Each n-pixel row contains n/2 green samples and n/2 blue or red samples,
with alternating green-red and green-blue rows. They are conventionally
described as GRGR... BGBG..., RGRG... GBGB..., etc. Below is an example
-of one of these formats:
+of a small V4L2_PIX_FMT_SBGGR10P image:
**Byte Order.**
Each cell is one byte.
and n/2 blue or red samples, with alternating red and blue rows. Bytes
are stored in memory in little endian order. They are conventionally
described as GRGR... BGBG..., RGRG... GBGB..., etc. Below is an example
-of one of these formats:
+of a small V4L2_PIX_FMT_SBGGR12 image:
**Byte Order.**
Each cell is one byte, the 4 most significant bits in the high bytes are
n/2 green samples and n/2 blue or red samples, with alternating red and blue
rows. Bytes are stored in memory in little endian order. They are
conventionally described as GRGR... BGBG..., RGRG... GBGB..., etc. Below is
-an example of one of these formats:
+an example of a small V4L2_PIX_FMT_SBGGR16 image:
**Byte Order.**
Each cell is one byte.
sample. Each sample is stored in a byte. Each n-pixel row contains n/2
green samples and n/2 blue or red samples, with alternating red and
blue rows. They are conventionally described as GRGR... BGBG...,
-RGRG... GBGB..., etc. Below is an example of one of these formats:
+RGRG... GBGB..., etc. Below is an example of a small V4L2_PIX_FMT_SBGGR8 image:
**Byte Order.**
Each cell is one byte.