Hauppauge WinTV-HVR-3000: Difference between revisions
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[[Image:Hvr3000.jpg|right|]] The [[Hauppauge]] WinTV-HVR-3000 is a [[DVB-T]] and [[DVB-S]] on one [[DVB-T PCI Cards|PCI card]] sharing the same Demux. |
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-WORK IN PROGRESS- |
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===Kernel Support=== |
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The HVR3000 is pretty new and I've had so much trouble trying to get it working I thought I'd make some notes here. Apologies for the quality of this page (I'm writing it as a blog until I have time to rewrite it properly), but I thought some notes was better than no notes. |
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Kernels 2.6.28-rc1 and later have a working multiple frontend driver built in. |
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I've linked to this from a relevant bit of the V4L wiki as, I'm trying to get both the DVB-T and Analogue bits of this working. |
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Darron Broad & Fabio M. Di Nitto HVR3000/4000 comes in two flavours as a diff patch, one with a single frontend (you select frontend via options flag in modprobe.conf eg single /dev/adapter0/fe0) and the other with both frontends (selectable from adapter0/fe0 and adapter fe1) |
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====My System==== |
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I've got 3 PC's I intend to make this work on, the first is called barney. Barney is an AMD64 running in 32Bit mode, with a NVidia GeForce 7800 GTX and a Logitech Quickcam Express (046d:0928) camera and the Hauppauge HVR3000 card. Barney has 2GB of RAM and a 200GB SATA disk, with XP on sda3 (100GB). I have a separate /boot partition (~1GB). |
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I initially had barney running fc4 and had a lot of grief trying to install a working 2.6.19 kernel. I attempted to upgrade all the various packages to make it work, before going for a full =>fc6/7 (ie dev) upgrade, breaking the computer and starting again. Hey I didn't need that system anyway (thankfully). |
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So I re-installed it with kubuntu edgy (as an aside I had problems with the standard kubuntu install, and had to install via the mini cd. I subsequently discovered there are issues relating to a 32bit install on a 64bit CPU). |
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This uses work from Steve Toths original HVR3000 repository (at time of writing 16 months old and will not compile with current v4l-dvb) |
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At this point I should let you know, /proc/bus/usb/devices identifies my (unknown) camera and I have /dev/video0 and /dev/video1 corresponding to the camera and HVR3000 although I can't tune anything. When I started this, XP worked and if I rebooted from XP into fc4 having watched a channel on the WinTV2000, I could see the last channel. xawtv seems to |
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There are several sets of patches at http://people.debian.org/~pm/hauppauge/ : a single frontend patch only for HVR3000 against 2.6.26-rc version kernels, and several revisions of Darron Broad's multiple frontend scratcpad-8628.diff patch (from http://dev.kewl.org/hauppauge ), cleaned up and updated for v4l-dvb revisions 8628 and 8854. |
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====Kernel Support==== |
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Unfortunately kubuntu edgy comes with 2.6.17 and no HVR3000 support also, so I've been working on getting the latest code into /drivers/media/video/cx88 to working kernel modules. I've tried following http://www.ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=311158 to upgrade my kernel, but I encountered the SATA problems it lists at the bottom. |
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So I installed the feisty 2.6.19 kernel, which boots and seems to have support compiled in. If only I can make it work. |
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===Components Used=== |
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OK backtrack, I rebooted into the stock 2.6.17 kernel (with all the standard build stuff installed like headers and source) and followed this:- http://www.mythtvtalk.com/forum/viewtopic.php?p=17223 which explains how to build a kernel developer patch (git is a source thing linus invented which seems to allow clever things like working on just one bit of the kernel at a time). Follow this instructions and all the v4l stuff gets built. |
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* Conexant CX23882 PCI Broadcast Audio/Video Decoder |
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* Conexant CX22702 DVB-T chip |
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* 14109LF Rev B3D3 Tuner |
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=== Identification === |
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If your kernel doesn't support it |
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<pre> |
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01:06.0 Multimedia video controller: Conexant CX23880/1/2/3 PCI Video and Audio Decoder (rev 05) |
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Subsystem: Hauppauge computer works Inc. Unknown device 1402 |
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Control: I/O- Mem+ BusMaster+ SpecCycle- MemWINV- VGASnoop- ParErr- Stepping- SERR- FastB2B- |
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Status: Cap+ 66MHz- UDF- FastB2B+ ParErr- DEVSEL=medium >TAbort- <TAbort- <MAbort- >SERR- <PERR- |
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Latency: 32 (5000ns min, 13750ns max), Cache Line Size: 32 bytes |
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Interrupt: pin A routed to IRQ 16 |
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Region 0: Memory at f8000000 (32-bit, non-prefetchable) [size=16M] |
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Capabilities: [44] Vital Product Data |
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Capabilities: [4c] Power Management version 2 |
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Flags: PMEClk- DSI+ D1- D2- AuxCurrent=0mA PME(D0-,D1-,D2-,D3hot-,D3cold-) |
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Status: D0 PME-Enable- DSel=0 DScale=0 PME- |
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</pre> |
