GX series camera appnotes 4 jetson

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1 overview

The GX series cameras are designed for embedded AI applications, featuring outstanding ISP performance, multiple working modes, a wealth of functional options, and reliable stability design. They use the MIPI CSI-2 interface and are particularly suitable for embedded computing platforms.

This article introduces how to use GX series cameras on the NVIDIA Jetson platform.

1.1 Supported camera modules

series model status
GX Series GX-MIPI-IMX662 complete

1.2 Supported Jetson Board

Jetson model status
XAVIER NX complete
Orin NX complete
Orin Nano complete

1.3 Supported L4T versions

  • Jetpack5.1.4,L4T version r35.6
  • Jetpack6.2.1,L4T version r36.4.4
1.3.1 How to check the current L4T version

On the Jetson board, check the current L4T version and try to replace it with the same version.

cat /etc/nv_tegra_release

As shown:

# R32 (release), REVISION: 7.1......

This indicates that the current L4T version is 32.7.1, and the corresponding Jetpack version is Jetpack 32.6.1.

2 Hardware preparation and installation

The GX series cameras require a adapter board to be connected to the Jetson platform. The supported conditions are as shown in the table below:

Camera model Jetson model FFC line Number of cameras Additional power supply
GX Series XAVIER NX 15-pin to 22-pin face-to-face FFC conversion connector 2 5V DC (must be provided)
Orin Nano

Orin NX

22-pin oblique FFC 2 5V DC (must be provided)
2.1 GX camera connected to Xavier NX

TBD

2.2 The GX camera is connected to Orin Nano or Orin NX.

TBD

3 Update the Jetson system

This section describes how to update the L4T system of Jetson to support the GX camera module. For the method of operating system update, please refer to the update instructions for Jetson operating system.

In particular, if you need the external trigger function, you need to apply a patch to the original kernel of Jetson - veye_mv_l4t_<version>.patch.

This patch has two functions:

  1. Added support for two data formats, Y10 and Y12, for black-and-white cameras.
  2. Added support for the trigger mode.

4 Support for the Trigger mode

The default driver of the Jetson system only supports video streaming mode. In its VI driver, the data reception function has a timeout mechanism. We have added a configurable option named "vi_time_out_disable" which allows for dynamically enabling or disabling this timeout mechanism.

For specific applications, please refer to the following application examples.

5 System status monitoring

After completing the system update, restart the Jetson motherboard.

During the startup process of the Jetson system, it will check whether there are any cameras on all i2c buses. If there are, it will create a /dev/videoX device node.

Execute the following commands on the Jetson board to check if the camera is properly connected.

dmesg | grep gxcam

It can be seen that during the Linux startup process, the camera model and version number that were probed are as follows:

For example, the following prompt indicates that a GX-MIPI-IMX662 camera has been detected on the i2c-9 bus.

gxcam 9-003b: camera is: GX-MIPI-IMX662

6 Detect the status and configure the environment variables

Here, we have provided two scripts that can automatically retrieve some information about the camera.

6.1 probe_camera_info-jetson.sh

This script is used to detect the connected and successfully registered camera devices, and retrieve the underlying information such as the media device nodes, video device nodes, sub-device nodes, I²C bus and device names corresponding to the devices.

After execution, an "auto_camera_index.json" file will be generated in the current directory, and the retrieved information will be recorded in this file.

Here is an example:

$ ./probe_camera_info-jetson.sh

cat auto_camera_index.json

[

{"i2c_bus": "9", "video_node": "/dev/video0"}

]

{}Inside is the information of the camera. If the motherboard supports multiple camera modules, then multiple sets of {} will contain the content.

The explanation of the camera information is as follows:

Camera information
antonomasia name effect Where to use
video_node Video capture device node Typical V4L2 video device v4l2-ctl or the programs developed by the customers are used to obtain the images.
i2c_bus I²C bus number The I²C bus number indicating the device connection The underlying communication channel for configuring the camera parameters, the gx_mipi_i2c.sh script uses

The media device nodes, video device nodes, sub-device nodes, I²C bus and device names used in the following text can all be replaced with the information in the JSON file obtained from this detection script.

The camera module is mapped to the /dev/videoX device node in the Jetson system.

During the startup process of the operating system, the cameras are probed in the order of the i2c bus from small to large. The X value starts from 0 and increments in the logical order of the probe.

For example, if only one camera is connected, regardless of where the hardware is connected, X will be 0. If five cameras are connected, then according to the i2c bus from smallest to largest, X will be [0-4].

