NAME
fbtv - a console program for watching TV
SYNOPSIS
fbtv [ options ] [ station name ]
DESCRIPTION
fbtv is a program for watching TV with
your linux box. It runs on top of a graphic framebuffer device
(/dev/fb0). You'll need a new 2.1.x kernel to play with this.
fbtv shares the config file ($HOME/.xawtv) with the
xawtv application. Check the xawtv(1)
manpage for details about the config file format.
OPTIONS
- -o base
- set basestring for the snapshot output files. The filename will
be "base-timestamp-nr.ext".
- -v
- Be verbose.
- -c device
- video4linux device (default is /dev/video0).
- -d device
- framebuffer device (default is $FRAMEBUFFER; /dev/fb0 if unset)
- -g
- grayscaled display (works for 256 color mode only)
- -s widthxheight
- display the TV picture in width x height size in
the upper right corner.
- -f font
- font for text. Default is to look for lat1-16.psf in
/usr/lib/kbd/consolefonts and /usr/share/consolefonts. If you have
a local X11 font server running (or the FONTSERVER environment
variable set to some working server), you can also give X11 font
specs here.
- -m mode
- video mode for TV. fbtv will look up the mode in /etc/fb.modes.
- -j joydev
- joystick device to use for controlling fbtv.
- -k
- keep capture on when switching consoles. Might be useful
together with -s switch, you have a video picture while working on
another console. This is more or less a dirty hack. Works only if
all your consoles have the same video mode and fbcon does not use
panning to speed up scrolling. For a multiheaded setup this is
useful too.
- -q
- quiet mode. Doesn't reserve space for the status line at the
top, doesn't display the status messages and clock. You can toggle
this at runtime too ('F').
- -M
- EXPERIMENTAL: Turn on backend scaler mode (write yuv to
offscreen memory and let the gfx board scale up the video).
Supported hardware: Matrox G200/G400 (with matroxfb) and ATI Mach64
VT/GT (with atyfb, 16bpp only). You'll need at least bttv-0.7.16 or
kernel 2.3.50.
USAGE
fbtv is supported to work much like xawtv from user's
point of view. You might have noticed that xawtv has a lot of
keyboard shortcuts. They work in fbtv too (if it useful). Here is
the list:
G Grab picture (full size, ppm)
J Grab picture (full size, jpeg)
F Fullscreen. Toggle quiet mode (see above).
up/down tune up/down one channel
left/right fine tuning
pgup/pgdown station up/down
ESC,Q Quit
X Quit, but leave sound on.
+/- Volume up/down
Enter mute
The channel hotkeys defined in $HOME/.xawtv are supported too,
with one exception: modifier keys (something like "key = Ctrl+F1")
do not work.
FULLSCREEN TV
Some hints from Dag Bakke <dag.bakke@riksnett.no>: The
BT8xx cards can produce images up to 768x576 pixels. In order to
have fbtv make use of your entire monitor-size and get maximum
image quality, you need to create a 768x576 pixels
framebufferconsole. This can be accomplished with the fbset(1)
utility, which is availabile at various locations. See: http://www.cs.kuleuven.ac.be/~geert/bin/
Or, you can let fbtv handle the videomode changes with the -m
switch. This requires that you have a small database with the
various videomodes availabile. The file containing the videomodes
is normally named /etc/fb.modes. For example, the following entry
produces a 768x576x32bpp mode, with 75Hz refresh on a Matrox G200.
mode "tv"
# D: 49.188 MHz, H: 46.580 kHz, V: 75.008 Hz
geometry 768 576 768 576 32
timings 20330 128 32 32 8 128 5
endmode
The command "fbtv -q -mtv" thus gives you crisp clear (well, as
good as the received signal anyway) tv on your entire screen. Alias
this command to 'tv', and you're set. NB! Please note that
your monitor may or may not be able to handle such a "custom"
resolution. And that misuse of the aforementioned fbset utility can
toast your monitor. It is a lot easier to pull smoke out of
electronic components, than to put it back in. A database of the
standard VESA-modes can be downloaded from:
ftp://platan.vc.cvut.cz/pub/linux/matrox-latest/fb.modes.vesa60.gz
SEE ALSO
xawtv(1)
AUTHOR
Gerd Knorr <kraxel@goldbach.in-berlin.de>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 1997,98 Gerd Knorr <kraxel@goldbach.in-berlin.de>
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the
License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public
License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.