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If your kernel does support it |
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<pre> |
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01:06.0 Multimedia video controller: Conexant Systems, Inc. CX23880/1/2/3 PCI Video and Audio Decoder (rev 05) |
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Subsystem: Hauppauge computer works Inc. Device 1402 |
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Flags: bus master, medium devsel, latency 32, IRQ 16 |
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Memory at f8000000 (32-bit, non-prefetchable) [size=16M] |
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Capabilities: [44] Vital Product Data <?> |
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Capabilities: [4c] Power Management version 2 |
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Kernel driver in use: cx8800 |
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Kernel modules: cx8800 |
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</pre> |
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===Driver Sources=== |
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====Steve Toth's repository (22 Sep 2008)==== |
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On September 2008, you can get patched v4l sources from Steve Toth's repository ( http://linuxtv.org/hg/~stoth/s2-mfe/ ) via mercurial and you won't have to get any patch to get working this card (this version also has got support for HVR4000). It has been tested on Ubuntu 8.04.1 (working DVB-T and DVB-S, analogue audio didn't work for me) with a 2.6.24-21-generic kernel version/flavour. The way to compile the modules is the same as it would be getting the official v4l sources but without having to patch them. The way to get the v4l "patch included" sources is (supposing that you have mercurial installed): |
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<pre> |
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# hg clone -r 8894 http://linuxtv.org/hg/~stoth/s2-mfe |
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</pre> |
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After it, on the s2-mfe directory you get a patched version of the v4l drivers. Maybe you will want/need to configure it, with a "make menuconfig". Finally, just compile and install the modules: |
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<pre> |
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# make && make install |
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</pre> |
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Remember: on ubuntu you need to delete the "original" modules for cx88 and saa7134 |
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<pre> |
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# rm -rf /lib/modules/`uname -r`/ubuntu/media/cx88 |
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# rm -rf /lib/modules/`uname -r`/ubuntu/media/saa7134 |
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# depmod -a |
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</pre> |
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To load modules on the right order, follow the next bash script: |
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<pre> |
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#!/bin/bash |
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modprobe cx8800 && modprobe cx88xx && modprobe cx8802 && modprobe cx22702 && modprobe cx88-dvb && \ |
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echo "Successfully loaded HVR-3000 modules" |
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exit |
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</pre> |
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''On Ubuntu 8.10 Intrepid, when kernel changed from 2.6.27-7 to 2.6.27-9 or to 2.6.27-11, |
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you must delete the previous kernel headers 2.6.27-nn, the old modules in directories cx88 and saa7134 |
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(they are now in /lib/modules/`uname -r`/kernel/drivers/media/video/. ), |
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do a depmod -a, then download the new s2-mfe tree, recompile and reinstall. |
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'' |
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====kewl.org HVR3000 (06 Mar 08)==== |
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Please follow these instructions based on FC8/Ubuntu 8.04 using yum or apt-get. |
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# yum install mercurial |
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Or |
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# apt-get install mercurial |
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As the current patch does NOT work with the current version of v4l you will have to pull a working revision from the repository. In order to do that you will have to install one of the newer versions of mercurial. So if your version of Mercurial doesn't support revisions you will have to get an updated package or compile a current version yourself. |
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# hg clone -r 7285 http://linuxtv.org/hg/v4l-dvb |
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# cd v4l-dvb |
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Or |
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(Plan B Tested on 2.6.22 ====DVB-S==== Only) |
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# hg clone -r 7879 http://linuxtv.org/hg/v4l-dvb |
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# cd v4l-dvb |
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Then get the diff you want (sfe or mfe). Note how the filename represents the version of the v4l repository that you have to use. You can also check at http://dev.kewl.org/hauppauge if a newer version of the patch exists and use another version of the repository accordingly. |
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# wget http://dev.kewl.org/hauppauge/sfe-7285.diff |
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Or |
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# wget http://dev.kewl.org/hauppauge/mfe-7285.diff |
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Or |
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(Plan B Tested on 2.6.22 ====DVB-S==== Only) |
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# wget http://linuxtreme.net/Drivers/Patches/sfe.diff |
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Apply the patch |