In the v4l2-ctl command, use -d /dev/videoX to access different cameras.

In GStreamer, the v4l2src can access different cameras by specifying the device as /dev/videoX.

6.2 gx_probe.sh

By using the gx_probe.sh script, the I²C bus number corresponding to a certain camera, the camera model, width, height, frame rate, etc. can be configured into the environment variables.

In this way, it will facilitate the subsequent use of the media-ctl configuration format, making it easier to operate.

The usage method is:

$ source ./gx_probe.sh i2c_bus

A typical output is as follows:

$ source ./gx_probe.sh 9

Found veye_gxcam camera on i2c-9.

Setenv I2C_BUS = 9

Setenv CAMERAMODEL = GX-MIPI-IMX662

Setenv FPS = 60

Setenv WIDTH = 1920

Setenv HEIGHT = 1080

You can verify the output result of the environment variable by using the command "echo $CAMERAMODEL". Note that this environment variable is only valid for the current session.

7 Real-time preview

7.1 veye_viewer

veye_viewer is an open-source client software based on QT5.

For the code and usage, please refer to:https://github.com/veyeimaging/veye_viewer

Domestic users can access gitee

7.2 Use the qv4l2 preview screen

First, install qv4l2

sudo apt install qv4l2

1. Enter "qv4l2" in the command line to start the V4L2 player.

2. Click the ▶ (play) button to bring up the opened media window.

Play gx camera using qv4l2


8 Gstreamer Usage

To install the latest accelerated version of gstreamer plugins and applications, please run the following command:

sudo apt-get update

sudo apt-get install nvidia-l4t-gstreamer

sudo ldconfig

rm -rf .cache/gstreamer-1.0/

export DISPLAY=:0

  • video preview 1080p HD

gst-launch-1.0 nvv4l2camerasrc device=/dev/video0 ! "video/x-raw(memory:NVMM),format=(string)UYVY, width=(int)1920, height=(int)1080" ! nvvidconv ! "video/x-raw(memory:NVMM),format=(string)I420" ! nv3dsink sync=false

gst-launch-1.0 nvv4l2camerasrc device=/dev/video0 ! "video/x-raw(memory:NVMM),format=(string)UYVY, width=(int)1920, height=(int)1080" ! nvvidconv ! "video/x-raw(memory:NVMM),format=(string)NV12" ! nv3dsink sync=false

  • video preview 1080p HD(using xvimagesink sink if supported)

export DISPLAY=:0

gst-launch-1.0 -e v4l2src io-mode=4 device=/dev/video0 do-timestamp=true ! 'video/x-raw, width=1920, height=1080, framerate=30/1, format=UYVY' ! xvimagesink sync=false

  • Gstreamer is embedded into OpenCV

I think maybe OpenCV do not support I420 data format input,so you should convert it to BGR format.

gst-launch-1.0 nvv4l2camerasrc ! video/x-raw(memory:NVMM), format=(string)UYVY, width=(int)1920, height=(int)1080 ! nvvidconv ! video/x-raw(memory:NVMM), format=(string)I420 ! nvvidconv ! video/x-raw, format=(string)BGRx ! videoconvert ! video/x-raw, format=(string)BGR ! appsink

  • Video recording 1080p HD

gst-launch-1.0 nvv4l2camerasrc num-buffers=300 ! "video/x-raw(memory:NVMM),format=(string)UYVY, width=(int)1920, height=(int)1080" ! nvvidconv ! "video/x-raw(memory:NVMM),format=(string)NV12" ! nvv4l2h264enc control-rate=1 bitrate=10000000 ! h264parse ! qtmux ! filesink location=filename.mp4 -e

  • replay

gst-launch-1.0 filesrc location=filename.mp4 ! qtdemux ! queue ! h264parse ! nvv4l2decoder ! nv3dsink -e

  • Snapshots / Photos taken on the spot

gst-launch-1.0 v4l2src num-buffers=1 ! "video/x-raw,format=(string)UYVY, width=(int)1920, height=(int)1080" ! nvvidconv ! "video/x-raw(memory:NVMM),format=(string)I420" ! nvjpegenc ! filesink location=jpgname.jpg

9 yavta(Only supports streaming mode)

9.1 yavta install

git clone https://github.com/veyeimaging/yavta.git

cd yavta;make

Domestic users can access gitee

9.2 Set image format

v4l2-ctl --set-fmt-video=width=$WIDTH,height=$HEIGHT,pixelformat=UYVY

9.3 Save the image to a file
9.3.1 under normal conditions

The usual situation here refers to the condition where WIDTH is an integer multiple of 256.

