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			3112 lines
		
	
	
		
			160 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
| USING THE IJG JPEG LIBRARY
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| 
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| Copyright (C) 1994-2013, Thomas G. Lane, Guido Vollbeding.
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| This file is part of the Independent JPEG Group's software.
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| For conditions of distribution and use, see the accompanying README file.
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| 
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| 
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| This file describes how to use the IJG JPEG library within an application
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| program.  Read it if you want to write a program that uses the library.
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| 
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| The file example.c provides heavily commented skeleton code for calling the
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| JPEG library.  Also see jpeglib.h (the include file to be used by application
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| programs) for full details about data structures and function parameter lists.
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| The library source code, of course, is the ultimate reference.
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| 
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| Note that there have been *major* changes from the application interface
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| presented by IJG version 4 and earlier versions.  The old design had several
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| inherent limitations, and it had accumulated a lot of cruft as we added
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| features while trying to minimize application-interface changes.  We have
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| sacrificed backward compatibility in the version 5 rewrite, but we think the
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| improvements justify this.
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| 
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| 
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| TABLE OF CONTENTS
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| -----------------
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| 
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| Overview:
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| 	Functions provided by the library
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| 	Outline of typical usage
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| Basic library usage:
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| 	Data formats
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| 	Compression details
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| 	Decompression details
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| 	Mechanics of usage: include files, linking, etc
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| Advanced features:
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| 	Compression parameter selection
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| 	Decompression parameter selection
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| 	Special color spaces
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| 	Error handling
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| 	Compressed data handling (source and destination managers)
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| 	I/O suspension
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| 	Progressive JPEG support
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| 	Buffered-image mode
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| 	Abbreviated datastreams and multiple images
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| 	Special markers
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| 	Raw (downsampled) image data
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| 	Really raw data: DCT coefficients
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| 	Progress monitoring
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| 	Memory management
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| 	Memory usage
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| 	Library compile-time options
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| 	Portability considerations
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| 	Notes for MS-DOS implementors
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| 
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| You should read at least the overview and basic usage sections before trying
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| to program with the library.  The sections on advanced features can be read
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| if and when you need them.
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| 
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| 
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| OVERVIEW
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| ========
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| 
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| Functions provided by the library
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| ---------------------------------
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| 
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| The IJG JPEG library provides C code to read and write JPEG-compressed image
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| files.  The surrounding application program receives or supplies image data a
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| scanline at a time, using a straightforward uncompressed image format.  All
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| details of color conversion and other preprocessing/postprocessing can be
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| handled by the library.
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| 
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| The library includes a substantial amount of code that is not covered by the
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| JPEG standard but is necessary for typical applications of JPEG.  These
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| functions preprocess the image before JPEG compression or postprocess it after
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| decompression.  They include colorspace conversion, downsampling/upsampling,
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| and color quantization.  The application indirectly selects use of this code
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| by specifying the format in which it wishes to supply or receive image data.
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| For example, if colormapped output is requested, then the decompression
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| library automatically invokes color quantization.
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| 
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| A wide range of quality vs. speed tradeoffs are possible in JPEG processing,
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| and even more so in decompression postprocessing.  The decompression library
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| provides multiple implementations that cover most of the useful tradeoffs,
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| ranging from very-high-quality down to fast-preview operation.  On the
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| compression side we have generally not provided low-quality choices, since
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| compression is normally less time-critical.  It should be understood that the
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| low-quality modes may not meet the JPEG standard's accuracy requirements;
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| nonetheless, they are useful for viewers.
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| 
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| A word about functions *not* provided by the library.  We handle a subset of
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| the ISO JPEG standard; most baseline, extended-sequential, and progressive
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| JPEG processes are supported.  (Our subset includes all features now in common
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| use.)  Unsupported ISO options include:
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| 	* Hierarchical storage
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| 	* Lossless JPEG
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| 	* DNL marker
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| 	* Nonintegral subsampling ratios
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| We support 8-bit to 12-bit data precision, but this is a compile-time choice
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| rather than a run-time choice; hence it is difficult to use different
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| precisions in a single application.
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| 
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| By itself, the library handles only interchange JPEG datastreams --- in
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| particular the widely used JFIF file format.  The library can be used by
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| surrounding code to process interchange or abbreviated JPEG datastreams that
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| are embedded in more complex file formats.  (For example, this library is
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| used by the free LIBTIFF library to support JPEG compression in TIFF.)
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| 
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| 
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| Outline of typical usage
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| ------------------------
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| 
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| The rough outline of a JPEG compression operation is:
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| 
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| 	Allocate and initialize a JPEG compression object
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| 	Specify the destination for the compressed data (eg, a file)
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| 	Set parameters for compression, including image size & colorspace
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| 	jpeg_start_compress(...);
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| 	while (scan lines remain to be written)
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| 		jpeg_write_scanlines(...);
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| 	jpeg_finish_compress(...);
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| 	Release the JPEG compression object
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| 
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| A JPEG compression object holds parameters and working state for the JPEG
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| library.  We make creation/destruction of the object separate from starting
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| or finishing compression of an image; the same object can be re-used for a
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| series of image compression operations.  This makes it easy to re-use the
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| same parameter settings for a sequence of images.  Re-use of a JPEG object
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| also has important implications for processing abbreviated JPEG datastreams,
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| as discussed later.
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| 
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| The image data to be compressed is supplied to jpeg_write_scanlines() from
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| in-memory buffers.  If the application is doing file-to-file compression,
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| reading image data from the source file is the application's responsibility.
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| The library emits compressed data by calling a "data destination manager",
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| which typically will write the data into a file; but the application can
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| provide its own destination manager to do something else.
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| 
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| Similarly, the rough outline of a JPEG decompression operation is:
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| 
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| 	Allocate and initialize a JPEG decompression object
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| 	Specify the source of the compressed data (eg, a file)
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| 	Call jpeg_read_header() to obtain image info
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| 	Set parameters for decompression
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| 	jpeg_start_decompress(...);
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| 	while (scan lines remain to be read)
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| 		jpeg_read_scanlines(...);
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| 	jpeg_finish_decompress(...);
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| 	Release the JPEG decompression object
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| 
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| This is comparable to the compression outline except that reading the
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| datastream header is a separate step.  This is helpful because information
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| about the image's size, colorspace, etc is available when the application
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| selects decompression parameters.  For example, the application can choose an
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| output scaling ratio that will fit the image into the available screen size.
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| 
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| The decompression library obtains compressed data by calling a data source
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| manager, which typically will read the data from a file; but other behaviors
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| can be obtained with a custom source manager.  Decompressed data is delivered
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| into in-memory buffers passed to jpeg_read_scanlines().
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| 
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| It is possible to abort an incomplete compression or decompression operation
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| by calling jpeg_abort(); or, if you do not need to retain the JPEG object,
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| simply release it by calling jpeg_destroy().
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| 
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| JPEG compression and decompression objects are two separate struct types.
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| However, they share some common fields, and certain routines such as
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| jpeg_destroy() can work on either type of object.
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| 
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| The JPEG library has no static variables: all state is in the compression
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| or decompression object.  Therefore it is possible to process multiple
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| compression and decompression operations concurrently, using multiple JPEG
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| objects.
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| 
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| Both compression and decompression can be done in an incremental memory-to-
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| memory fashion, if suitable source/destination managers are used.  See the
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| section on "I/O suspension" for more details.
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| 
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| 
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| BASIC LIBRARY USAGE
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| ===================
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| 
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| Data formats
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| ------------
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| 
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| Before diving into procedural details, it is helpful to understand the
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| image data format that the JPEG library expects or returns.
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| 
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| The standard input image format is a rectangular array of pixels, with each
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| pixel having the same number of "component" or "sample" values (color
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| channels).  You must specify how many components there are and the colorspace
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| interpretation of the components.  Most applications will use RGB data
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| (three components per pixel) or grayscale data (one component per pixel).
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| PLEASE NOTE THAT RGB DATA IS THREE SAMPLES PER PIXEL, GRAYSCALE ONLY ONE.
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| A remarkable number of people manage to miss this, only to find that their
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| programs don't work with grayscale JPEG files.
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| 
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| There is no provision for colormapped input.  JPEG files are always full-color
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| or full grayscale (or sometimes another colorspace such as CMYK).  You can
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| feed in a colormapped image by expanding it to full-color format.  However
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| JPEG often doesn't work very well with source data that has been colormapped,
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| because of dithering noise.  This is discussed in more detail in the JPEG FAQ
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| and the other references mentioned in the README file.
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| 
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| Pixels are stored by scanlines, with each scanline running from left to
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| right.  The component values for each pixel are adjacent in the row; for
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| example, R,G,B,R,G,B,R,G,B,... for 24-bit RGB color.  Each scanline is an
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| array of data type JSAMPLE --- which is typically "unsigned char", unless
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| you've changed jmorecfg.h.  (You can also change the RGB pixel layout, say
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| to B,G,R order, by modifying jmorecfg.h.  But see the restrictions listed in
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| that file before doing so.)
