ci.rst 6.6 KB

123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226227228229230231
  1. Digital TV Conditional Access Interface (CI API)
  2. ================================================
  3. .. note::
  4. This documentation is outdated.
  5. This document describes the usage of the high level CI API as
  6. in accordance to the Linux DVB API. This is a not a documentation for the,
  7. existing low level CI API.
  8. .. note::
  9. For the Twinhan/Twinhan clones, the dst_ca module handles the CI
  10. hardware handling.This module is loaded automatically if a CI
  11. (Common Interface, that holds the CAM (Conditional Access Module)
  12. is detected.
  13. ca_zap
  14. ~~~~~~
  15. An userspace application, like ``ca_zap`` is required to handle encrypted
  16. MPEG-TS streams.
  17. The ``ca_zap`` userland application is in charge of sending the
  18. descrambling related information to the Conditional Access Module (CAM).
  19. This application requires the following to function properly as of now.
  20. a) Tune to a valid channel, with szap.
  21. eg: $ szap -c channels.conf -r "TMC" -x
  22. b) a channels.conf containing a valid PMT PID
  23. eg: TMC:11996:h:0:27500:278:512:650:321
  24. here 278 is a valid PMT PID. the rest of the values are the
  25. same ones that szap uses.
  26. c) after running a szap, you have to run ca_zap, for the
  27. descrambler to function,
  28. eg: $ ca_zap channels.conf "TMC"
  29. d) Hopefully enjoy your favourite subscribed channel as you do with
  30. a FTA card.
  31. .. note::
  32. Currently ca_zap, and dst_test, both are meant for demonstration
  33. purposes only, they can become full fledged applications if necessary.
  34. Cards that fall in this category
  35. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  36. At present the cards that fall in this category are the Twinhan and its
  37. clones, these cards are available as VVMER, Tomato, Hercules, Orange and
  38. so on.
  39. CI modules that are supported
  40. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  41. The CI module support is largely dependent upon the firmware on the cards
  42. Some cards do support almost all of the available CI modules. There is
  43. nothing much that can be done in order to make additional CI modules
  44. working with these cards.
  45. Modules that have been tested by this driver at present are
  46. (1) Irdeto 1 and 2 from SCM
  47. (2) Viaccess from SCM
  48. (3) Dragoncam
  49. The High level CI API
  50. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  51. For the programmer
  52. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
  53. With the High Level CI approach any new card with almost any random
  54. architecture can be implemented with this style, the definitions
  55. inside the switch statement can be easily adapted for any card, thereby
  56. eliminating the need for any additional ioctls.
  57. The disadvantage is that the driver/hardware has to manage the rest. For
  58. the application programmer it would be as simple as sending/receiving an
  59. array to/from the CI ioctls as defined in the Linux DVB API. No changes
  60. have been made in the API to accommodate this feature.
  61. Why the need for another CI interface?
  62. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  63. This is one of the most commonly asked question. Well a nice question.
  64. Strictly speaking this is not a new interface.
  65. The CI interface is defined in the DVB API in ca.h as:
  66. .. code-block:: c
  67. typedef struct ca_slot_info {
  68. int num; /* slot number */
  69. int type; /* CA interface this slot supports */
  70. #define CA_CI 1 /* CI high level interface */
  71. #define CA_CI_LINK 2 /* CI link layer level interface */
  72. #define CA_CI_PHYS 4 /* CI physical layer level interface */
  73. #define CA_DESCR 8 /* built-in descrambler */
  74. #define CA_SC 128 /* simple smart card interface */
  75. unsigned int flags;
  76. #define CA_CI_MODULE_PRESENT 1 /* module (or card) inserted */
  77. #define CA_CI_MODULE_READY 2
  78. } ca_slot_info_t;
  79. This CI interface follows the CI high level interface, which is not
  80. implemented by most applications. Hence this area is revisited.
  81. This CI interface is quite different in the case that it tries to
  82. accommodate all other CI based devices, that fall into the other categories.
  83. This means that this CI interface handles the EN50221 style tags in the
  84. Application layer only and no session management is taken care of by the
  85. application. The driver/hardware will take care of all that.
  86. This interface is purely an EN50221 interface exchanging APDU's. This
  87. means that no session management, link layer or a transport layer do
  88. exist in this case in the application to driver communication. It is
  89. as simple as that. The driver/hardware has to take care of that.
  90. With this High Level CI interface, the interface can be defined with the
  91. regular ioctls.
  92. All these ioctls are also valid for the High level CI interface
  93. #define CA_RESET _IO('o', 128)
  94. #define CA_GET_CAP _IOR('o', 129, ca_caps_t)
  95. #define CA_GET_SLOT_INFO _IOR('o', 130, ca_slot_info_t)
  96. #define CA_GET_DESCR_INFO _IOR('o', 131, ca_descr_info_t)
  97. #define CA_GET_MSG _IOR('o', 132, ca_msg_t)
  98. #define CA_SEND_MSG _IOW('o', 133, ca_msg_t)
  99. #define CA_SET_DESCR _IOW('o', 134, ca_descr_t)
  100. #define CA_SET_PID _IOW('o', 135, ca_pid_t)
  101. On querying the device, the device yields information thus:
  102. .. code-block:: none
  103. CA_GET_SLOT_INFO
  104. ----------------------------
  105. Command = [info]
  106. APP: Number=[1]
  107. APP: Type=[1]
  108. APP: flags=[1]
  109. APP: CI High level interface
  110. APP: CA/CI Module Present
  111. CA_GET_CAP
  112. ----------------------------
  113. Command = [caps]
  114. APP: Slots=[1]
  115. APP: Type=[1]
  116. APP: Descrambler keys=[16]
  117. APP: Type=[1]
  118. CA_SEND_MSG
  119. ----------------------------
  120. Descriptors(Program Level)=[ 09 06 06 04 05 50 ff f1]
  121. Found CA descriptor @ program level
  122. (20) ES type=[2] ES pid=[201] ES length =[0 (0x0)]
  123. (25) ES type=[4] ES pid=[301] ES length =[0 (0x0)]
  124. ca_message length is 25 (0x19) bytes
  125. EN50221 CA MSG=[ 9f 80 32 19 03 01 2d d1 f0 08 01 09 06 06 04 05 50 ff f1 02 e0 c9 00 00 04 e1 2d 00 00]
  126. Not all ioctl's are implemented in the driver from the API, the other
  127. features of the hardware that cannot be implemented by the API are achieved
  128. using the CA_GET_MSG and CA_SEND_MSG ioctls. An EN50221 style wrapper is
  129. used to exchange the data to maintain compatibility with other hardware.
  130. .. code-block:: c
  131. /* a message to/from a CI-CAM */
  132. typedef struct ca_msg {
  133. unsigned int index;
  134. unsigned int type;
  135. unsigned int length;
  136. unsigned char msg[256];
  137. } ca_msg_t;
  138. The flow of data can be described thus,
  139. .. code-block:: none
  140. App (User)
  141. -----
  142. parse
  143. |
  144. |
  145. v
  146. en50221 APDU (package)
  147. --------------------------------------
  148. | | | High Level CI driver
  149. | | |
  150. | v |
  151. | en50221 APDU (unpackage) |
  152. | | |
  153. | | |
  154. | v |
  155. | sanity checks |
  156. | | |
  157. | | |
  158. | v |
  159. | do (H/W dep) |
  160. --------------------------------------
  161. | Hardware
  162. |
  163. v
  164. The High Level CI interface uses the EN50221 DVB standard, following a
  165. standard ensures futureproofness.