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# patch -p1 < *fe-7285.diff |
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Or |
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(Plan B Tested on 2.6.22 ====DVB-S==== Only) |
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# patch -p1 < sfe.diff |
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(Optional) Remove modules from *buntu 8.04 |
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This step is only required if you are running an Ubuntu variant, after one of their bug fixes duplicated the modules being run. |
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This also may be useful to anyone who gets dmesg errors like : cx88xx: disagrees about version of symbol (videobuf_dma_free) |
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# rm -rf /lib/modules/`uname -r`/ubuntu/media/cx88 |
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# rm -rf /lib/modules/`uname -r`/ubuntu/media/saa7134 |
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# depmod -a |
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Compile and Install |
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# make |
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# make install |
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If you apply the patch and get errors, you can contact Darron at kewl dot org whom will most likely refresh the patch against the latest v4l-dvb, or jarb1 at uk2 dot net whom has a tar.gz copy of the v4l-dvb the above patch works with (Well works with FC8 2.6.23 anyway) |
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(With plan B ====DVB-S==== Only; No further configuration is applicable; You may configure the Kaffiene and watch Sat on Linux :)) |
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====Single Frontend Diff (sfe)==== |
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Now all you need to do is edit /etc/modprobe.conf to have |
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<BR><BR> |
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This option will load the DVB-S/S2 frontend and is |
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the default: |
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<BR> |
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options cx88-dvb frontend=0 |
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<BR><BR> |
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This option will load the DVB-T frontend:<BR> |
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options cx88-dvb frontend=1 |
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NOTE: On Debian and Ubuntu Systems you will have to enter /etc/modprobe.d/ and create a custom named file that holds the above mentioned content. |
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====Multiple Frontend Diff (mfe)==== |
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No further configuration is applicable. |
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Enter directory /dev/dvb/adapterX for the HVR3000 and you should see more than one frontend (eg. demux0 demux1 dvr0 dvr1 frontend0 frontend1 net0 net1). If you only see one of each then the HVR3000 has not installed correctly and your kernel is running the release version of V4l_DVB which presently has no support for the DVB-S side of HVR3000. |
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If the module has not loaded (/sbin/lsmod) try |
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# modprobe cx88_dvb |
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=====Problems===== |
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On Ubuntu Hardy with the latest kernel the driver doesn't survive suspend/resume. tested with Mythtv using Plan A (sfe). |
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On Ubuntu Jaunty with the latest kernel trying to use DVB-T: |
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# dvbscan -frontend 1 -demux 1 /usr/share/dvb-apps/dvb-t/(the new zealand one?) > channels.conf |
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Unable to query frontend |
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===Testing=== |
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Untested by myself (jarb1) is analogue TV |
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====DVB-T==== |
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To test DVB-T the [[wiki:Scan|scandvb]] command can be used. Use the relevant channel info in the dvb-t folder for your transmitter. |
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# scandvb /usr/share/dvb-apps/dvb-t/uk-EmleyMoor > channels.conf |
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If the card is working this will create a channels.conf file with the channel information |
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To test you can copy the channels.conf into your ~/.mplayer folder and view with mplayer by issuing a command like |
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# mplayer dvb://0@'BBC ONE' |
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Note : Some dvb-apps : scandvb is dvbscan |
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====DVB-S==== |
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For testing DVB-S we also use scan DVB with the provided initial tuning data. Use the correct data for your satelite. Note the -f (frontend) and -d demux options to select the correct frontend. You can also specify which DVB adapter by adding option -a 2 for /dev/dvb/adapter2 etc. |
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# scandvb -f 1 -d 1 /usr/share/dvb-apps/dvb-s/Astra28.2E > channels.conf |
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The method shown in DVB-T can be used to view the channel. Or you can use dvbstream to stream it into mplayer. Example. |
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# /sbin/dvbstream -o -f 12421 2343 2345 -p H -s 27500 -c 2 | mplayer - |
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MythTv users don't forget to set the Diseqc option to LNB if you have a basic satelite dish. |
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=====Sound===== |
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This part of the article is original and has not been rewritten since Steve Toths version as I use the onboard sound card. |