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| 
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| A 2-D array of pixels is formed by making a list of pointers to the starts of
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| scanlines; so the scanlines need not be physically adjacent in memory.  Even
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| if you process just one scanline at a time, you must make a one-element
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| pointer array to conform to this structure.  Pointers to JSAMPLE rows are of
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| type JSAMPROW, and the pointer to the pointer array is of type JSAMPARRAY.
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| 
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| The library accepts or supplies one or more complete scanlines per call.
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| It is not possible to process part of a row at a time.  Scanlines are always
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| processed top-to-bottom.  You can process an entire image in one call if you
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| have it all in memory, but usually it's simplest to process one scanline at
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| a time.
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| 
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| For best results, source data values should have the precision specified by
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| BITS_IN_JSAMPLE (normally 8 bits).  For instance, if you choose to compress
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| data that's only 6 bits/channel, you should left-justify each value in a
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| byte before passing it to the compressor.  If you need to compress data
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| that has more than 8 bits/channel, compile with BITS_IN_JSAMPLE = 9 to 12.
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| (See "Library compile-time options", later.)
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| 
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| 
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| The data format returned by the decompressor is the same in all details,
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| except that colormapped output is supported.  (Again, a JPEG file is never
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| colormapped.  But you can ask the decompressor to perform on-the-fly color
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| quantization to deliver colormapped output.)  If you request colormapped
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| output then the returned data array contains a single JSAMPLE per pixel;
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| its value is an index into a color map.  The color map is represented as
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| a 2-D JSAMPARRAY in which each row holds the values of one color component,
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| that is, colormap[i][j] is the value of the i'th color component for pixel
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| value (map index) j.  Note that since the colormap indexes are stored in
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| JSAMPLEs, the maximum number of colors is limited by the size of JSAMPLE
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| (ie, at most 256 colors for an 8-bit JPEG library).
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| 
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| 
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| Compression details
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| -------------------
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| 
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| Here we revisit the JPEG compression outline given in the overview.
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| 
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| 1. Allocate and initialize a JPEG compression object.
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| 
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| A JPEG compression object is a "struct jpeg_compress_struct".  (It also has
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| a bunch of subsidiary structures which are allocated via malloc(), but the
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| application doesn't control those directly.)  This struct can be just a local
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| variable in the calling routine, if a single routine is going to execute the
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| whole JPEG compression sequence.  Otherwise it can be static or allocated
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| from malloc().
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| 
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| You will also need a structure representing a JPEG error handler.  The part
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| of this that the library cares about is a "struct jpeg_error_mgr".  If you
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| are providing your own error handler, you'll typically want to embed the
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| jpeg_error_mgr struct in a larger structure; this is discussed later under
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| "Error handling".  For now we'll assume you are just using the default error
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| handler.  The default error handler will print JPEG error/warning messages
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| on stderr, and it will call exit() if a fatal error occurs.
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| 
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| You must initialize the error handler structure, store a pointer to it into
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| the JPEG object's "err" field, and then call jpeg_create_compress() to
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| initialize the rest of the JPEG object.
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| 
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| Typical code for this step, if you are using the default error handler, is
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| 
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| 	struct jpeg_compress_struct cinfo;
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| 	struct jpeg_error_mgr jerr;
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| 	...
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| 	cinfo.err = jpeg_std_error(&jerr);
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| 	jpeg_create_compress(&cinfo);
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| 
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| jpeg_create_compress allocates a small amount of memory, so it could fail
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| if you are out of memory.  In that case it will exit via the error handler;
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| that's why the error handler must be initialized first.
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| 
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| 
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| 2. Specify the destination for the compressed data (eg, a file).
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| 
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| As previously mentioned, the JPEG library delivers compressed data to a
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| "data destination" module.  The library includes one data destination
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| module which knows how to write to a stdio stream.  You can use your own
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| destination module if you want to do something else, as discussed later.
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| 
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| If you use the standard destination module, you must open the target stdio
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| stream beforehand.  Typical code for this step looks like:
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| 
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| 	FILE * outfile;
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| 	...
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| 	if ((outfile = fopen(filename, "wb")) == NULL) {
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| 	    fprintf(stderr, "can't open %s\n", filename);
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| 	    exit(1);
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| 	}
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| 	jpeg_stdio_dest(&cinfo, outfile);
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| 
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| where the last line invokes the standard destination module.
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| 
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| WARNING: it is critical that the binary compressed data be delivered to the
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| output file unchanged.  On non-Unix systems the stdio library may perform
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| newline translation or otherwise corrupt binary data.  To suppress this
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| behavior, you may need to use a "b" option to fopen (as shown above), or use
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| setmode() or another routine to put the stdio stream in binary mode.  See
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| cjpeg.c and djpeg.c for code that has been found to work on many systems.
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| 
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| You can select the data destination after setting other parameters (step 3),
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| if that's more convenient.  You may not change the destination between
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| calling jpeg_start_compress() and jpeg_finish_compress().
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| 
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| 
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| 3. Set parameters for compression, including image size & colorspace.
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| 
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| You must supply information about the source image by setting the following
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| fields in the JPEG object (cinfo structure):
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| 
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| 	image_width		Width of image, in pixels
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| 	image_height		Height of image, in pixels
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| 	input_components	Number of color channels (samples per pixel)
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| 	in_color_space		Color space of source image
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| 
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| The image dimensions are, hopefully, obvious.  JPEG supports image dimensions
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| of 1 to 64K pixels in either direction.  The input color space is typically
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| RGB or grayscale, and input_components is 3 or 1 accordingly.  (See "Special
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| color spaces", later, for more info.)  The in_color_space field must be
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| assigned one of the J_COLOR_SPACE enum constants, typically JCS_RGB or
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| JCS_GRAYSCALE.
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| 
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| JPEG has a large number of compression parameters that determine how the
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| image is encoded.  Most applications don't need or want to know about all
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| these parameters.  You can set all the parameters to reasonable defaults by
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| calling jpeg_set_defaults(); then, if there are particular values you want
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| to change, you can do so after that.  The "Compression parameter selection"
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| section tells about all the parameters.
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| 
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| You must set in_color_space correctly before calling jpeg_set_defaults(),
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| because the defaults depend on the source image colorspace.  However the
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| other three source image parameters need not be valid until you call
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| jpeg_start_compress().  There's no harm in calling jpeg_set_defaults() more
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| than once, if that happens to be convenient.
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| 
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| Typical code for a 24-bit RGB source image is
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| 
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| 	cinfo.image_width = Width; 	/* image width and height, in pixels */
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| 	cinfo.image_height = Height;
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| 	cinfo.input_components = 3;	/* # of color components per pixel */
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| 	cinfo.in_color_space = JCS_RGB; /* colorspace of input image */
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| 
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| 	jpeg_set_defaults(&cinfo);
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| 	/* Make optional parameter settings here */
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| 
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| 
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| 4. jpeg_start_compress(...);
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| 
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| After you have established the data destination and set all the necessary
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| source image info and other parameters, call jpeg_start_compress() to begin
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| a compression cycle.  This will initialize internal state, allocate working
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| storage, and emit the first few bytes of the JPEG datastream header.
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| 
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| Typical code:
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| 
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| 	jpeg_start_compress(&cinfo, TRUE);
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| 
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| The "TRUE" parameter ensures that a complete JPEG interchange datastream
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| will be written.  This is appropriate in most cases.  If you think you might
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| want to use an abbreviated datastream, read the section on abbreviated
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| datastreams, below.
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| 
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| Once you have called jpeg_start_compress(), you may not alter any JPEG
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| parameters or other fields of the JPEG object until you have completed
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| the compression cycle.
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| 
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| 
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| 5. while (scan lines remain to be written)
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| 	jpeg_write_scanlines(...);
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| 
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| Now write all the required image data by calling jpeg_write_scanlines()
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| one or more times.  You can pass one or more scanlines in each call, up
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| to the total image height.  In most applications it is convenient to pass
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| just one or a few scanlines at a time.  The expected format for the passed
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| data is discussed under "Data formats", above.
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| 
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| Image data should be written in top-to-bottom scanline order.  The JPEG spec
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| contains some weasel wording about how top and bottom are application-defined
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| terms (a curious interpretation of the English language...) but if you want
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| your files to be compatible with everyone else's, you WILL use top-to-bottom
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| order.  If the source data must be read in bottom-to-top order, you can use
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| the JPEG library's virtual array mechanism to invert the data efficiently.
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| Examples of this can be found in the sample application cjpeg.
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| 
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| The library maintains a count of the number of scanlines written so far
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| in the next_scanline field of the JPEG object.  Usually you can just use
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| this variable as the loop counter, so that the loop test looks like
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| "while (cinfo.next_scanline < cinfo.image_height)".
 | |
| 
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| Code for this step depends heavily on the way that you store the source data.
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| example.c shows the following code for the case of a full-size 2-D source
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| array containing 3-byte RGB pixels:
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| 
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| 	JSAMPROW row_pointer[1];	/* pointer to a single row */
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| 	int row_stride;			/* physical row width in buffer */
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| 
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| 	row_stride = image_width * 3;	/* JSAMPLEs per row in image_buffer */
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| 
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| 	while (cinfo.next_scanline < cinfo.image_height) {
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| 	    row_pointer[0] = & image_buffer[cinfo.next_scanline * row_stride];
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| 	    jpeg_write_scanlines(&cinfo, row_pointer, 1);
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| 	}
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| 
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| jpeg_write_scanlines() returns the number of scanlines actually written.
