| /* |
| * Copyright (C) 2012 The Android Open Source Project |
| * |
| * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); |
| * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. |
| * You may obtain a copy of the License at |
| * |
| * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 |
| * |
| * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software |
| * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, |
| * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. |
| * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and |
| * limitations under the License. |
| */ |
| |
| #ifndef ANDROID_SENSORS_INTERFACE_H |
| #define ANDROID_SENSORS_INTERFACE_H |
| |
| #include <stdint.h> |
| #include <sys/cdefs.h> |
| #include <sys/types.h> |
| |
| #include <hardware/hardware.h> |
| #include <cutils/native_handle.h> |
| |
| __BEGIN_DECLS |
| |
| /*****************************************************************************/ |
| |
| #define SENSORS_HEADER_VERSION 1 |
| #define SENSORS_MODULE_API_VERSION_0_1 HARDWARE_MODULE_API_VERSION(0, 1) |
| #define SENSORS_DEVICE_API_VERSION_0_1 HARDWARE_DEVICE_API_VERSION_2(0, 1, SENSORS_HEADER_VERSION) |
| #define SENSORS_DEVICE_API_VERSION_1_0 HARDWARE_DEVICE_API_VERSION_2(1, 0, SENSORS_HEADER_VERSION) |
| |
| /** |
| * The id of this module |
| */ |
| #define SENSORS_HARDWARE_MODULE_ID "sensors" |
| |
| /** |
| * Name of the sensors device to open |
| */ |
| #define SENSORS_HARDWARE_POLL "poll" |
| |
| /** |
| * Handles must be higher than SENSORS_HANDLE_BASE and must be unique. |
| * A Handle identifies a given sensors. The handle is used to activate |
| * and/or deactivate sensors. |
| * In this version of the API there can only be 256 handles. |
| */ |
| #define SENSORS_HANDLE_BASE 0 |
| #define SENSORS_HANDLE_BITS 8 |
| #define SENSORS_HANDLE_COUNT (1<<SENSORS_HANDLE_BITS) |
| |
| |
| /* |
| * flags for (*batch)() |
| * Availability: SENSORS_DEVICE_API_VERSION_1_0 |
| * see (*batch)() documentation for details |
| */ |
| enum { |
| SENSORS_BATCH_DRY_RUN = 0x00000001, |
| SENSORS_BATCH_WAKE_UPON_FIFO_FULL = 0x00000002 |
| }; |
| |
| /** |
| * Definition of the axis used by the sensor HAL API |
| * |
| * This API is relative to the screen of the device in its default orientation, |
| * that is, if the device can be used in portrait or landscape, this API |
| * is only relative to the NATURAL orientation of the screen. In other words, |
| * the axis are not swapped when the device's screen orientation changes. |
| * Higher level services /may/ perform this transformation. |
| * |
| * x<0 x>0 |
| * ^ |
| * | |
| * +-----------+--> y>0 |
| * | | |
| * | | |
| * | | |
| * | | / z<0 |
| * | | / |
| * | | / |
| * O-----------+/ |
| * |[] [ ] []/ |
| * +----------/+ y<0 |
| * / |
| * / |
| * |/ z>0 (toward the sky) |
| * |
| * O: Origin (x=0,y=0,z=0) |
| * |
| */ |
| |
| /* |
| * Interaction with suspend mode |
| * |
| * Unless otherwise noted, an enabled sensor shall not prevent the |
| * SoC to go into suspend mode. It is the responsibility of applications |
| * to keep a partial wake-lock should they wish to receive sensor |
| * events while the screen is off. While in suspend mode, and unless |
| * otherwise noted (batch mode, sensor particularities, ...), enabled sensors' |
| * events are lost. |
| * |
| * Note that conceptually, the sensor itself is not de-activated while in |
| * suspend mode -- it's just that the data it returns are lost. As soon as |
| * the SoC gets out of suspend mode, operations resume as usual. Of course, |
| * in practice sensors shall be disabled while in suspend mode to |
| * save power, unless batch mode is active, in which case they must |
| * continue fill their internal FIFO (see the documentation of batch() to |
| * learn how suspend interacts with batch mode). |
| * |
| * In batch mode, and only when the flag SENSORS_BATCH_WAKE_UPON_FIFO_FULL is |
| * set and supported, the specified sensor must be able to wake-up the SoC and |
| * be able to buffer at least 10 seconds worth of the requested sensor events. |
| * |
| * There are notable exceptions to this behavior, which are sensor-dependent |
| * (see sensor types definitions below) |
| * |
| * |
| * The sensor type documentation below specifies the wake-up behavior of |
| * each sensor: |
| * wake-up: yes this sensor must wake-up the SoC to deliver events |
| * wake-up: no this sensor shall not wake-up the SoC, events are dropped |
| * |
| */ |
| |
| /* |
| * Sensor type |
| * |
| * Each sensor has a type which defines what this sensor measures and how |
| * measures are reported. All types are defined below. |
| */ |
| |
| /* |
| * Sensor fusion and virtual sensors |
| * |
| * Many sensor types are or can be implemented as virtual sensors from |
| * physical sensors on the device. For instance the rotation vector sensor, |
| * orientation sensor, step-detector, step-counter, etc... |
| * |
| * From the point of view of this API these virtual sensors MUST appear as |
| * real, individual sensors. It is the responsibility of the driver and HAL |
| * to make sure this is the case. |
| * |
| * In particular, all sensors must be able to function concurrently. |
| * For example, if defining both an accelerometer and a step counter, |
| * then both must be able to work concurrently. |
| */ |
| |
| /* |
| * Trigger modes |
| * |
| * Sensors can report events in different ways called trigger modes, |
| * each sensor type has one and only one trigger mode associated to it. |
| * Currently there are four trigger modes defined: |
| * |