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To hear sound from the card you will need to pipe the sound output from the cards sound device back into your sound card. There are a number of ways of doing it, but I only managed to make 1 work properly. In theory you can use sox to stream from one device to another, but I had problems with resampling and it just sounded wrong. You can also use arecord to get data from the alsa device, then pipe it to aplay using - as a source (stdin), but when I did that the sound came out nearly a second later than the picture. I had success only using mplayer:- |
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mplayer tv://25 -tv driver=v4l2:device=/dev/video0:norm=PAL-I:chanlist=europe-west:\ |
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alsa:adevice=hw.2,0:amode=1:audiorate=48000:volume=100:\ |
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immediatemode=0:buffersize=32 -aspect 16:9 |
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Where My Sky DigiBox is tuned to channel 25, my video card is /dev/video0 it's PAL-I (europe-west) and the cx88_alsa device is card2 sub 0 (ie hw.2,0). I want sound in stereo (amode=1) at 48k. I had problems with buffers overflowing, so I set the buffersize to twice what was needed and the sound is now perfect. |
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My Sky DigiBox is setup for a 16:9 screen, even though PAL-I isn't so the -aspect 16:9 corrects the screen size |
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=== Useful Information === |
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====Remote Control==== |
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The HVR3000 has onboard IR receiver. This can be configured by following the V4L wiki here at LinuxTV. Search Remote Contollers. |
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I found however when you booted with or without a keyboard and mouse the event no changed and you had to manually start lircd each time. The following bash script is a simple way of automatically determining the event no and starting lircd. |
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The startup script has a work around for systems with more than one HVR3000 card. Please adjust the cardno to start. |
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/etc/init.d/lircdhvr3000 |
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<pre> |
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#!/bin/bash |
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# |
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# chkconfig: 5 90 10 |
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# description: Startup for lircd with multiple HVR3000 cards |
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# This will only funtion in run level 5 (X)... where else is a remote |
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# useful? |
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# |
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. /etc/init.d/functions |
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RUNAS="root" |
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#If we have 2 tuner cards with IR set this as 2, otherwise 1 |
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CARDNO=2 |
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RETVAL=0 |
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# depending on parameter -- startup, shutdown, restart |
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# of the instance and listener or usage display |
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case "$1" in |
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start) |
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echo -n "Starting HVR3000 IR (lircd) : " |
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#Determin the first IR Input card number |
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EVENTNO=`cat /proc/bus/input/devices |grep HVR300 -A 4 |grep H: | grep H: -n | grep $CARDNO | grep -o event[01123456789] | grep -o [01234567890]` |
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RESULT="Using Card : "$EVENTNO |
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echo -n $RESULT |
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#Start Lircd with the right event |
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daemon /usr/sbin/lircd -H dev/input -d /dev/input/event$EVENTNO |
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RETVAL=$? |
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echo |
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touch /var/lock/subsys/lircd |
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exit $RETVAL |
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;; |
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stop) |
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echo -n "Stopping HVR3000 IR (lircd) : " |
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killproc lircd |
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RETVAL=$? |
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echo |
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rm -f /var/lock/subsys/lircd |
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exit $RETVAL |
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;; |
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reload|restart) |
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$0 stop |
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$0 start |
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exit $RETVAL |
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;; |
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*) |
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echo "Usage: $0 start|stop|restart|reload" |
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RETVAL=1 |
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;; |
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esac |
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exit $RETVAL |
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</pre> |
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Then enable the script |
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# /sbin/chkconfig --add lircdhvr3000 |
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# /sbin/chkconfig --levels 5 lircdhvr3000 on |
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=====lircd.conf===== |
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A working lircd.conf: |
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<pre> |
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begin remote |
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name Hauppauge_3000 |
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bits 16 |