  • UYVY type

Take the XAVIER platform as an example

./yavta -c1 -F"uyvy-${WIDTH}x${HEIGHT}.yuv" --skip 0 -f UYVY -s "${WIDTH}x${HEIGHT}" /dev/video0

9.3.2 GX-MIPI-IMX662

./yavta -c1 -Fuyvy-1920x1080.yuv --skip 0 -f UYVY -s 1920x1080 /dev/video0

10 Jetson multimedia-api samples

On the Jetson platform, the Jetson Linux API is provided for developers to use. For the installation of the jetson_multimedia_api package, please refer to the official documentation of NVIDIA.

For the GX series cameras, the ISP function has already been integrated within the camera. Therefore, it is not possible to obtain data using libargus. Instead, data can be directly obtained from the /dev/videoX device file using the standard V4L2 interface.

After installing the Jetson system, you can enter the multimedia API sample directory and compile and run the following command by yourself to preview the camera video:

cd /usr/src/jetson_multimedia_api/samples/12_v4l2_camera_cuda

make

./v4l2_camera_cuda -d /dev/video0 -s 1920x1080 -f UYVY

This command will use the /dev/video0 device for real-time video preview at a resolution of 1920×1080 and in UYVY format.

11 V4L2-CTL Application Examples

11.1 Install v4l2-utils

sudo apt-get install v4l-utils

11.2 Configure parameters using v4l2-ctl
11.2.1 List the data formats supported by the camera

v4l2-ctl --list-formats-ext

Below is an example in the XAVIER system, using the GX-MIPI-IMX662:

ioctl: VIDIOC_ENUM_FMT

        Type: Video Capture

        [0]: 'UYVY' (UYVY 4:2:2)

                Size: Discrete 1920x1080

                        Interval: Discrete 0.017s (60.000 fps)

        [1]: 'YUYV' (YUYV 4:2:2)

        [2]: 'NV16' (Y/CbCr 4:2:2)

                Size: Discrete 1920x1080

                        Interval: Discrete 0.017s (60.000 fps)

  • Frame rate statistics

v4l2-ctl --set-fmt-video=width=1920,height=1080,pixelformat=UYVY --stream-mmap --stream-count=-1 --stream-to=/dev/null

  • Save the image to a file

v4l2-ctl --set-fmt-video=width=1920,height=1080,pixelformat=UYVY --stream-mmap --stream-count=1 --stream-to=uyvy-1920x1080.yuv

11.2.2 List the configurable parameters of the camera implemented in the driver

v4l2-ctl -L

User Controls

                   work_mode 0x00981a01 (int)    : min=0 max=4 step=1 default=0 value=0 flags=volatile, execute-on-write

                    trigger_src 0x00981a02 (int)    : min=0 max=1 step=1 default=1 value=1 flags=volatile, execute-on-write

                    soft_trgone 0x00981a03 (button) : flags=write-only, execute-on-write

                      sync_role 0x00981a04 (int)    : min=0 max=1 step=1 default=0 value=0 flags=volatile, execute-on-write

                     frame_rate 0x00981a05 (int)    : min=0 max=60 step=1 default=60 value=60 flags=volatile, execute-on-write

The parameters can be set and retrieved using the following methods.

v4l2-ctl --set-ctrl [ctrl_type]=[val]

v4l2-ctl --get-ctrl [ctrl_type]

All of the above functions can be achieved by using the gx_mipi_i2c.sh script.

It should be noted that the above parameters cannot be modified once the image capture process begins. The following will provide detailed explanations for each one:

11.2.3 Configure trigger mode

v4l2-ctl --set-ctrl work_mode=[0-2]

0: Streaming Mode

1: Ordinary Trigger Mode

2: Multi-camera Synchronization Mode

11.2.4 Configure trigger source

v4l2-ctl --set-ctrl trigger_src=[0-1]

0: Soft Trigger

1: Hard Trigger

11.2.5 Soft trigger once

v4l2-ctl --set-ctrl soft_trgone=1

11.2.6 Set frame rate

v4l2-ctl --set-ctrl frame_rate=[1-max]

As the resolution is adjusted, the maximum frame rate will be automatically updated.