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| This will normally be equal to the number passed in, so you can usually
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| ignore the return value.  It is different in just two cases:
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|   * If you try to write more scanlines than the declared image height,
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|     the additional scanlines are ignored.
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|   * If you use a suspending data destination manager, output buffer overrun
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|     will cause the compressor to return before accepting all the passed lines.
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|     This feature is discussed under "I/O suspension", below.  The normal
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|     stdio destination manager will NOT cause this to happen.
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| In any case, the return value is the same as the change in the value of
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| next_scanline.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| 6. jpeg_finish_compress(...);
 | |
| 
 | |
| After all the image data has been written, call jpeg_finish_compress() to
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| complete the compression cycle.  This step is ESSENTIAL to ensure that the
 | |
| last bufferload of data is written to the data destination.
 | |
| jpeg_finish_compress() also releases working memory associated with the JPEG
 | |
| object.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Typical code:
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	jpeg_finish_compress(&cinfo);
 | |
| 
 | |
| If using the stdio destination manager, don't forget to close the output
 | |
| stdio stream (if necessary) afterwards.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you have requested a multi-pass operating mode, such as Huffman code
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| optimization, jpeg_finish_compress() will perform the additional passes using
 | |
| data buffered by the first pass.  In this case jpeg_finish_compress() may take
 | |
| quite a while to complete.  With the default compression parameters, this will
 | |
| not happen.
 | |
| 
 | |
| It is an error to call jpeg_finish_compress() before writing the necessary
 | |
| total number of scanlines.  If you wish to abort compression, call
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| jpeg_abort() as discussed below.
 | |
| 
 | |
| After completing a compression cycle, you may dispose of the JPEG object
 | |
| as discussed next, or you may use it to compress another image.  In that case
 | |
| return to step 2, 3, or 4 as appropriate.  If you do not change the
 | |
| destination manager, the new datastream will be written to the same target.
 | |
| If you do not change any JPEG parameters, the new datastream will be written
 | |
| with the same parameters as before.  Note that you can change the input image
 | |
| dimensions freely between cycles, but if you change the input colorspace, you
 | |
| should call jpeg_set_defaults() to adjust for the new colorspace; and then
 | |
| you'll need to repeat all of step 3.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| 7. Release the JPEG compression object.
 | |
| 
 | |
| When you are done with a JPEG compression object, destroy it by calling
 | |
| jpeg_destroy_compress().  This will free all subsidiary memory (regardless of
 | |
| the previous state of the object).  Or you can call jpeg_destroy(), which
 | |
| works for either compression or decompression objects --- this may be more
 | |
| convenient if you are sharing code between compression and decompression
 | |
| cases.  (Actually, these routines are equivalent except for the declared type
 | |
| of the passed pointer.  To avoid gripes from ANSI C compilers, jpeg_destroy()
 | |
| should be passed a j_common_ptr.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you allocated the jpeg_compress_struct structure from malloc(), freeing
 | |
| it is your responsibility --- jpeg_destroy() won't.  Ditto for the error
 | |
| handler structure.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Typical code:
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	jpeg_destroy_compress(&cinfo);
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| 8. Aborting.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you decide to abort a compression cycle before finishing, you can clean up
 | |
| in either of two ways:
 | |
| 
 | |
| * If you don't need the JPEG object any more, just call
 | |
|   jpeg_destroy_compress() or jpeg_destroy() to release memory.  This is
 | |
|   legitimate at any point after calling jpeg_create_compress() --- in fact,
 | |
|   it's safe even if jpeg_create_compress() fails.
 | |
| 
 | |
| * If you want to re-use the JPEG object, call jpeg_abort_compress(), or call
 | |
|   jpeg_abort() which works on both compression and decompression objects.
 | |
|   This will return the object to an idle state, releasing any working memory.
 | |
|   jpeg_abort() is allowed at any time after successful object creation.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Note that cleaning up the data destination, if required, is your
 | |
| responsibility; neither of these routines will call term_destination().
 | |
| (See "Compressed data handling", below, for more about that.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| jpeg_destroy() and jpeg_abort() are the only safe calls to make on a JPEG
 | |
| object that has reported an error by calling error_exit (see "Error handling"
 | |
| for more info).  The internal state of such an object is likely to be out of
 | |
| whack.  Either of these two routines will return the object to a known state.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Decompression details
 | |
| ---------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| Here we revisit the JPEG decompression outline given in the overview.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 1. Allocate and initialize a JPEG decompression object.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This is just like initialization for compression, as discussed above,
 | |
| except that the object is a "struct jpeg_decompress_struct" and you
 | |
| call jpeg_create_decompress().  Error handling is exactly the same.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Typical code:
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	struct jpeg_decompress_struct cinfo;
 | |
| 	struct jpeg_error_mgr jerr;
 | |
| 	...
 | |
| 	cinfo.err = jpeg_std_error(&jerr);
 | |
| 	jpeg_create_decompress(&cinfo);
 | |
| 
 | |
| (Both here and in the IJG code, we usually use variable name "cinfo" for
 | |
| both compression and decompression objects.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| 2. Specify the source of the compressed data (eg, a file).
 | |
| 
 | |
| As previously mentioned, the JPEG library reads compressed data from a "data
 | |
| source" module.  The library includes one data source module which knows how
 | |
| to read from a stdio stream.  You can use your own source module if you want
 | |
| to do something else, as discussed later.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you use the standard source module, you must open the source stdio stream
 | |
| beforehand.  Typical code for this step looks like:
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	FILE * infile;
 | |
| 	...
 | |
| 	if ((infile = fopen(filename, "rb")) == NULL) {
 | |
| 	    fprintf(stderr, "can't open %s\n", filename);
 | |
| 	    exit(1);
 | |
| 	}
 | |
| 	jpeg_stdio_src(&cinfo, infile);
 | |
| 
 | |
| where the last line invokes the standard source module.
 | |
| 
 | |
| WARNING: it is critical that the binary compressed data be read unchanged.
 | |
| On non-Unix systems the stdio library may perform newline translation or
 | |
| otherwise corrupt binary data.  To suppress this behavior, you may need to use
 | |
| a "b" option to fopen (as shown above), or use setmode() or another routine to
 | |
| put the stdio stream in binary mode.  See cjpeg.c and djpeg.c for code that
 | |
| has been found to work on many systems.
 | |
| 
 | |
| You may not change the data source between calling jpeg_read_header() and
 | |
| jpeg_finish_decompress().  If you wish to read a series of JPEG images from
 | |
| a single source file, you should repeat the jpeg_read_header() to
 | |
| jpeg_finish_decompress() sequence without reinitializing either the JPEG
 | |
| object or the data source module; this prevents buffered input data from
 | |
| being discarded.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| 3. Call jpeg_read_header() to obtain image info.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Typical code for this step is just
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	jpeg_read_header(&cinfo, TRUE);
 | |
| 
 | |
| This will read the source datastream header markers, up to the beginning
 | |
| of the compressed data proper.  On return, the image dimensions and other
 | |
| info have been stored in the JPEG object.  The application may wish to
 | |
| consult this information before selecting decompression parameters.
 | |
| 
 | |
| More complex code is necessary if
 | |
|   * A suspending data source is used --- in that case jpeg_read_header()
 | |
|     may return before it has read all the header data.  See "I/O suspension",
 | |
|     below.  The normal stdio source manager will NOT cause this to happen.
 | |
|   * Abbreviated JPEG files are to be processed --- see the section on
 | |
|     abbreviated datastreams.  Standard applications that deal only in
 | |
|     interchange JPEG files need not be concerned with this case either.
 | |
| 
 | |
| It is permissible to stop at this point if you just wanted to find out the
 | |
| image dimensions and other header info for a JPEG file.  In that case,
 | |
| call jpeg_destroy() when you are done with the JPEG object, or call
 | |
| jpeg_abort() to return it to an idle state before selecting a new data
 | |
| source and reading another header.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| 4. Set parameters for decompression.
 | |
| 
 | |
| jpeg_read_header() sets appropriate default decompression parameters based on
 | |
| the properties of the image (in particular, its colorspace).  However, you
 | |
| may well want to alter these defaults before beginning the decompression.
 | |
| For example, the default is to produce full color output from a color file.
 | |
| If you want colormapped output you must ask for it.  Other options allow the
 | |
| returned image to be scaled and allow various speed/quality tradeoffs to be
 | |
| selected.  "Decompression parameter selection", below, gives details.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If the defaults are appropriate, nothing need be done at this step.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Note that all default values are set by each call to jpeg_read_header().
 | |
| If you reuse a decompression object, you cannot expect your parameter
 | |
| settings to be preserved across cycles, as you can for compression.