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eps 30 |
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aeps 100 |
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one 0 0 |
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zero 0 0 |
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pre_data_bits 16 |
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pre_data 0x1 |
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post_data_bits 32 |
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post_data 0x1 |
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gap 32994 |
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toggle_bit_mask 0x0 |
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begin codes |
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Power 0x0074 |
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Go 0x0161 |
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Skip 0x00A3 |
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Replay 0x00A5 |
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Rewind 0x00A8 |
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Forward 0x00D0 |
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Play 0x00CF |
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Stop 0x0080 |
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Pause 0x0077 |
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Record 0x00A7 |
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TV 0x0179 |
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Videos 0x0189 |
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Music 0x0188 |
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Pictures 0x016F |
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Guide 0x016D |
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Radio 0x0181 |
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Up 0x0067 |
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Down 0x006C |
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Left 0x0069 |
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Right 0x006A |
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OK 0x001C |
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Back/Exit 0x00AE |
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Menu 0x008B |
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Prev.Ch 0x019C |
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Mute 0x0071 |
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Vol+ 0x0073 |
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Vol- 0x0072 |
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Channel+ 0x0192 |
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Channel- 0x0193 |
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Red 0x018E |
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Green 0x018F |
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Yellow 0x0190 |
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Blue 0x0191 |
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Text 0x0184 |
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Sub/CC 0x0172 |
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1 0x0002 |
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2 0x0003 |
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3 0x0004 |
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4 0x0005 |
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5 0x0006 |
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6 0x0007 |
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7 0x0008 |
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8 0x0009 |
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9 0x000A |
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0 0x000B |
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end codes |
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end remote |
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</pre> |
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====Multiple Frontends==== |
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There does not seem to be a consensus on multiple frontends and how to handle them in applications. The basic DVB apps can easily select the correct frontend, but for instance in MythTV this support is not available and will only select a complete adapter. |
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It is suggested to create symbolic links as follows. |
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<pre> |
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mkdir /dev/dvb/adapter1 |
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ln /dev/dvb/adapter0/demux1 /dev/dvb/adapter1/demux0 |
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ln /dev/dvb/adapter0/frontend1 /dev/dvb/adapter1/frontend0 |
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ln /dev/dvb/adapter0/net1 /dev/dvb/adapter1/net0 |
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ln /dev/dvb/adapter0/dvr1 /dev/dvb/adapter1/dvr0 |
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</pre> |
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But be warned it is one or the other, if your application tries to open both adapters at the same time it will fail. ITS HARDWARE not software! |
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==External Links== |
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* [http://www.hauppauge.co.uk/site/products/data_hvr3000.html WinTV-HVR-3000 product page] |
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[[Category:DVB-T PCI Cards]] |
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[[Category:DVB-S PCI Cards]] |
Latest revision as of 08:42, 15 October 2010
The Hauppauge WinTV-HVR-3000 is a DVB-T and DVB-S on one PCI card sharing the same Demux.
Kernel Support
Kernels 2.6.28-rc1 and later have a working multiple frontend driver built in.
Darron Broad & Fabio M. Di Nitto HVR3000/4000 comes in two flavours as a diff patch, one with a single frontend (you select frontend via options flag in modprobe.conf eg single /dev/adapter0/fe0) and the other with both frontends (selectable from adapter0/fe0 and adapter fe1)
This uses work from Steve Toths original HVR3000 repository (at time of writing 16 months old and will not compile with current v4l-dvb)
There are several sets of patches at http://people.debian.org/~pm/hauppauge/ : a single frontend patch only for HVR3000 against 2.6.26-rc version kernels, and several revisions of Darron Broad's multiple frontend scratcpad-8628.diff patch (from http://dev.kewl.org/hauppauge ), cleaned up and updated for v4l-dvb revisions 8628 and 8854.