| * continuous: events are reported at a constant rate defined by setDelay(). |
| * eg: accelerometers, gyroscopes. |
| * on-change: events are reported only if the sensor's value has changed. |
| * setDelay() is used to set a lower limit to the reporting |
| * period (minimum time between two events). |
| * The HAL must return an event immediately when an on-change |
| * sensor is activated. |
| * eg: proximity, light sensors |
| * one-shot: upon detection of an event, the sensor deactivates itself and |
| * then sends a single event. Order matters to avoid race |
| * conditions. No other event is sent until the sensor get |
| * reactivated. setDelay() is ignored. |
| * eg: significant motion sensor |
| * special: see details in the sensor type specification below |
| * |
| */ |
| |
| /* |
| * SENSOR_TYPE_ACCELEROMETER |
| * trigger-mode: continuous |
| * wake-up sensor: no |
| * |
| * All values are in SI units (m/s^2) and measure the acceleration of the |
| * device minus the force of gravity. |
| * |
| * Acceleration sensors return sensor events for all 3 axes at a constant |
| * rate defined by setDelay(). |
| * |
| * x: Acceleration on the x-axis |
| * y: Acceleration on the y-axis |
| * z: Acceleration on the z-axis |
| * |
| * Note that the readings from the accelerometer include the acceleration |
| * due to gravity (which is opposite to the direction of the gravity vector). |
| * |
| * Examples: |
| * The norm of <x, y, z> should be close to 0 when in free fall. |
| * |
| * When the device lies flat on a table and is pushed on its left side |
| * toward the right, the x acceleration value is positive. |
| * |
| * When the device lies flat on a table, the acceleration value is +9.81, |
| * which correspond to the acceleration of the device (0 m/s^2) minus the |
| * force of gravity (-9.81 m/s^2). |
| * |
| * When the device lies flat on a table and is pushed toward the sky, the |
| * acceleration value is greater than +9.81, which correspond to the |
| * acceleration of the device (+A m/s^2) minus the force of |
| * gravity (-9.81 m/s^2). |
| */ |
| #define SENSOR_TYPE_ACCELEROMETER (1) |
| |
| /* |
| * SENSOR_TYPE_GEOMAGNETIC_FIELD |
| * trigger-mode: continuous |
| * wake-up sensor: no |
| * |
| * All values are in micro-Tesla (uT) and measure the geomagnetic |
| * field in the X, Y and Z axis. |
| * |
| * Returned values include calibration mechanisms such that the vector is |
| * aligned with the magnetic declination and heading of the earth's |
| * geomagnetic field. |
| * |
| * Magnetic Field sensors return sensor events for all 3 axes at a constant |
| * rate defined by setDelay(). |
| */ |
| #define SENSOR_TYPE_GEOMAGNETIC_FIELD (2) |
| #define SENSOR_TYPE_MAGNETIC_FIELD SENSOR_TYPE_GEOMAGNETIC_FIELD |
| |
| /* |
| * SENSOR_TYPE_ORIENTATION |
| * trigger-mode: continuous |
| * wake-up sensor: no |
| * |
| * All values are angles in degrees. |
| * |
| * Orientation sensors return sensor events for all 3 axes at a constant |
| * rate defined by setDelay(). |
| * |
| * azimuth: angle between the magnetic north direction and the Y axis, around |
| * the Z axis (0<=azimuth<360). |
| * 0=North, 90=East, 180=South, 270=West |
| * |
| * pitch: Rotation around X axis (-180<=pitch<=180), with positive values when |
| * the z-axis moves toward the y-axis. |
| * |
| * roll: Rotation around Y axis (-90<=roll<=90), with positive values when |
| * the x-axis moves towards the z-axis. |
| * |
| * Note: For historical reasons the roll angle is positive in the clockwise |
| * direction (mathematically speaking, it should be positive in the |
| * counter-clockwise direction): |
| * |
| * Z |
| * ^ |
| * (+roll) .--> | |
| * / | |
| * | | roll: rotation around Y axis |
| * X <-------(.) |
| * Y |
| * note that +Y == -roll |
| * |
| * |
| * |
| * Note: This definition is different from yaw, pitch and roll used in aviation |
| * where the X axis is along the long side of the plane (tail to nose). |
| */ |
| #define SENSOR_TYPE_ORIENTATION (3) |
| |
| /* |
| * SENSOR_TYPE_GYROSCOPE |
| * trigger-mode: continuous |
| * wake-up sensor: no |
| * |
| * All values are in radians/second and measure the rate of rotation |
| * around the X, Y and Z axis. The coordinate system is the same as is |
| * used for the acceleration sensor. Rotation is positive in the |
| * counter-clockwise direction (right-hand rule). That is, an observer |
| * looking from some positive location on the x, y or z axis at a device |
| * positioned on the origin would report positive rotation if the device |
| * appeared to be rotating counter clockwise. Note that this is the |
| * standard mathematical definition of positive rotation and does not agree |
| * with the definition of roll given earlier. |
| * The range should at least be 17.45 rad/s (ie: ~1000 deg/s). |
| * |
| * automatic gyro-drift compensation is allowed but not required. |
| */ |
| #define SENSOR_TYPE_GYROSCOPE (4) |
| |
| /* |
| * SENSOR_TYPE_LIGHT |
| * trigger-mode: on-change |
| * wake-up sensor: no |
| * |
| * The light sensor value is returned in SI lux units. |
| */ |
| #define SENSOR_TYPE_LIGHT (5) |
| |
| /* |
| * SENSOR_TYPE_PRESSURE |
| * trigger-mode: continuous |
| * wake-up sensor: no |
| * |
| * The pressure sensor return the athmospheric pressure in hectopascal (hPa) |
| */ |
| #define SENSOR_TYPE_PRESSURE (6) |
| |
| /* SENSOR_TYPE_TEMPERATURE is deprecated in the HAL */ |
| #define SENSOR_TYPE_TEMPERATURE (7) |
| |
| /* |
| * SENSOR_TYPE_PROXIMITY |
| * trigger-mode: on-change |
| * wake-up sensor: yes |
| * |