 | |
| You must set desired parameter values each time.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| 5. jpeg_start_decompress(...);
 | |
| 
 | |
| Once the parameter values are satisfactory, call jpeg_start_decompress() to
 | |
| begin decompression.  This will initialize internal state, allocate working
 | |
| memory, and prepare for returning data.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Typical code is just
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	jpeg_start_decompress(&cinfo);
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you have requested a multi-pass operating mode, such as 2-pass color
 | |
| quantization, jpeg_start_decompress() will do everything needed before data
 | |
| output can begin.  In this case jpeg_start_decompress() may take quite a while
 | |
| to complete.  With a single-scan (non progressive) JPEG file and default
 | |
| decompression parameters, this will not happen; jpeg_start_decompress() will
 | |
| return quickly.
 | |
| 
 | |
| After this call, the final output image dimensions, including any requested
 | |
| scaling, are available in the JPEG object; so is the selected colormap, if
 | |
| colormapped output has been requested.  Useful fields include
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	output_width		image width and height, as scaled
 | |
| 	output_height
 | |
| 	out_color_components	# of color components in out_color_space
 | |
| 	output_components	# of color components returned per pixel
 | |
| 	colormap		the selected colormap, if any
 | |
| 	actual_number_of_colors		number of entries in colormap
 | |
| 
 | |
| output_components is 1 (a colormap index) when quantizing colors; otherwise it
 | |
| equals out_color_components.  It is the number of JSAMPLE values that will be
 | |
| emitted per pixel in the output arrays.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Typically you will need to allocate data buffers to hold the incoming image.
 | |
| You will need output_width * output_components JSAMPLEs per scanline in your
 | |
| output buffer, and a total of output_height scanlines will be returned.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Note: if you are using the JPEG library's internal memory manager to allocate
 | |
| data buffers (as djpeg does), then the manager's protocol requires that you
 | |
| request large buffers *before* calling jpeg_start_decompress().  This is a
 | |
| little tricky since the output_XXX fields are not normally valid then.  You
 | |
| can make them valid by calling jpeg_calc_output_dimensions() after setting the
 | |
| relevant parameters (scaling, output color space, and quantization flag).
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| 6. while (scan lines remain to be read)
 | |
| 	jpeg_read_scanlines(...);
 | |
| 
 | |
| Now you can read the decompressed image data by calling jpeg_read_scanlines()
 | |
| one or more times.  At each call, you pass in the maximum number of scanlines
 | |
| to be read (ie, the height of your working buffer); jpeg_read_scanlines()
 | |
| will return up to that many lines.  The return value is the number of lines
 | |
| actually read.  The format of the returned data is discussed under "Data
 | |
| formats", above.  Don't forget that grayscale and color JPEGs will return
 | |
| different data formats!
 | |
| 
 | |
| Image data is returned in top-to-bottom scanline order.  If you must write
 | |
| out the image in bottom-to-top order, you can use the JPEG library's virtual
 | |
| array mechanism to invert the data efficiently.  Examples of this can be
 | |
| found in the sample application djpeg.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The library maintains a count of the number of scanlines returned so far
 | |
| in the output_scanline field of the JPEG object.  Usually you can just use
 | |
| this variable as the loop counter, so that the loop test looks like
 | |
| "while (cinfo.output_scanline < cinfo.output_height)".  (Note that the test
 | |
| should NOT be against image_height, unless you never use scaling.  The
 | |
| image_height field is the height of the original unscaled image.)
 | |
| The return value always equals the change in the value of output_scanline.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you don't use a suspending data source, it is safe to assume that
 | |
| jpeg_read_scanlines() reads at least one scanline per call, until the
 | |
| bottom of the image has been reached.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you use a buffer larger than one scanline, it is NOT safe to assume that
 | |
| jpeg_read_scanlines() fills it.  (The current implementation returns only a
 | |
| few scanlines per call, no matter how large a buffer you pass.)  So you must
 | |
| always provide a loop that calls jpeg_read_scanlines() repeatedly until the
 | |
| whole image has been read.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| 7. jpeg_finish_decompress(...);
 | |
| 
 | |
| After all the image data has been read, call jpeg_finish_decompress() to
 | |
| complete the decompression cycle.  This causes working memory associated
 | |
| with the JPEG object to be released.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Typical code:
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	jpeg_finish_decompress(&cinfo);
 | |
| 
 | |
| If using the stdio source manager, don't forget to close the source stdio
 | |
| stream if necessary.
 | |
| 
 | |
| It is an error to call jpeg_finish_decompress() before reading the correct
 | |
| total number of scanlines.  If you wish to abort decompression, call
 | |
| jpeg_abort() as discussed below.
 | |
| 
 | |
| After completing a decompression cycle, you may dispose of the JPEG object as
 | |
| discussed next, or you may use it to decompress another image.  In that case
 | |
| return to step 2 or 3 as appropriate.  If you do not change the source
 | |
| manager, the next image will be read from the same source.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| 8. Release the JPEG decompression object.
 | |
| 
 | |
| When you are done with a JPEG decompression object, destroy it by calling
 | |
| jpeg_destroy_decompress() or jpeg_destroy().  The previous discussion of
 | |
| destroying compression objects applies here too.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Typical code:
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	jpeg_destroy_decompress(&cinfo);
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| 9. Aborting.
 | |
| 
 | |
| You can abort a decompression cycle by calling jpeg_destroy_decompress() or
 | |
| jpeg_destroy() if you don't need the JPEG object any more, or
 | |
| jpeg_abort_decompress() or jpeg_abort() if you want to reuse the object.
 | |
| The previous discussion of aborting compression cycles applies here too.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Mechanics of usage: include files, linking, etc
 | |
| -----------------------------------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| Applications using the JPEG library should include the header file jpeglib.h
 | |
| to obtain declarations of data types and routines.  Before including
 | |
| jpeglib.h, include system headers that define at least the typedefs FILE and
 | |
| size_t.  On ANSI-conforming systems, including <stdio.h> is sufficient; on
 | |
| older Unix systems, you may need <sys/types.h> to define size_t.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If the application needs to refer to individual JPEG library error codes, also
 | |
| include jerror.h to define those symbols.
 | |
| 
 | |
| jpeglib.h indirectly includes the files jconfig.h and jmorecfg.h.  If you are
 | |
| installing the JPEG header files in a system directory, you will want to
 | |
| install all four files: jpeglib.h, jerror.h, jconfig.h, jmorecfg.h.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The most convenient way to include the JPEG code into your executable program
 | |
| is to prepare a library file ("libjpeg.a", or a corresponding name on non-Unix
 | |
| machines) and reference it at your link step.  If you use only half of the
 | |
| library (only compression or only decompression), only that much code will be
 | |
| included from the library, unless your linker is hopelessly brain-damaged.
 | |
| The supplied makefiles build libjpeg.a automatically (see install.txt).
 | |
| 
 | |
| While you can build the JPEG library as a shared library if the whim strikes
 | |
| you, we don't really recommend it.  The trouble with shared libraries is that
 | |
| at some point you'll probably try to substitute a new version of the library
 | |
| without recompiling the calling applications.  That generally doesn't work
 | |
| because the parameter struct declarations usually change with each new
 | |
| version.  In other words, the library's API is *not* guaranteed binary
 | |
| compatible across versions; we only try to ensure source-code compatibility.
 | |
| (In hindsight, it might have been smarter to hide the parameter structs from
 | |
| applications and introduce a ton of access functions instead.  Too late now,
 | |
| however.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| On some systems your application may need to set up a signal handler to ensure
 | |
| that temporary files are deleted if the program is interrupted.  This is most
 | |
| critical if you are on MS-DOS and use the jmemdos.c memory manager back end;
 | |
| it will try to grab extended memory for temp files, and that space will NOT be
 | |
| freed automatically.  See cjpeg.c or djpeg.c for an example signal handler.
 | |
| 
 | |
| It may be worth pointing out that the core JPEG library does not actually
 | |
| require the stdio library: only the default source/destination managers and
 | |
| error handler need it.  You can use the library in a stdio-less environment
 | |
| if you replace those modules and use jmemnobs.c (or another memory manager of
 | |
| your own devising).  More info about the minimum system library requirements
 | |
| may be found in jinclude.h.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| ADVANCED FEATURES
 | |
| =================
 | |
| 
 | |
| Compression parameter selection
 | |
| -------------------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| This section describes all the optional parameters you can set for JPEG
 | |
| compression, as well as the "helper" routines provided to assist in this
 | |
| task.  Proper setting of some parameters requires detailed understanding
 | |
| of the JPEG standard; if you don't know what a parameter is for, it's best
 | |
| not to mess with it!  See REFERENCES in the README file for pointers to
 | |
| more info about JPEG.
 | |
| 
 | |
| It's a good idea to call jpeg_set_defaults() first, even if you plan to set
 | |
| all the parameters; that way your code is more likely to work with future JPEG
 | |
| libraries that have additional parameters.  For the same reason, we recommend
 | |
| you use a helper routine where one is provided, in preference to twiddling
 | |
| cinfo fields directly.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The helper routines are:
 | |
| 
 | |
| jpeg_set_defaults (j_compress_ptr cinfo)
 | |
| 	This routine sets all JPEG parameters to reasonable defaults, using
 | |
| 	only the input image's color space (field in_color_space, which must
 | |
| 	already be set in cinfo).  Many applications will only need to use
 | |
| 	this routine and perhaps jpeg_set_quality().