Components Used
- Conexant CX23882 PCI Broadcast Audio/Video Decoder
- Conexant CX22702 DVB-T chip
- 14109LF Rev B3D3 Tuner
Identification
If your kernel doesn't support it
01:06.0 Multimedia video controller: Conexant CX23880/1/2/3 PCI Video and Audio Decoder (rev 05) Subsystem: Hauppauge computer works Inc. Unknown device 1402 Control: I/O- Mem+ BusMaster+ SpecCycle- MemWINV- VGASnoop- ParErr- Stepping- SERR- FastB2B- Status: Cap+ 66MHz- UDF- FastB2B+ ParErr- DEVSEL=medium >TAbort- <TAbort- <MAbort- >SERR- <PERR- Latency: 32 (5000ns min, 13750ns max), Cache Line Size: 32 bytes Interrupt: pin A routed to IRQ 16 Region 0: Memory at f8000000 (32-bit, non-prefetchable) [size=16M] Capabilities: [44] Vital Product Data Capabilities: [4c] Power Management version 2 Flags: PMEClk- DSI+ D1- D2- AuxCurrent=0mA PME(D0-,D1-,D2-,D3hot-,D3cold-) Status: D0 PME-Enable- DSel=0 DScale=0 PME-
If your kernel does support it
01:06.0 Multimedia video controller: Conexant Systems, Inc. CX23880/1/2/3 PCI Video and Audio Decoder (rev 05) Subsystem: Hauppauge computer works Inc. Device 1402 Flags: bus master, medium devsel, latency 32, IRQ 16 Memory at f8000000 (32-bit, non-prefetchable) [size=16M] Capabilities: [44] Vital Product Data <?> Capabilities: [4c] Power Management version 2 Kernel driver in use: cx8800 Kernel modules: cx8800
Driver Sources
Steve Toth's repository (22 Sep 2008)
On September 2008, you can get patched v4l sources from Steve Toth's repository ( http://linuxtv.org/hg/~stoth/s2-mfe/ ) via mercurial and you won't have to get any patch to get working this card (this version also has got support for HVR4000). It has been tested on Ubuntu 8.04.1 (working DVB-T and DVB-S, analogue audio didn't work for me) with a 2.6.24-21-generic kernel version/flavour. The way to compile the modules is the same as it would be getting the official v4l sources but without having to patch them. The way to get the v4l "patch included" sources is (supposing that you have mercurial installed):
# hg clone -r 8894 http://linuxtv.org/hg/~stoth/s2-mfe
After it, on the s2-mfe directory you get a patched version of the v4l drivers. Maybe you will want/need to configure it, with a "make menuconfig". Finally, just compile and install the modules:
# make && make install
Remember: on ubuntu you need to delete the "original" modules for cx88 and saa7134
# rm -rf /lib/modules/`uname -r`/ubuntu/media/cx88 # rm -rf /lib/modules/`uname -r`/ubuntu/media/saa7134 # depmod -a
To load modules on the right order, follow the next bash script:
#!/bin/bash modprobe cx8800 && modprobe cx88xx && modprobe cx8802 && modprobe cx22702 && modprobe cx88-dvb && \ echo "Successfully loaded HVR-3000 modules" exit
On Ubuntu 8.10 Intrepid, when kernel changed from 2.6.27-7 to 2.6.27-9 or to 2.6.27-11, you must delete the previous kernel headers 2.6.27-nn, the old modules in directories cx88 and saa7134 (they are now in /lib/modules/`uname -r`/kernel/drivers/media/video/. ), do a depmod -a, then download the new s2-mfe tree, recompile and reinstall.
kewl.org HVR3000 (06 Mar 08)
Please follow these instructions based on FC8/Ubuntu 8.04 using yum or apt-get.
# yum install mercurial
Or
# apt-get install mercurial
As the current patch does NOT work with the current version of v4l you will have to pull a working revision from the repository. In order to do that you will have to install one of the newer versions of mercurial. So if your version of Mercurial doesn't support revisions you will have to get an updated package or compile a current version yourself.
# hg clone -r 7285 http://linuxtv.org/hg/v4l-dvb # cd v4l-dvb
Or (Plan B Tested on 2.6.22 ====DVB-S==== Only)
# hg clone -r 7879 http://linuxtv.org/hg/v4l-dvb # cd v4l-dvb
Then get the diff you want (sfe or mfe). Note how the filename represents the version of the v4l repository that you have to use. You can also check at http://dev.kewl.org/hauppauge if a newer version of the patch exists and use another version of the repository accordingly.