11.3 stream mode

11.3.1 Set image format

Take the largest screen as an example:

v4l2-ctl --set-fmt-video=width=$WIDTH,height=$HEIGHT,pixelformat=UYVY

v4l2-ctl --set-ctrl frame_rate=$FPS

11.3.2 Frame rate statistics

v4l2-ctl --set-fmt-video=width=$WIDTH,height=$HEIGHT,pixelformat=UYVY --stream-mmap --stream-count=-1 --stream-to=/dev/null

11.3.3 Save the image to a file
11.3.3.1 under normal conditions
  • UYVY

v4l2-ctl -d /dev/video0 --set-fmt-video=width=$WIDTH,height=$HEIGHT,pixelformat=UYVY --stream-mmap --stream-count=1 --stream-to="uyvy-${WIDTH}x${HEIGHT}.yuv"

11.3.3.2 Use OpenCV to preview images in GREY format

sudo apt install python3-opencv

  • We have provided a simple sample to demonstrate how to achieve this functionality:

python3 ./v4l2_opencv_show2.py --width 1920 --height 1080 --fps 60

11.4 Trigger mode

11.4.1 preparatory work

v4l2-ctl --set-ctrl low_latency_mode=1

v4l2-ctl --set-fmt-video=width=$WIDTH,height=$HEIGHT,pixelformat=UYVY

v4l2-ctl --set-ctrl frame_rate=$FPS

11.4.2 Soft trigger
11.4.2.1 Setup Mode

v4l2-ctl --set-ctrl work_mode=1

v4l2-ctl --set-ctrl trigger_src=0

v4l2-ctl --set-ctrl vi_time_out_disable=1

11.4.2.2 Start taking pictures
  • under normal conditions

The usual situation here refers to the condition where WIDTH is an integer multiple of 256.

v4l2-ctl --set-fmt-video=width=$WIDTH,height=$HEIGHT,pixelformat=UYVY --stream-mmap --stream-count=-1 --stream-to="uyvy-${WIDTH}x${HEIGHT}.yuv"

  • GX-MIPI-IMX662

v4l2-ctl --set-fmt-video=width=1920,height=1080,pixelformat=UYVY --stream-mmap --stream-count=-1 --stream-to=uyvy-1920x1080.yuv

11.4.2.3 Perform soft triggering operation

In other shell terminals, you can execute the following command multiple times to trigger it multiple times.

v4l2-ctl --set-ctrl soft_trgone=1

11.4.2.4 Stop triggering and collecting

Due to the fact that in the kernel driver, a dead loop is used to wait for new images, it is necessary to first disable vi_time_out_disable, and then exit the acquisition operation.

v4l2-ctl --set-ctrl vi_time_out_disable=0

In the terminal of the image acquisition command, press Ctrl+C to exit the acquisition operation.

11.4.3 hardware trigger

To perform the triggering operation using jetson-gpio, first, install and configure jetson-gpio properly.

Next, using Jetson GPIO40 (Board number) as the simulated trigger source and with the rising edge as the trigger condition, an example will be given.

The rich trigger parameter settings can be carried out by using the gx_mipi_i2c.sh script.

11.4.3.1 hardware connection
11.4.3.2 TBD
11.4.3.3 Setup Mode

v4l2-ctl --set-ctrl work_mode=1

v4l2-ctl --set-ctrl trigger_src=1

v4l2-ctl --set-ctrl vi_time_out_disable=1

11.4.3.4 Start taking pictures
  • under normal conditions

The usual situation here refers to the condition where WIDTH is an integer multiple of 256.

v4l2-ctl --set-fmt-video=width=$WIDTH,height=$HEIGHT,pixelformat=UYVY --stream-mmap --stream-count=-1 --stream-to="uyvy-${WIDTH}x${HEIGHT}.yuv"

11.4.3.5 Perform a hard trigger operation

python gpio_trigger_jetson.py

Note:触发脚本链接

11.4.3.6 Stop triggering and collecting

Due to the fact that in the kernel driver, a dead loop is used to wait for new images, it is necessary to first disable vi_time_out_disable, and then exit the acquisition operation.

v4l2-ctl --set-ctrl vi_time_out_disable=0

In the terminal of the image acquisition command, press Ctrl+C to exit the acquisition operation.

11.5 synchronous mode

11.5.1 Set the synchronization mode

$ v4l2-ctl --set-ctrl work_mode=4

11.5.2 Set up the master and slave cameras

Main camera:

$ v4l2-ctl --set-ctrl sync_role=0

slave camera:

$ v4l2-ctl --set-ctrl sync_role=1

11.5.3 Start taking pictures

The method of taking screenshots in the synchronization mode is exactly the same as that in the video stream mode.

12 I2C Script Usage Instructions

We provided shell scripts to configure the parameters.

gx_mipi_i2c.sh user guide

13 参考资料

14 本文修改记录

  • 2025-12-11

第一个发布版本