 | |
| 
 | |
| jpeg_set_colorspace (j_compress_ptr cinfo, J_COLOR_SPACE colorspace)
 | |
| 	Sets the JPEG file's colorspace (field jpeg_color_space) as specified,
 | |
| 	and sets other color-space-dependent parameters appropriately.  See
 | |
| 	"Special color spaces", below, before using this.  A large number of
 | |
| 	parameters, including all per-component parameters, are set by this
 | |
| 	routine; if you want to twiddle individual parameters you should call
 | |
| 	jpeg_set_colorspace() before rather than after.
 | |
| 
 | |
| jpeg_default_colorspace (j_compress_ptr cinfo)
 | |
| 	Selects an appropriate JPEG colorspace based on cinfo->in_color_space,
 | |
| 	and calls jpeg_set_colorspace().  This is actually a subroutine of
 | |
| 	jpeg_set_defaults().  It's broken out in case you want to change
 | |
| 	just the colorspace-dependent JPEG parameters.
 | |
| 
 | |
| jpeg_set_quality (j_compress_ptr cinfo, int quality, boolean force_baseline)
 | |
| 	Constructs JPEG quantization tables appropriate for the indicated
 | |
| 	quality setting.  The quality value is expressed on the 0..100 scale
 | |
| 	recommended by IJG (cjpeg's "-quality" switch uses this routine).
 | |
| 	Note that the exact mapping from quality values to tables may change
 | |
| 	in future IJG releases as more is learned about DCT quantization.
 | |
| 	If the force_baseline parameter is TRUE, then the quantization table
 | |
| 	entries are constrained to the range 1..255 for full JPEG baseline
 | |
| 	compatibility.  In the current implementation, this only makes a
 | |
| 	difference for quality settings below 25, and it effectively prevents
 | |
| 	very small/low quality files from being generated.  The IJG decoder
 | |
| 	is capable of reading the non-baseline files generated at low quality
 | |
| 	settings when force_baseline is FALSE, but other decoders may not be.
 | |
| 
 | |
| jpeg_set_linear_quality (j_compress_ptr cinfo, int scale_factor,
 | |
| 			 boolean force_baseline)
 | |
| 	Same as jpeg_set_quality() except that the generated tables are the
 | |
| 	sample tables given in the JPEC spec section K.1, multiplied by the
 | |
| 	specified scale factor (which is expressed as a percentage; thus
 | |
| 	scale_factor = 100 reproduces the spec's tables).  Note that larger
 | |
| 	scale factors give lower quality.  This entry point is useful for
 | |
| 	conforming to the Adobe PostScript DCT conventions, but we do not
 | |
| 	recommend linear scaling as a user-visible quality scale otherwise.
 | |
| 	force_baseline again constrains the computed table entries to 1..255.
 | |
| 
 | |
| int jpeg_quality_scaling (int quality)
 | |
| 	Converts a value on the IJG-recommended quality scale to a linear
 | |
| 	scaling percentage.  Note that this routine may change or go away
 | |
| 	in future releases --- IJG may choose to adopt a scaling method that
 | |
| 	can't be expressed as a simple scalar multiplier, in which case the
 | |
| 	premise of this routine collapses.  Caveat user.
 | |
| 
 | |
| jpeg_default_qtables (j_compress_ptr cinfo, boolean force_baseline)
 | |
| 	Set default quantization tables with linear q_scale_factor[] values
 | |
| 	(see below).
 | |
| 
 | |
| jpeg_add_quant_table (j_compress_ptr cinfo, int which_tbl,
 | |
| 		      const unsigned int *basic_table,
 | |
| 		      int scale_factor, boolean force_baseline)
 | |
| 	Allows an arbitrary quantization table to be created.  which_tbl
 | |
| 	indicates which table slot to fill.  basic_table points to an array
 | |
| 	of 64 unsigned ints given in normal array order.  These values are
 | |
| 	multiplied by scale_factor/100 and then clamped to the range 1..65535
 | |
| 	(or to 1..255 if force_baseline is TRUE).
 | |
| 	CAUTION: prior to library version 6a, jpeg_add_quant_table expected
 | |
| 	the basic table to be given in JPEG zigzag order.  If you need to
 | |
| 	write code that works with either older or newer versions of this
 | |
| 	routine, you must check the library version number.  Something like
 | |
| 	"#if JPEG_LIB_VERSION >= 61" is the right test.
 | |
| 
 | |
| jpeg_simple_progression (j_compress_ptr cinfo)
 | |
| 	Generates a default scan script for writing a progressive-JPEG file.
 | |
| 	This is the recommended method of creating a progressive file,
 | |
| 	unless you want to make a custom scan sequence.  You must ensure that
 | |
| 	the JPEG color space is set correctly before calling this routine.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Compression parameters (cinfo fields) include:
 | |
| 
 | |
| boolean arith_code
 | |
| 	If TRUE, use arithmetic coding.
 | |
| 	If FALSE, use Huffman coding.
 | |
| 
 | |
| int block_size
 | |
| 	Set DCT block size.  All N from 1 to 16 are possible.
 | |
| 	Default is 8 (baseline format).
 | |
| 	Larger values produce higher compression,
 | |
| 	smaller values produce higher quality.
 | |
| 	An exact DCT stage is possible with 1 or 2.
 | |
| 	With the default quality of 75 and default Luminance qtable
 | |
| 	the DCT+Quantization stage is lossless for value 1.
 | |
| 	Note that values other than 8 require a SmartScale capable decoder,
 | |
| 	introduced with IJG JPEG 8.  Setting the block_size parameter for
 | |
| 	compression works with version 8c and later.
 | |
| 
 | |
| J_DCT_METHOD dct_method
 | |
| 	Selects the algorithm used for the DCT step.  Choices are:
 | |
| 		JDCT_ISLOW: slow but accurate integer algorithm
 | |
| 		JDCT_IFAST: faster, less accurate integer method
 | |
| 		JDCT_FLOAT: floating-point method
 | |
| 		JDCT_DEFAULT: default method (normally JDCT_ISLOW)
 | |
| 		JDCT_FASTEST: fastest method (normally JDCT_IFAST)
 | |
| 	The FLOAT method is very slightly more accurate than the ISLOW method,
 | |
| 	but may give different results on different machines due to varying
 | |
| 	roundoff behavior.  The integer methods should give the same results
 | |
| 	on all machines.  On machines with sufficiently fast FP hardware, the
 | |
| 	floating-point method may also be the fastest.  The IFAST method is
 | |
| 	considerably less accurate than the other two; its use is not
 | |
| 	recommended if high quality is a concern.  JDCT_DEFAULT and
 | |
| 	JDCT_FASTEST are macros configurable by each installation.
 | |
| 
 | |
| unsigned int scale_num, scale_denom
 | |
| 	Scale the image by the fraction scale_num/scale_denom.  Default is
 | |
| 	1/1, or no scaling.  Currently, the supported scaling ratios are
 | |
| 	M/N with all N from 1 to 16, where M is the destination DCT size,
 | |
| 	which is 8 by default (see block_size parameter above).
 | |
| 	(The library design allows for arbitrary scaling ratios but this
 | |
| 	is not likely to be implemented any time soon.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| J_COLOR_SPACE jpeg_color_space
 | |
| int num_components
 | |
| 	The JPEG color space and corresponding number of components; see
 | |
| 	"Special color spaces", below, for more info.  We recommend using
 | |
| 	jpeg_set_colorspace() if you want to change these.
 | |
| 
 | |
| J_COLOR_TRANSFORM color_transform
 | |
| 	Internal color transform identifier, writes LSE marker if nonzero
 | |
| 	(requires decoder with inverse color transform support, introduced
 | |
| 	with IJG JPEG 9).
 | |
| 	Two values are currently possible: JCT_NONE and JCT_SUBTRACT_GREEN.
 | |
| 	Set this value for lossless RGB application *before* calling
 | |
| 	jpeg_set_colorspace(), because entropy table assignment in
 | |
| 	jpeg_set_colorspace() depends on color_transform.
 | |
| 
 | |
| boolean optimize_coding
 | |
| 	TRUE causes the compressor to compute optimal Huffman coding tables
 | |
| 	for the image.  This requires an extra pass over the data and
 | |
| 	therefore costs a good deal of space and time.  The default is
 | |
| 	FALSE, which tells the compressor to use the supplied or default
 | |
| 	Huffman tables.  In most cases optimal tables save only a few percent
 | |
| 	of file size compared to the default tables.  Note that when this is
 | |
| 	TRUE, you need not supply Huffman tables at all, and any you do
 | |
| 	supply will be overwritten.
 | |
| 
 | |
| unsigned int restart_interval
 | |
| int restart_in_rows
 | |
| 	To emit restart markers in the JPEG file, set one of these nonzero.
 | |
| 	Set restart_interval to specify the exact interval in MCU blocks.
 | |
| 	Set restart_in_rows to specify the interval in MCU rows.  (If
 | |
| 	restart_in_rows is not 0, then restart_interval is set after the
 | |
| 	image width in MCUs is computed.)  Defaults are zero (no restarts).
 | |
| 	One restart marker per MCU row is often a good choice.
