@@ -39,19 +39,19 @@ A typical media device hardware is shown at
The media infrastructure API was designed to control such devices. It is
divided into four parts.
-The first part covers radio, video capture and output,
+The :Ref:`first part <v4l2spec>` covers radio, video capture and output,
cameras, analog TV devices and codecs.
-The second part covers the API used for digital TV and Internet
-reception via one of the several digital tv standards. While it is
-called as DVB API, in fact it covers several different video standards
-including DVB-T/T2, DVB-S/S2, DVB-C, ATSC, ISDB-T, ISDB-S, DTMB, etc.
-The complete list of supported standards can be found at
+The :Ref:`second part <dvbapi>` covers the API used for digital TV and
+Internet reception via one of the several digital tv standards. While it
+is called as DVB API, in fact it covers several different video
+standards including DVB-T/T2, DVB-S/S2, DVB-C, ATSC, ISDB-T, ISDB-S,
+DTMB, etc. The complete list of supported standards can be found at
:ref:`fe-delivery-system-t`.
-The third part covers the Remote Controller API.
+The :Ref:`third part <remote_controllers>` covers the Remote Controller API.
-The fourth part covers the Media Controller API.
+The :Ref:`fourth part <media_controller>` covers the Media Controller API.
It should also be noted that a media device may also have audio
components, like mixers, PCM capture, PCM playback, etc, which are
Make easier to navigate at the media document by adding the links to each of the parts of the document. Signed-off-by: Mauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab@s-opensource.com> --- Documentation/linux_tv/index.rst | 16 ++++++++-------- 1 file changed, 8 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-)