625
P.O. Box 118                     Fax:      +46 46 138118
SE-221 00 Lund, Sweden
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-media" in
the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org
More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html

Reply via email to