 | |
| 	NOTE: the overhead of restart markers is higher in grayscale JPEG
 | |
| 	files than in color files, and MUCH higher in progressive JPEGs.
 | |
| 	If you use restarts, you may want to use larger intervals in those
 | |
| 	cases.
 | |
| 
 | |
| const jpeg_scan_info * scan_info
 | |
| int num_scans
 | |
| 	By default, scan_info is NULL; this causes the compressor to write a
 | |
| 	single-scan sequential JPEG file.  If not NULL, scan_info points to
 | |
| 	an array of scan definition records of length num_scans.  The
 | |
| 	compressor will then write a JPEG file having one scan for each scan
 | |
| 	definition record.  This is used to generate noninterleaved or
 | |
| 	progressive JPEG files.  The library checks that the scan array
 | |
| 	defines a valid JPEG scan sequence.  (jpeg_simple_progression creates
 | |
| 	a suitable scan definition array for progressive JPEG.)  This is
 | |
| 	discussed further under "Progressive JPEG support".
 | |
| 
 | |
| boolean do_fancy_downsampling
 | |
| 	If TRUE, use direct DCT scaling with DCT size > 8 for downsampling
 | |
| 	of chroma components.
 | |
| 	If FALSE, use only DCT size <= 8 and simple separate downsampling.
 | |
| 	Default is TRUE.
 | |
| 	For better image stability in multiple generation compression cycles
 | |
| 	it is preferable that this value matches the corresponding
 | |
| 	do_fancy_upsampling value in decompression.
 | |
| 
 | |
| int smoothing_factor
 | |
| 	If non-zero, the input image is smoothed; the value should be 1 for
 | |
| 	minimal smoothing to 100 for maximum smoothing.  Consult jcsample.c
 | |
| 	for details of the smoothing algorithm.  The default is zero.
 | |
| 
 | |
| boolean write_JFIF_header
 | |
| 	If TRUE, a JFIF APP0 marker is emitted.  jpeg_set_defaults() and
 | |
| 	jpeg_set_colorspace() set this TRUE if a JFIF-legal JPEG color space
 | |
| 	(ie, YCbCr or grayscale) is selected, otherwise FALSE.
 | |
| 
 | |
| UINT8 JFIF_major_version
 | |
| UINT8 JFIF_minor_version
 | |
| 	The version number to be written into the JFIF marker.
 | |
| 	jpeg_set_defaults() initializes the version to 1.01 (major=minor=1).
 | |
| 	You should set it to 1.02 (major=1, minor=2) if you plan to write
 | |
| 	any JFIF 1.02 extension markers.
 | |
| 
 | |
| UINT8 density_unit
 | |
| UINT16 X_density
 | |
| UINT16 Y_density
 | |
| 	The resolution information to be written into the JFIF marker;
 | |
| 	not used otherwise.  density_unit may be 0 for unknown,
 | |
| 	1 for dots/inch, or 2 for dots/cm.  The default values are 0,1,1
 | |
| 	indicating square pixels of unknown size.
 | |
| 
 | |
| boolean write_Adobe_marker
 | |
| 	If TRUE, an Adobe APP14 marker is emitted.  jpeg_set_defaults() and
 | |
| 	jpeg_set_colorspace() set this TRUE if JPEG color space RGB, CMYK,
 | |
| 	or YCCK is selected, otherwise FALSE.  It is generally a bad idea
 | |
| 	to set both write_JFIF_header and write_Adobe_marker.  In fact,
 | |
| 	you probably shouldn't change the default settings at all --- the
 | |
| 	default behavior ensures that the JPEG file's color space can be
 | |
| 	recognized by the decoder.
 | |
| 
 | |
| JQUANT_TBL * quant_tbl_ptrs[NUM_QUANT_TBLS]
 | |
| 	Pointers to coefficient quantization tables, one per table slot,
 | |
| 	or NULL if no table is defined for a slot.  Usually these should
 | |
| 	be set via one of the above helper routines; jpeg_add_quant_table()
 | |
| 	is general enough to define any quantization table.  The other
 | |
| 	routines will set up table slot 0 for luminance quality and table
 | |
| 	slot 1 for chrominance.
 | |
| 
 | |
| int q_scale_factor[NUM_QUANT_TBLS]
 | |
| 	Linear quantization scaling factors (percentage, initialized 100)
 | |
| 	for use with jpeg_default_qtables().
 | |
| 	See rdswitch.c and cjpeg.c for an example of usage.
 | |
| 	Note that the q_scale_factor[] fields are the "linear" scales, so you
 | |
| 	have to convert from user-defined ratings via jpeg_quality_scaling().
 | |
| 	Here is an example code which corresponds to cjpeg -quality 90,70:
 | |
| 
 | |
| 		jpeg_set_defaults(cinfo);
 | |
| 
 | |
| 		/* Set luminance quality 90. */
 | |
| 		cinfo->q_scale_factor[0] = jpeg_quality_scaling(90);
 | |
| 		/* Set chrominance quality 70. */
 | |
| 		cinfo->q_scale_factor[1] = jpeg_quality_scaling(70);
 | |
| 
 | |
| 		jpeg_default_qtables(cinfo, force_baseline);
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	CAUTION: You must also set 1x1 subsampling for efficient separate
 | |
| 	color quality selection, since the default value used by library
 | |
| 	is 2x2:
 | |
| 
 | |
| 		cinfo->comp_info[0].v_samp_factor = 1;
 | |
| 		cinfo->comp_info[0].h_samp_factor = 1;
 | |
| 
 | |
| JHUFF_TBL * dc_huff_tbl_ptrs[NUM_HUFF_TBLS]
 | |
| JHUFF_TBL * ac_huff_tbl_ptrs[NUM_HUFF_TBLS]
 | |
| 	Pointers to Huffman coding tables, one per table slot, or NULL if
 | |
| 	no table is defined for a slot.  Slots 0 and 1 are filled with the
 | |
| 	JPEG sample tables by jpeg_set_defaults().  If you need to allocate
 | |
| 	more table structures, jpeg_alloc_huff_table() may be used.
 | |
| 	Note that optimal Huffman tables can be computed for an image
 | |
| 	by setting optimize_coding, as discussed above; there's seldom
 | |
| 	any need to mess with providing your own Huffman tables.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| The actual dimensions of the JPEG image that will be written to the file are
 | |
| given by the following fields.  These are computed from the input image
 | |
| dimensions and the compression parameters by jpeg_start_compress().  You can
 | |
| also call jpeg_calc_jpeg_dimensions() to obtain the values that will result
 | |
| from the current parameter settings.  This can be useful if you are trying
 | |
| to pick a scaling ratio that will get close to a desired target size.
 | |
| 
 | |
| JDIMENSION jpeg_width		Actual dimensions of output image.
 | |
| JDIMENSION jpeg_height
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Per-component parameters are stored in the struct cinfo.comp_info[i] for
 | |
| component number i.  Note that components here refer to components of the
 | |
| JPEG color space, *not* the source image color space.  A suitably large
 | |
| comp_info[] array is allocated by jpeg_set_defaults(); if you choose not
 | |
| to use that routine, it's up to you to allocate the array.
 | |
| 
 | |
| int component_id
 | |
| 	The one-byte identifier code to be recorded in the JPEG file for
 | |
| 	this component.  For the standard color spaces, we recommend you
 | |
| 	leave the default values alone.
 | |
| 
 | |
| int h_samp_factor
 | |
| int v_samp_factor
 | |
| 	Horizontal and vertical sampling factors for the component; must
 | |
| 	be 1..4 according to the JPEG standard.  Note that larger sampling
 | |
| 	factors indicate a higher-resolution component; many people find
 | |
| 	this behavior quite unintuitive.  The default values are 2,2 for
 | |
| 	luminance components and 1,1 for chrominance components, except
 | |
| 	for grayscale where 1,1 is used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| int quant_tbl_no
 | |
| 	Quantization table number for component.  The default value is
 | |
| 	0 for luminance components and 1 for chrominance components.
 | |
| 
 | |
| int dc_tbl_no
 | |
| int ac_tbl_no
 | |
| 	DC and AC entropy coding table numbers.  The default values are
 | |
| 	0 for luminance components and 1 for chrominance components.
 | |
| 
 | |
| int component_index
 | |
| 	Must equal the component's index in comp_info[].  (Beginning in
 | |
| 	release v6, the compressor library will fill this in automatically;
 | |
| 	you don't have to.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Decompression parameter selection
 | |
| ---------------------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| Decompression parameter selection is somewhat simpler than compression
 | |
| parameter selection, since all of the JPEG internal parameters are
 | |
| recorded in the source file and need not be supplied by the application.