| * The distance value is measured in centimeters. Note that some proximity |
| * sensors only support a binary "close" or "far" measurement. In this case, |
| * the sensor should report its maxRange value in the "far" state and a value |
| * less than maxRange in the "near" state. |
| */ |
| #define SENSOR_TYPE_PROXIMITY (8) |
| |
| /* |
| * SENSOR_TYPE_GRAVITY |
| * trigger-mode: continuous |
| * wake-up sensor: no |
| * |
| * A gravity output indicates the direction of and magnitude of gravity in |
| * the devices's coordinates. On Earth, the magnitude is 9.8 m/s^2. |
| * Units are m/s^2. The coordinate system is the same as is used for the |
| * acceleration sensor. When the device is at rest, the output of the |
| * gravity sensor should be identical to that of the accelerometer. |
| */ |
| #define SENSOR_TYPE_GRAVITY (9) |
| |
| /* |
| * SENSOR_TYPE_LINEAR_ACCELERATION |
| * trigger-mode: continuous |
| * wake-up sensor: no |
| * |
| * Indicates the linear acceleration of the device in device coordinates, |
| * not including gravity. |
| * |
| * The output is conceptually: |
| * output of TYPE_ACCELERATION - output of TYPE_GRAVITY |
| * |
| * Readings on all axes should be close to 0 when device lies on a table. |
| * Units are m/s^2. |
| * The coordinate system is the same as is used for the acceleration sensor. |
| */ |
| #define SENSOR_TYPE_LINEAR_ACCELERATION (10) |
| |
| |
| /* |
| * SENSOR_TYPE_ROTATION_VECTOR |
| * trigger-mode: continuous |
| * wake-up sensor: no |
| * |
| * The rotation vector symbolizes the orientation of the device relative to the |
| * East-North-Up coordinates frame. It is usually obtained by integration of |
| * accelerometer, gyroscope and magnetometer readings. |
| * |
| * The East-North-Up coordinate system is defined as a direct orthonormal basis |
| * where: |
| * - X points east and is tangential to the ground. |
| * - Y points north and is tangential to the ground. |
| * - Z points towards the sky and is perpendicular to the ground. |
| * |
| * The orientation of the phone is represented by the rotation necessary to |
| * align the East-North-Up coordinates with the phone's coordinates. That is, |
| * applying the rotation to the world frame (X,Y,Z) would align them with the |
| * phone coordinates (x,y,z). |
| * |
| * The rotation can be seen as rotating the phone by an angle theta around |
| * an axis rot_axis to go from the reference (East-North-Up aligned) device |
| * orientation to the current device orientation. |
| * |
| * The rotation is encoded as the 4 (reordered) components of a unit quaternion: |
| * sensors_event_t.data[0] = rot_axis.x*sin(theta/2) |
| * sensors_event_t.data[1] = rot_axis.y*sin(theta/2) |
| * sensors_event_t.data[2] = rot_axis.z*sin(theta/2) |
| * sensors_event_t.data[3] = cos(theta/2) |
| * where |
| * - rot_axis.x,y,z are the North-East-Up coordinates of a unit length vector |
| * representing the rotation axis |
| * - theta is the rotation angle |
| * |
| * The quaternion must be of norm 1 (it is a unit quaternion). Failure to ensure |
| * this will cause erratic client behaviour. |
| * |
| * In addition, this sensor reports an estimated heading accuracy. |
| * sensors_event_t.data[4] = estimated_accuracy (in radians) |
| * The heading error must be less than estimated_accuracy 95% of the time |
| * |
| * This sensor must use a gyroscope and an accelerometer as main orientation |
| * change input. |
| * |
| * This sensor can also include magnetometer input to make up for gyro drift, |
| * but it cannot be implemented using only a magnetometer. |
| */ |
| #define SENSOR_TYPE_ROTATION_VECTOR (11) |
| |
| /* |
| * SENSOR_TYPE_RELATIVE_HUMIDITY |
| * trigger-mode: on-change |
| * wake-up sensor: no |
| * |
| * A relative humidity sensor measures relative ambient air humidity and |
| * returns a value in percent. |
| */ |
| #define SENSOR_TYPE_RELATIVE_HUMIDITY (12) |
| |
| /* |
| * SENSOR_TYPE_AMBIENT_TEMPERATURE |
| * trigger-mode: on-change |
| * wake-up sensor: no |
| * |
| * The ambient (room) temperature in degree Celsius. |
| */ |
| #define SENSOR_TYPE_AMBIENT_TEMPERATURE (13) |
| |
| /* |
| * SENSOR_TYPE_MAGNETIC_FIELD_UNCALIBRATED |
| * trigger-mode: continuous |
| * wake-up sensor: no |
| * |
| * Similar to SENSOR_TYPE_MAGNETIC_FIELD, but the hard iron calibration is |
| * reported separately instead of being included in the measurement. |
| * Factory calibration and temperature compensation should still be applied to |
| * the "uncalibrated" measurement. |
| * Separating away the hard iron calibration estimation allows the system to |
| * better recover from bad hard iron estimation. |
| * |
| * All values are in micro-Tesla (uT) and measure the ambient magnetic |
| * field in the X, Y and Z axis. Assumptions that the the magnetic field |
| * is due to the Earth's poles should be avoided. |
| * |
| * The uncalibrated_magnetic event contains |
| * - 3 fields for uncalibrated measurement: x_uncalib, y_uncalib, z_uncalib. |
| * Each is a component of the measured magnetic field, with soft iron |
| * and temperature compensation applied, but not hard iron calibration. |
| * These values should be continuous (no re-calibration should cause a jump). |
| * - 3 fields for hard iron bias estimates: x_bias, y_bias, z_bias. |
| * Each field is a component of the estimated hard iron calibration. |
| * They represent the offsets to apply to the uncalibrated readings to obtain |
| * calibrated readings (x_calibrated = x_uncalib + x_bias) |
| * These values are expected to jump as soon as the estimate of the hard iron |
| * changes. |
