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The MIPI CSI-2 v1.0 specification was released in 2005. It uses either D-PHY or C-PHY (Both standards are set by the MIPI Alliance) as a physical layer option. The protocol is divided into the following layers: Physical Layer (C-PHY/D-PHY) Lane Merger Layer. Low Level Protocol Layer. Pixel to Byte Conversion Layer; Application Layer
A typical Camera Interface would support at least a parallel interface although these days many camera interfaces are beginning to support the Mobile Industry Processor Interface (MIPI) Camera Serial Interface (CSI) interface.
It defines a serial bus and a communication protocol between the host, the source of the image data, and the device which is the destination. The interface is closed source, which means that the specification of the interface is not open to the public. The maintenance of the interface is the responsibility of the MIPI Alliance.
Camera Link is a serial communication protocol standard [1] designed for camera interface applications based on the National Semiconductor interface Channel-link.It was designed for the purpose of standardizing scientific and industrial video products including cameras, cables and frame grabbers.
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M-PHY is a high speed data communications physical layer protocol standard developed by the MIPI Alliance, PHY Working group, and targeted at the needs of mobile multimedia devices. [1] The specification's details are proprietary to MIPI member organizations, but a substantial body of knowledge can be assembled from open sources.
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In mobile-telephone technology, the UniPro protocol stack [1] follows the architecture of the classical OSI Reference Model. In UniPro , the OSI Physical Layer is split into two sublayers: Layer 1 (the actual physical layer) and Layer 1.5 (the PHY Adapter layer) which abstracts from differences between alternative Layer 1 technologies.