 | |
| (Unless you are working with abbreviated files, in which case see
 | |
| "Abbreviated datastreams", below.)  Decompression parameters control
 | |
| the postprocessing done on the image to deliver it in a format suitable
 | |
| for the application's use.  Many of the parameters control speed/quality
 | |
| tradeoffs, in which faster decompression may be obtained at the price of
 | |
| a poorer-quality image.  The defaults select the highest quality (slowest)
 | |
| processing.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The following fields in the JPEG object are set by jpeg_read_header() and
 | |
| may be useful to the application in choosing decompression parameters:
 | |
| 
 | |
| JDIMENSION image_width			Width and height of image
 | |
| JDIMENSION image_height
 | |
| int num_components			Number of color components
 | |
| J_COLOR_SPACE jpeg_color_space		Colorspace of image
 | |
| boolean saw_JFIF_marker			TRUE if a JFIF APP0 marker was seen
 | |
|   UINT8 JFIF_major_version		Version information from JFIF marker
 | |
|   UINT8 JFIF_minor_version
 | |
|   UINT8 density_unit			Resolution data from JFIF marker
 | |
|   UINT16 X_density
 | |
|   UINT16 Y_density
 | |
| boolean saw_Adobe_marker		TRUE if an Adobe APP14 marker was seen
 | |
|   UINT8 Adobe_transform			Color transform code from Adobe marker
 | |
| 
 | |
| The JPEG color space, unfortunately, is something of a guess since the JPEG
 | |
| standard proper does not provide a way to record it.  In practice most files
 | |
| adhere to the JFIF or Adobe conventions, and the decoder will recognize these
 | |
| correctly.  See "Special color spaces", below, for more info.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| The decompression parameters that determine the basic properties of the
 | |
| returned image are:
 | |
| 
 | |
| J_COLOR_SPACE out_color_space
 | |
| 	Output color space.  jpeg_read_header() sets an appropriate default
 | |
| 	based on jpeg_color_space; typically it will be RGB or grayscale.
 | |
| 	The application can change this field to request output in a different
 | |
| 	colorspace.  For example, set it to JCS_GRAYSCALE to get grayscale
 | |
| 	output from a color file.  (This is useful for previewing: grayscale
 | |
| 	output is faster than full color since the color components need not
 | |
| 	be processed.)  Note that not all possible color space transforms are
 | |
| 	currently implemented; you may need to extend jdcolor.c if you want an
 | |
| 	unusual conversion.
 | |
| 
 | |
| unsigned int scale_num, scale_denom
 | |
| 	Scale the image by the fraction scale_num/scale_denom.  Currently,
 | |
| 	the supported scaling ratios are M/N with all M from 1 to 16, where
 | |
| 	N is the source DCT size, which is 8 for baseline JPEG.  (The library
 | |
| 	design allows for arbitrary scaling ratios but this is not likely
 | |
| 	to be implemented any time soon.)  The values are initialized by
 | |
| 	jpeg_read_header() with the source DCT size.  For baseline JPEG
 | |
| 	this is 8/8.  If you change only the scale_num value while leaving
 | |
| 	the other unchanged, then this specifies the DCT scaled size to be
 | |
| 	applied on the given input.  For baseline JPEG this is equivalent
 | |
| 	to M/8 scaling, since the source DCT size for baseline JPEG is 8.
 | |
| 	Smaller scaling ratios permit significantly faster decoding since
 | |
| 	fewer pixels need be processed and a simpler IDCT method can be used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| boolean quantize_colors
 | |
| 	If set TRUE, colormapped output will be delivered.  Default is FALSE,
 | |
| 	meaning that full-color output will be delivered.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The next three parameters are relevant only if quantize_colors is TRUE.
 | |
| 
 | |
| int desired_number_of_colors
 | |
| 	Maximum number of colors to use in generating a library-supplied color
 | |
| 	map (the actual number of colors is returned in a different field).
 | |
| 	Default 256.  Ignored when the application supplies its own color map.
 | |
| 
 | |
| boolean two_pass_quantize
 | |
| 	If TRUE, an extra pass over the image is made to select a custom color
 | |
| 	map for the image.  This usually looks a lot better than the one-size-
 | |
| 	fits-all colormap that is used otherwise.  Default is TRUE.  Ignored
 | |
| 	when the application supplies its own color map.
 | |
| 
 | |
| J_DITHER_MODE dither_mode
 | |
| 	Selects color dithering method.  Supported values are:
 | |
| 		JDITHER_NONE	no dithering: fast, very low quality
 | |
| 		JDITHER_ORDERED	ordered dither: moderate speed and quality
 | |
| 		JDITHER_FS	Floyd-Steinberg dither: slow, high quality
 | |
| 	Default is JDITHER_FS.  (At present, ordered dither is implemented
 | |
| 	only in the single-pass, standard-colormap case.  If you ask for
 | |
| 	ordered dither when two_pass_quantize is TRUE or when you supply
 | |
| 	an external color map, you'll get F-S dithering.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| When quantize_colors is TRUE, the target color map is described by the next
 | |
| two fields.  colormap is set to NULL by jpeg_read_header().  The application
 | |
| can supply a color map by setting colormap non-NULL and setting
 | |
| actual_number_of_colors to the map size.  Otherwise, jpeg_start_decompress()
 | |
| selects a suitable color map and sets these two fields itself.
 | |
| [Implementation restriction: at present, an externally supplied colormap is
 | |
| only accepted for 3-component output color spaces.]
 | |
| 
 | |
| JSAMPARRAY colormap
 | |
| 	The color map, represented as a 2-D pixel array of out_color_components
 | |
| 	rows and actual_number_of_colors columns.  Ignored if not quantizing.
 | |
| 	CAUTION: if the JPEG library creates its own colormap, the storage
 | |
| 	pointed to by this field is released by jpeg_finish_decompress().
 | |
| 	Copy the colormap somewhere else first, if you want to save it.
 | |
| 
 | |
| int actual_number_of_colors
 | |
| 	The number of colors in the color map.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Additional decompression parameters that the application may set include:
 | |
| 
 | |
| J_DCT_METHOD dct_method
 | |
| 	Selects the algorithm used for the DCT step.  Choices are the same
 | |
| 	as described above for compression.
 | |
| 
 | |
| boolean do_fancy_upsampling
 | |
| 	If TRUE, use direct DCT scaling with DCT size > 8 for upsampling
 | |
| 	of chroma components.
 | |
| 	If FALSE, use only DCT size <= 8 and simple separate upsampling.
 | |
| 	Default is TRUE.
 | |
| 	For better image stability in multiple generation compression cycles
 | |
| 	it is preferable that this value matches the corresponding
 | |
| 	do_fancy_downsampling value in compression.
 | |
| 
 | |
| boolean do_block_smoothing
 | |
| 	If TRUE, interblock smoothing is applied in early stages of decoding
 | |
| 	progressive JPEG files; if FALSE, not.  Default is TRUE.  Early
 | |
| 	progression stages look "fuzzy" with smoothing, "blocky" without.
 | |
| 	In any case, block smoothing ceases to be applied after the first few
 | |
| 	AC coefficients are known to full accuracy, so it is relevant only
 | |
| 	when using buffered-image mode for progressive images.
 | |
| 
 | |
| boolean enable_1pass_quant
 | |
| boolean enable_external_quant
 | |
| boolean enable_2pass_quant
 | |
| 	These are significant only in buffered-image mode, which is
 | |
| 	described in its own section below.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| The output image dimensions are given by the following fields.  These are
 | |
| computed from the source image dimensions and the decompression parameters
 | |
| by jpeg_start_decompress().  You can also call jpeg_calc_output_dimensions()
 | |
| to obtain the values that will result from the current parameter settings.
 | |
| This can be useful if you are trying to pick a scaling ratio that will get
 | |
| close to a desired target size.  It's also important if you are using the
 | |
| JPEG library's memory manager to allocate output buffer space, because you
 | |
| are supposed to request such buffers *before* jpeg_start_decompress().
 | |
| 
 | |
| JDIMENSION output_width		Actual dimensions of output image.
 | |
| JDIMENSION output_height
 | |
| int out_color_components	Number of color components in out_color_space.
 | |
| int output_components		Number of color components returned.
 | |
| int rec_outbuf_height		Recommended height of scanline buffer.
 | |
| 
 | |
| When quantizing colors, output_components is 1, indicating a single color map
 | |
| index per pixel.  Otherwise it equals out_color_components.  The output arrays
 | |
| are required to be output_width * output_components JSAMPLEs wide.
 | |
| 
 | |
| rec_outbuf_height is the recommended minimum height (in scanlines) of the
 | |
| buffer passed to jpeg_read_scanlines().  If the buffer is smaller, the
 | |
| library will still work, but time will be wasted due to unnecessary data
 | |
| copying.  In high-quality modes, rec_outbuf_height is always 1, but some
 | |
| faster, lower-quality modes set it to larger values (typically 2 to 4).
 | |
| If you are going to ask for a high-speed processing mode, you may as well
 | |
| go to the trouble of honoring rec_outbuf_height so as to avoid data copying.
 | |
| (An output buffer larger than rec_outbuf_height lines is OK, but won't
 | |
| provide any material speed improvement over that height.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Special color spaces
 | |
| --------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| The JPEG standard itself is "color blind" and doesn't specify any particular
 | |
| color space.  It is customary to convert color data to a luminance/chrominance
 | |
| color space before compressing, since this permits greater compression.  The
 | |
| existing JPEG file interchange format standards specify YCbCr or GRAYSCALE
 | |
| data (JFIF version 1), GRAYSCALE, RGB, YCbCr, CMYK, or YCCK (Adobe), or BG_RGB
 | |
| or BG_YCC (big gamut color spaces, JFIF version 2).  For special applications
 | |
| such as multispectral images, other color spaces can be used,
 | |
| but it must be understood that such files will be unportable.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The JPEG library can handle the most common colorspace conversions (namely
 | |
| RGB <=> YCbCr and CMYK <=> YCCK).  It can also deal with data of an unknown
 | |
| color space, passing it through without conversion.  If you deal extensively
 | |
| with an unusual color space, you can easily extend the library to understand
 | |
| additional color spaces and perform appropriate conversions.