# wget http://dev.kewl.org/hauppauge/sfe-7285.diff
Or
# wget http://dev.kewl.org/hauppauge/mfe-7285.diff
Or (Plan B Tested on 2.6.22 ====DVB-S==== Only)
# wget http://linuxtreme.net/Drivers/Patches/sfe.diff
Apply the patch
# patch -p1 < *fe-7285.diff
Or (Plan B Tested on 2.6.22 ====DVB-S==== Only)
# patch -p1 < sfe.diff
(Optional) Remove modules from *buntu 8.04
This step is only required if you are running an Ubuntu variant, after one of their bug fixes duplicated the modules being run. This also may be useful to anyone who gets dmesg errors like : cx88xx: disagrees about version of symbol (videobuf_dma_free)
# rm -rf /lib/modules/`uname -r`/ubuntu/media/cx88 # rm -rf /lib/modules/`uname -r`/ubuntu/media/saa7134 # depmod -a
Compile and Install
# make # make install
If you apply the patch and get errors, you can contact Darron at kewl dot org whom will most likely refresh the patch against the latest v4l-dvb, or jarb1 at uk2 dot net whom has a tar.gz copy of the v4l-dvb the above patch works with (Well works with FC8 2.6.23 anyway)
(With plan B ====DVB-S==== Only; No further configuration is applicable; You may configure the Kaffiene and watch Sat on Linux :))
Single Frontend Diff (sfe)
Now all you need to do is edit /etc/modprobe.conf to have
This option will load the DVB-S/S2 frontend and is
the default:
options cx88-dvb frontend=0
This option will load the DVB-T frontend:
options cx88-dvb frontend=1
NOTE: On Debian and Ubuntu Systems you will have to enter /etc/modprobe.d/ and create a custom named file that holds the above mentioned content.
Multiple Frontend Diff (mfe)
No further configuration is applicable.
Enter directory /dev/dvb/adapterX for the HVR3000 and you should see more than one frontend (eg. demux0 demux1 dvr0 dvr1 frontend0 frontend1 net0 net1). If you only see one of each then the HVR3000 has not installed correctly and your kernel is running the release version of V4l_DVB which presently has no support for the DVB-S side of HVR3000.
If the module has not loaded (/sbin/lsmod) try
# modprobe cx88_dvb
Problems
On Ubuntu Hardy with the latest kernel the driver doesn't survive suspend/resume. tested with Mythtv using Plan A (sfe). On Ubuntu Jaunty with the latest kernel trying to use DVB-T:
# dvbscan -frontend 1 -demux 1 /usr/share/dvb-apps/dvb-t/(the new zealand one?) > channels.conf Unable to query frontend
Testing
Untested by myself (jarb1) is analogue TV
DVB-T
To test DVB-T the scandvb command can be used. Use the relevant channel info in the dvb-t folder for your transmitter.
# scandvb /usr/share/dvb-apps/dvb-t/uk-EmleyMoor > channels.conf
If the card is working this will create a channels.conf file with the channel information
To test you can copy the channels.conf into your ~/.mplayer folder and view with mplayer by issuing a command like
# mplayer dvb://0@'BBC ONE'
Note : Some dvb-apps : scandvb is dvbscan
DVB-S
For testing DVB-S we also use scan DVB with the provided initial tuning data. Use the correct data for your satelite. Note the -f (frontend) and -d demux options to select the correct frontend. You can also specify which DVB adapter by adding option -a 2 for /dev/dvb/adapter2 etc.
# scandvb -f 1 -d 1 /usr/share/dvb-apps/dvb-s/Astra28.2E > channels.conf
The method shown in DVB-T can be used to view the channel. Or you can use dvbstream to stream it into mplayer. Example.
# /sbin/dvbstream -o -f 12421 2343 2345 -p H -s 27500 -c 2 | mplayer -
MythTv users don't forget to set the Diseqc option to LNB if you have a basic satelite dish.
Sound
This part of the article is original and has not been rewritten since Steve Toths version as I use the onboard sound card.
To hear sound from the card you will need to pipe the sound output from the cards sound device back into your sound card. There are a number of ways of doing it, but I only managed to make 1 work properly. In theory you can use sox to stream from one device to another, but I had problems with resampling and it just sounded wrong. You can also use arecord to get data from the alsa device, then pipe it to aplay using - as a source (stdin), but when I did that the sound came out nearly a second later than the picture. I had success only using mplayer:-
mplayer tv://25 -tv driver=v4l2:device=/dev/video0:norm=PAL-I:chanlist=europe-west:\ alsa:adevice=hw.2,0:amode=1:audiorate=48000:volume=100:\ immediatemode=0:buffersize=32 -aspect 16:9
Where My Sky DigiBox is tuned to channel 25, my video card is /dev/video0 it's PAL-I (europe-west) and the cx88_alsa device is card2 sub 0 (ie hw.2,0). I want sound in stereo (amode=1) at 48k. I had problems with buffers overflowing, so I set the buffersize to twice what was needed and the sound is now perfect.
