What have you tried? I have used cameras on Pi Zero, Zero2, 2B, 3A+ and 4B using Bookworm (Lite) and libcamera. The only thing I've needed to do on some of them is to install libcamera-tools, then pythin3-picamera2 for the ones I'm using python on.That sounds good but I never managed to get any of my Raspberry Pi cameras to work on any of my Pis without the legacy stack. Is there anything else required? Do I need to configure something or enable something to make it work?Full support for ALL Raspberry Pi Cameras and several others is available for Bullseye and Bookworm through the open source libcamera/picamera2 and standard Linux kernel drivers.
Any hint would help because it just doesn't work at all for me with this new stack. I'm sure there was a reason to migrate away from the old stack (beyond it being closed source) but for me as an end user the result simply is that the camera is completely broken beyond buster (or bullseye when enabling the legacy stack) and I have absolutely no idea how to fix it apart from using outdated versions of RPi OS.
What does "rpicam-hello --list-cameras" show for you?
Statistics: Posted by rpdom — Mon Aug 12, 2024 10:36 pm