Romain Vimont 7 months ago
parent 6af4bd601f
commit 9bfc749803

@ -25,12 +25,13 @@ It focuses on:
[lowlatency]: https://github.com/Genymobile/scrcpy/pull/646
Its features include:
- [audio forwarding](doc/audio.md) (Android >= 11)
- [audio forwarding](doc/audio.md) (Android 11+)
- [recording](doc/recording.md)
- mirroring with [Android device screen off](doc/device.md#turn-screen-off)
- [copy-paste](doc/control.md#copy-paste) in both directions
- [configurable quality](doc/video.md)
- Android device screen [as a webcam (V4L2)](doc/v4l2.md) (Linux-only)
- [camera mirroring](doc/camera.md) (Android 12+)
- [mirroring as a webcam (V4L2)](doc/v4l2.md) (Linux-only)
- [physical keyboard/mouse simulation (HID)](doc/hid-otg.md)
- [OTG mode](doc/hid-otg.md#otg)
- and more…
@ -77,6 +78,7 @@ documented in the following pages:
- [Recording](doc/recording.md)
- [Tunnels](doc/tunnels.md)
- [HID/OTG](doc/hid-otg.md)
- [Camera](doc/camera.md)
- [Video4Linux](doc/v4l2.md)
- [Shortcuts](doc/shortcuts.md)

@ -0,0 +1,150 @@
# Camera
Camera mirroring is supported for devices with Android 12 or higher.
To capture the camera instead of the device screen:
```
scrcpy --video-source=camera
```
By default, it automatically switches [audio source](audio.md#source) to
microphone (as if `--audio-source=mic` were also passed).
```bash
scrcpy --video-source=display # default is --audio-source=output
scrcpy --video-source=camera # default is --audio-source=mic
scrcpy --video-source=display --audio-source=mic # force display AND microphone
scrcpy --video-source=camera --audio-source=output # force camera AND device audio output
```
## List
To list the cameras available (with their declared valid sizes and frame rates):
```
scrcpy --list-cameras
scrcpy --list-camera-sizes
```
_Note that the sizes and frame rates are declarative. They are not accurate on
all devices: some of them are declared but not supported, while some others are
not declared but supported._
## Selection
It is possible to pass an explicit camera id (as listed by `--list-cameras`):
```
scrcpy --video-source=camera --camera-id=0
```
Alternatively, the camera may be selected automatically:
```bash
scrcpy --video-source=camera # use the first camera
scrcpy --video-source=camera --camera-facing=front # use the first front camera
scrcpy --video-source=camera --camera-facing=back # use the first back camera
scrcpy --video-source=camera --camera-facing=external # use the first external camera
```
If `--camera-id` is specified, then `--camera-facing` is forbidden (the id
already determines the camera):
```bash
scrcpy --video-source=camera --camera-id=0 --camera-facing=front # error
```
### Size selection
It is possible to pass an explicit camera size:
```
scrcpy --video-source=camera --camera-size=1920x1080
```
The given size may be listed among the declared valid sizes
(`--list-camera-sizes`), but may also be anything else (some devices support
arbitrary sizes):
```
scrcpy --video-source=camera --camera-size=1840x444
```
Alternatively, a declared valid size (among the ones listed by
`list-camera-sizes`) may be selected automatically.
Two constraints are supported:
- `-m`/`--max-size` (already used for display mirroring), for example `-m1920`;
- `--camera-ar` to specify an aspect ratio (`<num>:<den>`, `<value>` or
`sensor`).
Some examples:
```bash
scrcpy --video-source=camera # use the greatest width and the greatest associated height
scrcpy --video-source=camera -m1920 # use the greatest width not above 1920 and the greatest associated height
scrcpy --video-source=camera --camera-ar=4:3 # use the greatest size with an aspect ratio of 4:3 (+/- 10%)
scrcpy --video-source=camera --camera-ar=1.6 # use the greatest size with an aspect ratio of 1.6 (+/- 10%)
scrcpy --video-source=camera --camera-ar=sensor # use the greatest size with the aspect ratio of the camera sensor (+/- 10%)
scrcpy --video-source=camera -m1920 --camera-ar=16:9 # use the greatest width not above 1920 and the closest to 16:9 aspect ratio
```
If `--camera-size` is specified, then `-m`/`--max-size` and `--camera-ar` are
forbidden (the size is determined by the value given explicitly):
```bash
scrcpy --video-source=camera --camera-size=1920x1080 -m3000 # error
```
## Frame rate
By default, camera is captured at Android's default frame rate (30 fps).
To configure a different frame rate:
```
scrcpy --video-source=camera --camera-fps=60
```
## High speed capture
The Android camera API also supports a [high speed capture mode][high speed].
This mode is restricted to specific resolutions and frame rates, listed by
`--list-camera-sizes`.
```
scrcpy --video-source=camera --camera-size=1920x1080 --camera-fps=240
```
[high speed]: https://developer.android.com/reference/android/hardware/camera2/CameraConstrainedHighSpeedCaptureSession
## Brace expansion tip
All camera options start with `--camera-`, so if your shell supports it, you can
benefit from [brace expansion] (for example, it is supported _bash_ and _zsh_):
```bash
scrcpy --video-source=camera --camera-{facing=back,ar=16:9,high-speed,fps=120}
```
This will be expanded as:
```bash
scrcpy --video-source=camera --camera-facing=back --camera-ar=16:9 --camera-high-speed --camera-fps=120
```
[brace expansion]: https://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/html_node/Brace-Expansion.html
## Webcam
Combined with the [V4L2](v4l2.md) feature on Linux, the Android device camera
may be used as a webcam on the computer.

@ -1,5 +1,14 @@
# Video
## Source
By default, scrcpy mirrors the device screen.
It is possible to capture the device camera instead.
See the dedicated [camera](camera.md) page.
## Size
By default, scrcpy attempts to mirror at the Android device resolution.

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