My Sky DigiBox is setup for a 16:9 screen, even though PAL-I isn't so the -aspect 16:9 corrects the screen size
Useful Information
Remote Control
The HVR3000 has onboard IR receiver. This can be configured by following the V4L wiki here at LinuxTV. Search Remote Contollers.
I found however when you booted with or without a keyboard and mouse the event no changed and you had to manually start lircd each time. The following bash script is a simple way of automatically determining the event no and starting lircd.
The startup script has a work around for systems with more than one HVR3000 card. Please adjust the cardno to start.
/etc/init.d/lircdhvr3000
#!/bin/bash # # chkconfig: 5 90 10 # description: Startup for lircd with multiple HVR3000 cards # This will only funtion in run level 5 (X)... where else is a remote # useful? # . /etc/init.d/functions RUNAS="root" #If we have 2 tuner cards with IR set this as 2, otherwise 1 CARDNO=2 RETVAL=0 # depending on parameter -- startup, shutdown, restart # of the instance and listener or usage display case "$1" in start) echo -n "Starting HVR3000 IR (lircd) : " #Determin the first IR Input card number EVENTNO=`cat /proc/bus/input/devices |grep HVR300 -A 4 |grep H: | grep H: -n | grep $CARDNO | grep -o event[01123456789] | grep -o [01234567890]` RESULT="Using Card : "$EVENTNO echo -n $RESULT #Start Lircd with the right event daemon /usr/sbin/lircd -H dev/input -d /dev/input/event$EVENTNO RETVAL=$? echo touch /var/lock/subsys/lircd exit $RETVAL ;; stop) echo -n "Stopping HVR3000 IR (lircd) : " killproc lircd RETVAL=$? echo rm -f /var/lock/subsys/lircd exit $RETVAL ;; reload|restart) $0 stop $0 start exit $RETVAL ;; *) echo "Usage: $0 start|stop|restart|reload" RETVAL=1 ;; esac exit $RETVAL
Then enable the script
# /sbin/chkconfig --add lircdhvr3000 # /sbin/chkconfig --levels 5 lircdhvr3000 on
lircd.conf
A working lircd.conf:
begin remote name Hauppauge_3000 bits 16 eps 30 aeps 100 one 0 0 zero 0 0 pre_data_bits 16 pre_data 0x1 post_data_bits 32 post_data 0x1 gap 32994 toggle_bit_mask 0x0 begin codes Power 0x0074 Go 0x0161 Skip 0x00A3 Replay 0x00A5 Rewind 0x00A8 Forward 0x00D0 Play 0x00CF Stop 0x0080 Pause 0x0077 Record 0x00A7 TV 0x0179 Videos 0x0189 Music 0x0188 Pictures 0x016F Guide 0x016D Radio 0x0181 Up 0x0067 Down 0x006C Left 0x0069 Right 0x006A OK 0x001C Back/Exit 0x00AE Menu 0x008B Prev.Ch 0x019C Mute 0x0071 Vol+ 0x0073 Vol- 0x0072 Channel+ 0x0192 Channel- 0x0193 Red 0x018E Green 0x018F Yellow 0x0190 Blue 0x0191 Text 0x0184 Sub/CC 0x0172 1 0x0002 2 0x0003 3 0x0004 4 0x0005 5 0x0006 6 0x0007 7 0x0008 8 0x0009 9 0x000A 0 0x000B end codes end remote
Multiple Frontends
There does not seem to be a consensus on multiple frontends and how to handle them in applications. The basic DVB apps can easily select the correct frontend, but for instance in MythTV this support is not available and will only select a complete adapter.
It is suggested to create symbolic links as follows.
mkdir /dev/dvb/adapter1 ln /dev/dvb/adapter0/demux1 /dev/dvb/adapter1/demux0 ln /dev/dvb/adapter0/frontend1 /dev/dvb/adapter1/frontend0 ln /dev/dvb/adapter0/net1 /dev/dvb/adapter1/net0 ln /dev/dvb/adapter0/dvr1 /dev/dvb/adapter1/dvr0
But be warned it is one or the other, if your application tries to open both adapters at the same time it will fail. ITS HARDWARE not software!