| * |
| * If this sensor is present, then the corresponding |
| * SENSOR_TYPE_MAGNETIC_FIELD must be present and both must return the |
| * same sensor_t::name and sensor_t::vendor. |
| * |
| * See SENSOR_TYPE_MAGNETIC_FIELD for more information |
| */ |
| #define SENSOR_TYPE_MAGNETIC_FIELD_UNCALIBRATED (14) |
| |
| /* |
| * SENSOR_TYPE_GAME_ROTATION_VECTOR |
| * trigger-mode: continuous |
| * wake-up sensor: no |
| * |
| * Similar to SENSOR_TYPE_ROTATION_VECTOR, but not using the geomagnetic |
| * field. Therefore the Y axis doesn't point north, but instead to some other |
| * reference. That reference is allowed to drift by the same order of |
| * magnitude than the gyroscope drift around the Z axis. |
| * |
| * This sensor does not report an estimated heading accuracy: |
| * sensors_event_t.data[4] is reserved and should be set to 0 |
| * |
| * In the ideal case, a phone rotated and returning to the same real-world |
| * orientation should report the same game rotation vector |
| * (without using the earth's geomagnetic field). |
| * |
| * This sensor must be based on a gyroscope. It cannot be implemented using |
| * a magnetometer. |
| * |
| * see SENSOR_TYPE_ROTATION_VECTOR for more details |
| */ |
| #define SENSOR_TYPE_GAME_ROTATION_VECTOR (15) |
| |
| /* |
| * SENSOR_TYPE_GYROSCOPE_UNCALIBRATED |
| * trigger-mode: continuous |
| * wake-up sensor: no |
| * |
| * All values are in radians/second and measure the rate of rotation |
| * around the X, Y and Z axis. An estimation of the drift on each axis is |
| * reported as well. |
| * |
| * No gyro-drift compensation shall be performed. |
| * Factory calibration and temperature compensation should still be applied |
| * to the rate of rotation (angular speeds). |
| * |
| * The coordinate system is the same as is |
| * used for the acceleration sensor. Rotation is positive in the |
| * counter-clockwise direction (right-hand rule). That is, an observer |
| * looking from some positive location on the x, y or z axis at a device |
| * positioned on the origin would report positive rotation if the device |
| * appeared to be rotating counter clockwise. Note that this is the |
| * standard mathematical definition of positive rotation and does not agree |
| * with the definition of roll given earlier. |
| * The range should at least be 17.45 rad/s (ie: ~1000 deg/s). |
| * |
| * Content of an uncalibrated_gyro event: (units are rad/sec) |
| * x_uncalib : angular speed (w/o drift compensation) around the X axis |
| * y_uncalib : angular speed (w/o drift compensation) around the Y axis |
| * z_uncalib : angular speed (w/o drift compensation) around the Z axis |
| * x_bias : estimated drift around X axis in rad/s |
| * y_bias : estimated drift around Y axis in rad/s |
| * z_bias : estimated drift around Z axis in rad/s |
| * |
| * IMPLEMENTATION NOTES: |
| * |
| * If the implementation is not able to estimate the drift, then this |
| * sensor MUST NOT be reported by this HAL. Instead, the regular |
| * SENSOR_TYPE_GYROSCOPE is used without drift compensation. |
| * |
| * If this sensor is present, then the corresponding |
| * SENSOR_TYPE_GYROSCOPE must be present and both must return the |
| * same sensor_t::name and sensor_t::vendor. |
| */ |
| #define SENSOR_TYPE_GYROSCOPE_UNCALIBRATED (16) |
| |
| |
| /* |
| * SENSOR_TYPE_SIGNIFICANT_MOTION |
| * trigger-mode: one-shot |
| * wake-up sensor: yes |
| * |
| * A sensor of this type triggers an event each time significant motion |
| * is detected and automatically disables itself. |
| * The only allowed value to return is 1.0. |
| * |
| * A significant motion is a motion that might lead to a change in the user |
| * location. |
| * Examples of such motions are: |
| * walking, biking, sitting in a moving car, coach or train. |
| * Examples of situations that should not trigger significant motion: |
| * - phone in pocket and person is not moving |
| * - phone is on a table, even if the table shakes a bit due to nearby traffic |
| * or washing machine |
| * |
| * A note on false positive / false negative / power consumption tradeoff |
| * - The goal of this sensor is to save power. |
| * - Triggering an event when the user is not moving (false positive) is costly |
| * in terms of power, so it should be avoided. |
| * - Not triggering an event when the user is moving (false negative) is |
| * acceptable as long as it is not done repeatedly. If the user has been |
| * walking for 10 seconds, not triggering an event within those 10 seconds |
| * is not acceptable. |
| * |
| * IMPORTANT NOTE: this sensor type is very different from other types |
| * in that it must work when the screen is off without the need of |
| * holding a partial wake-lock and MUST allow the SoC to go into suspend. |
| * When significant motion is detected, the sensor must awaken the SoC and |
| * the event be reported. |
| * |
| * If a particular hardware cannot support this mode of operation then this |
| * sensor type MUST NOT be reported by the HAL. ie: it is not acceptable |
| * to "emulate" this sensor in the HAL. |
| * |
| * The whole point of this sensor type is to save power by keeping the |
| * SoC in suspend mode when the device is at rest. |
| * |
| * When the sensor is not activated, it must also be deactivated in the |
| * hardware: it must not wake up the SoC anymore, even in case of |
| * significant motion. |
| * |
| * setDelay() has no effect and is ignored. |
| * Once a "significant motion" event is returned, a sensor of this type |
| * must disables itself automatically, as if activate(..., 0) had been called. |
| */ |
| |
| #define SENSOR_TYPE_SIGNIFICANT_MOTION (17) |
| |
| |
| /* |
| * SENSOR_TYPE_STEP_DETECTOR |
| * trigger-mode: special |
| * wake-up sensor: no |
| * |
| * A sensor of this type triggers an event each time a step is taken |
| * by the user. The only allowed value to return is 1.0 and an event is |
| * generated for each step. Like with any other event, the timestamp |
| * indicates when the event (here the step) occurred, this corresponds to when |
| * the foot hit the ground, generating a high variation in acceleration. |
| * |
| * While this sensor operates, it shall not disrupt any other sensors, in |
| * particular, but not limited to, the accelerometer; which might very well |
| * be in use as well. |
| * |
| * This sensor must be low power. That is, if the step detection cannot be |
| * done in hardware, this sensor should not be defined. Also, when the |
| * step detector is activated and the accelerometer is not, only steps should |
| * trigger interrupts (not accelerometer data). |
| * |
| * setDelay() has no impact on this sensor type |
| */ |
| |
| #define SENSOR_TYPE_STEP_DETECTOR (18) |
| |
| |
| /* |
| * SENSOR_TYPE_STEP_COUNTER |
| * trigger-mode: on-change |
| * wake-up sensor: no |
| * |
| * A sensor of this type returns the number of steps taken by the user since |
| * the last reboot while activated. The value is returned as a uint64_t and is |
| * reset to zero only on a system reboot. |
| * |
| * The timestamp of the event is set to the time when the first step |
| * for that event was taken. |
| * See SENSOR_TYPE_STEP_DETECTOR for the signification of the time of a step. |
| * |
| * The minimum size of the hardware's internal counter shall be 16 bits |
| * (this restriction is here to avoid too frequent wake-ups when the |
| * delay is very large). |
| * |
| * IMPORTANT NOTE: this sensor type is different from other types |
| * in that it must work when the screen is off without the need of |
| * holding a partial wake-lock and MUST allow the SoC to go into suspend. |
| * Unlike other sensors, while in suspend mode this sensor must stay active, |
| * no events are reported during that time but, steps continue to be |
| * accounted for; an event will be reported as soon as the SoC resumes if |
| * the timeout has expired. |
| * |
| * In other words, when the screen is off and the device allowed to |
| * go into suspend mode, we don't want to be woken up, regardless of the |
| * setDelay() value, but the steps shall continue to be counted. |
| * |
| * The driver must however ensure that the internal step count never |
| * overflows. It is allowed in this situation to wake the SoC up so the |
| * driver can do the counter maintenance. |
| * |
| * While this sensor operates, it shall not disrupt any other sensors, in |
| * particular, but not limited to, the accelerometer; which might very well |
| * be in use as well. |
| * |
| * If a particular hardware cannot support these modes of operation then this |
| * sensor type MUST NOT be reported by the HAL. ie: it is not acceptable |
| * to "emulate" this sensor in the HAL. |
| * |
| * This sensor must be low power. That is, if the step detection cannot be |
| * done in hardware, this sensor should not be defined. Also, when the |
| * step counter is activated and the accelerometer is not, only steps should |
| * trigger interrupts (not accelerometer data). |
| * |
| * The whole point of this sensor type is to save power by keeping the |
| * SoC in suspend mode when the device is at rest. |
| */ |
| |
| #define SENSOR_TYPE_STEP_COUNTER (19) |
| |
| /* |
| * SENSOR_TYPE_GEOMAGNETIC_ROTATION_VECTOR |
| * trigger-mode: continuous |
| * wake-up sensor: no |
| * |
| * Similar to SENSOR_TYPE_ROTATION_VECTOR, but using a magnetometer instead |
| * of using a gyroscope. |
| * |
| * This sensor must be based on a magnetometer. It cannot be implemented using |
| * a gyroscope, and gyroscope input cannot be used by this sensor. |
| * |
| * Just like SENSOR_TYPE_ROTATION_VECTOR, this sensor reports an estimated |
| * heading accuracy: |
| * sensors_event_t.data[4] = estimated_accuracy (in radians) |
| * The heading error must be less than estimated_accuracy 95% of the time |
| * |
| * see SENSOR_TYPE_ROTATION_VECTOR for more details |
| */ |
| #define SENSOR_TYPE_GEOMAGNETIC_ROTATION_VECTOR (20) |
| |
| /** |
| * Values returned by the accelerometer in various locations in the universe. |
| * all values are in SI units (m/s^2) |
| */ |
| #define GRAVITY_SUN (275.0f) |
| #define GRAVITY_EARTH (9.80665f) |
| |
| /** Maximum magnetic field on Earth's surface */ |
| #define MAGNETIC_FIELD_EARTH_MAX (60.0f) |
| |
| /** Minimum magnetic field on Earth's surface */ |
| #define MAGNETIC_FIELD_EARTH_MIN (30.0f) |
| |
| |
| /** |
| * status of orientation sensor |
| */ |
| |
| #define SENSOR_STATUS_UNRELIABLE 0 |
| #define SENSOR_STATUS_ACCURACY_LOW 1 |
| #define SENSOR_STATUS_ACCURACY_MEDIUM 2 |
| #define SENSOR_STATUS_ACCURACY_HIGH 3 |
| |
| |
| /** |
| * sensor event data |
| */ |
| typedef struct { |
| union { |
| float v[3]; |
| struct { |
| float x; |
| float y; |
| float z; |
| }; |
| struct { |
| float azimuth; |
| float pitch; |
| float roll; |
| }; |
| }; |
| int8_t status; |
| uint8_t reserved[3]; |
| } sensors_vec_t; |
| |
| /** |
| * uncalibrated gyroscope and magnetometer event data |
| */ |
| typedef struct { |
| union { |
| float uncalib[3]; |
| struct { |
| float x_uncalib; |
| float y_uncalib; |
| float z_uncalib; |
| }; |
| }; |
| union { |
| float bias[3]; |
| struct { |
| float x_bias; |
| float y_bias; |
| float z_bias; |
| }; |
| }; |
| } uncalibrated_event_t; |
| |
| /** |
| * Union of the various types of sensor data |
| * that can be returned. |
| */ |
| typedef struct sensors_event_t { |
| /* must be sizeof(struct sensors_event_t) */ |
| int32_t version; |
| |
| /* sensor identifier */ |
| int32_t sensor; |
| |
| /* sensor type */ |
| int32_t type; |
| |
| /* reserved */ |
| int32_t reserved0; |
| |
| /* time is in nanosecond */ |
| int64_t timestamp; |
| |
| union { |
| float data[16]; |
| |
| /* acceleration values are in meter per second per second (m/s^2) */ |
| sensors_vec_t acceleration; |
| |
| /* magnetic vector values are in micro-Tesla (uT) */ |
| sensors_vec_t magnetic; |
| |
| /* orientation values are in degrees */ |
| sensors_vec_t orientation; |
| |
| /* gyroscope values are in rad/s */ |
| sensors_vec_t gyro; |
| |
| /* temperature is in degrees centigrade (Celsius) */ |
| float temperature; |
| |
| /* distance in centimeters */ |
| float distance; |
| |
| /* light in SI lux units */ |
| float light; |
| |
| /* pressure in hectopascal (hPa) */ |
| float pressure; |
| |
| /* relative humidity in percent */ |
| float relative_humidity; |
| |
| /* step-counter */ |
| uint64_t step_counter; |
| |
| /* uncalibrated gyroscope values are in rad/s */ |
| uncalibrated_event_t uncalibrated_gyro; |
| |
| /* uncalibrated magnetometer values are in micro-Teslas */ |
| uncalibrated_event_t uncalibrated_magnetic; |
| }; |
| uint32_t reserved1[4]; |
| } sensors_event_t; |
| |
| |
| |
| struct sensor_t; |
| |
| /** |
| * Every hardware module must have a data structure named HAL_MODULE_INFO_SYM |
| * and the fields of this data structure must begin with hw_module_t |
| * followed by module specific information. |
| */ |
| struct sensors_module_t { |
| struct hw_module_t common; |
| |
| /** |
| * Enumerate all available sensors. The list is returned in "list". |
| * @return number of sensors in the list |
| */ |
| int (*get_sensors_list)(struct sensors_module_t* module, |
| struct sensor_t const** list); |
| }; |
| |
| struct sensor_t { |
| |
| /* Name of this sensor. |
| * All sensors of the same "type" must have a different "name". |
| */ |
| const char* name; |
| |
| /* vendor of the hardware part */ |
| const char* vendor; |
| |
| /* version of the hardware part + driver. The value of this field |
| * must increase when the driver is updated in a way that changes the |
| * output of this sensor. This is important for fused sensors when the |
| * fusion algorithm is updated. |
| */ |
| int version; |
| |
| /* handle that identifies this sensors. This handle is used to reference |
| * this sensor throughout the HAL API. |
| */ |
| int handle; |
| |
| /* this sensor's type. */ |
| int type; |
| |
| /* maximum range of this sensor's value in SI units */ |
| float maxRange; |
| |
| /* smallest difference between two values reported by this sensor */ |
| float resolution; |
| |
| /* rough estimate of this sensor's power consumption in mA */ |
| float power; |
| |
| /* this value depends on the trigger mode: |
| * |
| * continuous: minimum sample period allowed in microseconds |
| * on-change : 0 |
| * one-shot :-1 |
| * special : 0, unless otherwise noted |
| */ |
| int32_t minDelay; |
| |
| /* reserved fields, must be zero */ |
| void* reserved[8]; |
| }; |
| |
| |
| /* |
| * sensors_poll_device_t is used with SENSORS_DEVICE_API_VERSION_0_1 |
| * and is present for backward binary and source compatibility. |
| * (see documentation of the hooks in struct sensors_poll_device_1 below) |
| */ |
| struct sensors_poll_device_t { |
| struct hw_device_t common; |
| int (*activate)(struct sensors_poll_device_t *dev, |
| int handle, int enabled); |
| int (*setDelay)(struct sensors_poll_device_t *dev, |
| int handle, int64_t ns); |
| int (*poll)(struct sensors_poll_device_t *dev, |
| sensors_event_t* data, int count); |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * struct sensors_poll_device_1 is used with SENSORS_DEVICE_API_VERSION_1_0 |
| */ |
| typedef struct sensors_poll_device_1 { |
| union { |
| /* sensors_poll_device_1 is compatible with sensors_poll_device_t, |
| * and can be down-cast to it |
| */ |
| struct sensors_poll_device_t v0; |
| |
| struct { |
| struct hw_device_t common; |
| |
| /* Activate/de-activate one sensor. |
| * |
| * handle is the handle of the sensor to change. |
| * enabled set to 1 to enable, or 0 to disable the sensor. |
| * |
| * unless otherwise noted in the sensor types definitions, an |
| * activated sensor never prevents the SoC to go into suspend |
| * mode; that is, the HAL shall not hold a partial wake-lock on |
| * behalf of applications. |
| * |
| * one-shot sensors de-activate themselves automatically upon |
| * receiving an event and they must still accept to be deactivated |
| * through a call to activate(..., ..., 0). |
| * |
| * if "enabled" is true and the sensor is already activated, this |
| * function is a no-op and succeeds. |
| * |
| * if "enabled" is false and the sensor is already de-activated, |
| * this function is a no-op and succeeds. |
| * |
| * return 0 on success, negative errno code otherwise |
| */ |
| int (*activate)(struct sensors_poll_device_t *dev, |
| int handle, int enabled); |
| |
| /** |
| * Set the events's period in nanoseconds for a given sensor. |
| * |
| * What the period_ns parameter means depends on the specified |
| * sensor's trigger mode: |
| * |
| * continuous: setDelay() sets the sampling rate. |
| * on-change: setDelay() limits the delivery rate of events |
| * one-shot: setDelay() is ignored. it has no effect. |
| * special: see specific sensor type definitions |
| * |
| * For continuous and on-change sensors, if the requested value is |
| * less than sensor_t::minDelay, then it's silently clamped to |
| * sensor_t::minDelay unless sensor_t::minDelay is 0, in which |
| * case it is clamped to >= 1ms. |
| * |
| * @return 0 if successful, < 0 on error |
| */ |
| int (*setDelay)(struct sensors_poll_device_t *dev, |
| int handle, int64_t period_ns); |
| |
| /** |
| * Returns an array of sensor data. |
| * This function must block until events are available. |
| * |
| * return the number of events read on success, or -errno in case |
| * of an error. |
| * |
| * The number of events returned in data must be less or equal |
| * to the "count" argument. |
| * |
| * This function shall never return 0 (no event). |
| */ |
| int (*poll)(struct sensors_poll_device_t *dev, |
| sensors_event_t* data, int count); |
| }; |
| }; |
| |
| |
| /* |
| * Enables batch mode for the given sensor and sets the delay between events |
| * |
| * A timeout value of zero disables batch mode for the given sensor. |
| * |
| * The period_ns parameter is equivalent to calling setDelay() -- this |
| * function both enables or disables the batch mode AND sets the events's |
| * period in nanosecond. See setDelay() above for a detailed explanation of |
| * the period_ns parameter. |
| * |
| * BATCH MODE: |
| * ----------- |
| * In non-batch mode, all sensor events must be reported as soon as they |
| * are detected. For example, an accelerometer activated at 50Hz will |
| * trigger interrupts 50 times per second. |
| * While in batch mode, sensor events do not need to be reported as soon |
| * as they are detected. They can be temporarily stored in batches and |
| * reported in batches, as long as no event is delayed by more than |
| * "timeout" nanoseconds. That is, all events since the previous batch |
| * are recorded and returned all at once. This allows to reduce the amount |
| * of interrupts sent to the SoC, and allow the SoC to switch to a lower |
| * power state (Idle) while the sensor is capturing and batching data. |
| * |
| * setDelay() is not affected and it behaves as usual. |
| * |
| * Each event has a timestamp associated with it, the timestamp |
| * must be accurate and correspond to the time at which the event |
| * physically happened. |
| * |
| * Batching does not modify the behavior of poll(): batches from different |
| * sensors can be interleaved and split. As usual, all events from the same |
| * sensor are time-ordered. |
| * |
| * BEHAVIOUR OUTSIDE OF SUSPEND MODE: |
| * ---------------------------------- |
| * |
| * When the SoC is awake (not in suspend mode), events must be reported in |
| * batches at least every "timeout". No event shall be dropped or lost. |
| * If internal h/w FIFOs fill-up before the timeout, then events are |
| * reported at that point to ensure no event is lost. |
| * |
| * |
| * NORMAL BEHAVIOR IN SUSPEND MODE: |
| * --------------------------------- |
| * |
| * By default, batch mode doesn't significantly change the interaction with |
| * suspend mode. That is, sensors must continue to allow the SoC to |
| * go into suspend mode and sensors must stay active to fill their |
| * internal FIFO. In this mode, when the FIFO fills up, it shall wrap |
| * around (basically behave like a circular buffer, overwriting events). |
| * As soon as the SoC comes out of suspend mode, a batch is produced with |
| * as much as the recent history as possible, and batch operation |
| * resumes as usual. |
| * |
| * The behavior described above allows applications to record the recent |
| * history of a set of sensor while keeping the SoC into suspend. It |
| * also allows the hardware to not have to rely on a wake-up interrupt line. |
| * |
| * WAKE_UPON_FIFO_FULL BEHAVIOR IN SUSPEND MODE: |
| * ---------------------------------------------- |
| * |
| * There are cases, however, where an application cannot afford to lose |
| * any events, even when the device goes into suspend mode. |
| * For a given rate, if a sensor has the capability to store at least 10 |
| * seconds worth of events in its FIFO and is able to wake up the Soc, it |
| * can implement an optional secondary mode: the WAKE_UPON_FIFO_FULL mode. |
| * |
| * The caller will set the SENSORS_BATCH_WAKE_UPON_FIFO_FULL flag to |
| * activate this mode. If the sensor does not support this mode, batch() |
| * will fail when the flag is set. |
| * |
| * When running with the WAKE_UPON_FIFO_FULL flag set, no events can be |
| * lost. When the FIFO is getting full, the sensor must wake up the SoC from |
| * suspend and return a batch before the FIFO fills-up. |
| * Depending on the device, it might take a few miliseconds for the SoC to |
| * entirely come out of suspend and start flushing the FIFO. Enough head |
| * room must be allocated in the FIFO to allow the device to entirely come |
| * out of suspend without the FIFO overflowing (no events shall be lost). |
| * |
| * Implementing the WAKE_UPON_FIFO_FULL mode is optional. |
| * If the hardware cannot support this mode, or if the physical |
| * FIFO is so small that the device would never be allowed to go into |
| * suspend for at least 10 seconds, then this function MUST fail when |
| * the flag SENSORS_BATCH_WAKE_UPON_FIFO_FULL is set, regardless of |
| * the value of the timeout parameter. |
| * |
| * |
| * DRY RUN: |
| * -------- |
| * |
| * If the flag SENSORS_BATCH_DRY_RUN is set, this function returns |
| * without modifying the batch mode or the event period and has no side |
| * effects, but returns errors as usual (as it would if this flag was |
| * not set). This flag is used to check if batch mode is available for a |
| * given configuration -- in particular for a given sensor at a given rate. |
| * |
| * |
| * Return values: |
| * -------------- |
| * |
| * Because sensors must be independent, the return value must not depend |
| * on the state of the system (whether another sensor is on or not), |
| * nor on whether the flag SENSORS_BATCH_DRY_RUN is set (in other words, |
| * if a batch call with SENSORS_BATCH_DRY_RUN is successful, |
| * the same call without SENSORS_BATCH_DRY_RUN must succeed as well). |
| * |
| * If successful, 0 is returned. |
| * If the specified sensor doesn't support batch mode, -EINVAL is returned. |
| * If the specified sensor's trigger-mode is one-shot, -EINVAL is returned. |
| * If WAKE_UPON_FIFO_FULL is specified and the specified sensor's internal |
| * FIFO is too small to store at least 10 seconds worth of data at the |
| * given rate, -EINVAL is returned. Note that as stated above, this has to |
| * be determined at compile time, and not based on the state of the system. |
| * If some other constraints above cannot be satisfied, -EINVAL is returned. |
| * |
| * Note: the timeout parameter, when > 0, has no impact on whether this |
| * function succeeds or fails. |
| * |
| * If timeout is set to 0, this function must succeed. |
| * |
| * |
| * IMPLEMENTATION NOTES: |
| * --------------------- |
| * |
| * Batch mode, if supported, should happen at the hardware level, |
| * typically using hardware FIFOs. In particular, it SHALL NOT be |
| * implemented in the HAL, as this would be counter productive. |
| * The goal here is to save significant amounts of power. |
| * |
| * In some implementations, events from several sensors can share the |
| * same physical FIFO. In that case, all events in the FIFO can be sent and |
| * processed by the HAL as soon as one batch must be reported. |
| * For example, if the following sensors are activated: |
| * - accelerometer batched with timeout = 20s |
| * - gyroscope batched with timeout = 5s |
| * then the accelerometer batches can be reported at the same time the |
| * gyroscope batches are reported (every 5 seconds) |
| * |
| * Batch mode can be enabled or disabled at any time, in particular |
| * while the specified sensor is already enabled, and this shall not |
| * result in the loss of events. |
| * |
| * COMPARATIVE IMPORTANCE OF BATCHING FOR DIFFERENT SENSORS: |
| * --------------------------------------------------------- |
| * |
| * On platforms on which hardware fifo size is limited, the system designers |
| * might have to choose how much fifo to reserve for each sensor. To help |
| * with this choice, here is a list of applications made possible when |
| * batching is implemented on the different sensors. |
| * |
| * High value: Low power pedestrian dead reckoning |
| * Target batching time: 20 seconds to 1 minute |
| * Sensors to batch: |
| * - Step detector |
| * - Rotation vector or game rotation vector at 5Hz |
| * Gives us step and heading while letting the SoC go to Suspend. |
| * |
| * High value: Medium power activity/gesture recognition |
| * Target batching time: 3 seconds |
| * Sensors to batch: accelerometer between 20Hz and 50Hz |
| * Allows recognizing arbitrary activities and gestures without having |
| * to keep the SoC fully awake while the data is collected. |
| * |
| * Medium-high value: Interrupt load reduction |
| * Target batching time: < 1 second |
| * Sensors to batch: any high frequency sensor. |
| * If the gyroscope is set at 800Hz, even batching just 10 gyro events can |
| * reduce the number of interrupts from 800/second to 80/second. |
| * |
| * Medium value: Continuous low frequency data collection |
| * Target batching time: > 1 minute |
| * Sensors to batch: barometer, humidity sensor, other low frequency |
| * sensors. |
| * Allows creating monitoring applications at low power. |
| * |
| * Medium value: Continuous full-sensors collection |
| * Target batching time: > 1 minute |
| * Sensors to batch: all, at high frequencies |
| * Allows full collection of sensor data while leaving the SoC in |
| * suspend mode. Only to consider if fifo space is not an issue. |
| * |
| * In each of the cases above, if WAKE_UPON_FIFO_FULL is implemented, the |
| * applications might decide to let the SoC go to suspend, allowing for even |
| * more power savings. |
| */ |
| int (*batch)(struct sensors_poll_device_1* dev, |
| int handle, int flags, int64_t period_ns, int64_t timeout); |
| |
| void (*reserved_procs[8])(void); |
| |
| } sensors_poll_device_1_t; |
| |
| |
| |
| /** convenience API for opening and closing a device */ |
| |
| static inline int sensors_open(const struct hw_module_t* module, |
| struct sensors_poll_device_t** device) { |
| return module->methods->open(module, |
| SENSORS_HARDWARE_POLL, (struct hw_device_t**)device); |
| } |
| |
| static inline int sensors_close(struct sensors_poll_device_t* device) { |
| return device->common.close(&device->common); |
| } |
| |
| static inline int sensors_open_1(const struct hw_module_t* module, |
| sensors_poll_device_1_t** device) { |
| return module->methods->open(module, |
| SENSORS_HARDWARE_POLL, (struct hw_device_t**)device); |
| } |
| |
| static inline int sensors_close_1(sensors_poll_device_1_t* device) { |
| return device->common.close(&device->common); |
| } |
| |
| __END_DECLS |
| |
| #endif // ANDROID_SENSORS_INTERFACE_H |