 | |
| 
 | |
| For compression, the source data's color space is specified by field
 | |
| in_color_space.  This is transformed to the JPEG file's color space given
 | |
| by jpeg_color_space.  jpeg_set_defaults() chooses a reasonable JPEG color
 | |
| space depending on in_color_space, but you can override this by calling
 | |
| jpeg_set_colorspace().  Of course you must select a supported transformation.
 | |
| jccolor.c currently supports the following transformations:
 | |
| 	RGB => YCbCr
 | |
| 	RGB => GRAYSCALE
 | |
| 	RGB => BG_YCC
 | |
| 	YCbCr => GRAYSCALE
 | |
| 	YCbCr => BG_YCC
 | |
| 	CMYK => YCCK
 | |
| plus the null transforms: GRAYSCALE => GRAYSCALE, RGB => RGB,
 | |
| BG_RGB => BG_RGB, YCbCr => YCbCr, BG_YCC => BG_YCC, CMYK => CMYK,
 | |
| YCCK => YCCK, and UNKNOWN => UNKNOWN.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The file interchange format standards (JFIF and Adobe) specify APPn markers
 | |
| that indicate the color space of the JPEG file.  It is important to ensure
 | |
| that these are written correctly, or omitted if the JPEG file's color space
 | |
| is not one of the ones supported by the interchange standards.
 | |
| jpeg_set_colorspace() will set the compression parameters to include or omit
 | |
| the APPn markers properly, so long as it is told the truth about the JPEG
 | |
| color space.  For example, if you are writing some random 3-component color
 | |
| space without conversion, don't try to fake out the library by setting
 | |
| in_color_space and jpeg_color_space to JCS_YCbCr; use JCS_UNKNOWN.
 | |
| You may want to write an APPn marker of your own devising to identify
 | |
| the colorspace --- see "Special markers", below.
 | |
| 
 | |
| When told that the color space is UNKNOWN, the library will default to using
 | |
| luminance-quality compression parameters for all color components.  You may
 | |
| well want to change these parameters.  See the source code for
 | |
| jpeg_set_colorspace(), in jcparam.c, for details.
 | |
| 
 | |
| For decompression, the JPEG file's color space is given in jpeg_color_space,
 | |
| and this is transformed to the output color space out_color_space.
 | |
| jpeg_read_header's setting of jpeg_color_space can be relied on if the file
 | |
| conforms to JFIF or Adobe conventions, but otherwise it is no better than a
 | |
| guess.  If you know the JPEG file's color space for certain, you can override
 | |
| jpeg_read_header's guess by setting jpeg_color_space.  jpeg_read_header also
 | |
| selects a default output color space based on (its guess of) jpeg_color_space;
 | |
| set out_color_space to override this.  Again, you must select a supported
 | |
| transformation.  jdcolor.c currently supports
 | |
| 	YCbCr => RGB
 | |
| 	YCbCr => GRAYSCALE
 | |
| 	BG_YCC => RGB
 | |
| 	BG_YCC => GRAYSCALE
 | |
| 	RGB => GRAYSCALE
 | |
| 	GRAYSCALE => RGB
 | |
| 	YCCK => CMYK
 | |
| as well as the null transforms.  (Since GRAYSCALE=>RGB is provided, an
 | |
| application can force grayscale JPEGs to look like color JPEGs if it only
 | |
| wants to handle one case.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| The two-pass color quantizer, jquant2.c, is specialized to handle RGB data
 | |
| (it weights distances appropriately for RGB colors).  You'll need to modify
 | |
| the code if you want to use it for non-RGB output color spaces.  Note that
 | |
| jquant2.c is used to map to an application-supplied colormap as well as for
 | |
| the normal two-pass colormap selection process.
 | |
| 
 | |
| CAUTION: it appears that Adobe Photoshop writes inverted data in CMYK JPEG
 | |
| files: 0 represents 100% ink coverage, rather than 0% ink as you'd expect.
 | |
| This is arguably a bug in Photoshop, but if you need to work with Photoshop
 | |
| CMYK files, you will have to deal with it in your application.  We cannot
 | |
| "fix" this in the library by inverting the data during the CMYK<=>YCCK
 | |
| transform, because that would break other applications, notably Ghostscript.
 | |
| Photoshop versions prior to 3.0 write EPS files containing JPEG-encoded CMYK
 | |
| data in the same inverted-YCCK representation used in bare JPEG files, but
 | |
| the surrounding PostScript code performs an inversion using the PS image
 | |
| operator.  I am told that Photoshop 3.0 will write uninverted YCCK in
 | |
| EPS/JPEG files, and will omit the PS-level inversion.  (But the data
 | |
| polarity used in bare JPEG files will not change in 3.0.)  In either case,
 | |
| the JPEG library must not invert the data itself, or else Ghostscript would
 | |
| read these EPS files incorrectly.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Error handling
 | |
| --------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| When the default error handler is used, any error detected inside the JPEG
 | |
| routines will cause a message to be printed on stderr, followed by exit().
 | |
| You can supply your own error handling routines to override this behavior
 | |
| and to control the treatment of nonfatal warnings and trace/debug messages.
 | |
| The file example.c illustrates the most common case, which is to have the
 | |
| application regain control after an error rather than exiting.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The JPEG library never writes any message directly; it always goes through
 | |
| the error handling routines.  Three classes of messages are recognized:
 | |
|   * Fatal errors: the library cannot continue.
 | |
|   * Warnings: the library can continue, but the data is corrupt, and a
 | |
|     damaged output image is likely to result.
 | |
|   * Trace/informational messages.  These come with a trace level indicating
 | |
|     the importance of the message; you can control the verbosity of the
 | |
|     program by adjusting the maximum trace level that will be displayed.
 | |
| 
 | |
| You may, if you wish, simply replace the entire JPEG error handling module
 | |
| (jerror.c) with your own code.  However, you can avoid code duplication by
 | |
| only replacing some of the routines depending on the behavior you need.
 | |
| This is accomplished by calling jpeg_std_error() as usual, but then overriding
 | |
| some of the method pointers in the jpeg_error_mgr struct, as illustrated by
 | |
| example.c.
 | |
| 
 | |
| All of the error handling routines will receive a pointer to the JPEG object
 | |
| (a j_common_ptr which points to either a jpeg_compress_struct or a
 | |
| jpeg_decompress_struct; if you need to tell which, test the is_decompressor
 | |
| field).  This struct includes a pointer to the error manager struct in its
 | |
| "err" field.  Frequently, custom error handler routines will need to access
 | |
| additional data which is not known to the JPEG library or the standard error
 | |
| handler.  The most convenient way to do this is to embed either the JPEG
 | |
| object or the jpeg_error_mgr struct in a larger structure that contains
 | |
| additional fields; then casting the passed pointer provides access to the
 | |
| additional fields.  Again, see example.c for one way to do it.  (Beginning
 | |
| with IJG version 6b, there is also a void pointer "client_data" in each
 | |
| JPEG object, which the application can also use to find related data.
 | |
| The library does not touch client_data at all.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| The individual methods that you might wish to override are:
 | |
| 
 | |
| error_exit (j_common_ptr cinfo)
 | |
| 	Receives control for a fatal error.  Information sufficient to
 | |
| 	generate the error message has been stored in cinfo->err; call
 | |
| 	output_message to display it.  Control must NOT return to the caller;
 | |
| 	generally this routine will exit() or longjmp() somewhere.
 | |
| 	Typically you would override this routine to get rid of the exit()
 | |
| 	default behavior.  Note that if you continue processing, you should
 | |
| 	clean up the JPEG object with jpeg_abort() or jpeg_destroy().
 | |
| 
 | |
| output_message (j_common_ptr cinfo)
 | |
| 	Actual output of any JPEG message.  Override this to send messages
 | |
| 	somewhere other than stderr.  Note that this method does not know
 | |
| 	how to generate a message, only where to send it.
 | |
| 
 | |
| format_message (j_common_ptr cinfo, char * buffer)
 | |
| 	Constructs a readable error message string based on the error info
 | |
| 	stored in cinfo->err.  This method is called by output_message.  Few
 | |
| 	applications should need to override this method.  One possible
 | |
| 	reason for doing so is to implement dynamic switching of error message
 | |
| 	language.
 | |
| 
 | |
| emit_message (j_common_ptr cinfo, int msg_level)
 | |
| 	Decide whether or not to emit a warning or trace message; if so,
 | |
| 	calls output_message.  The main reason for overriding this method
 | |
| 	would be to abort on warnings.  msg_level is -1 for warnings,
 | |
| 	0 and up for trace messages.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Only error_exit() and emit_message() are called from the rest of the JPEG
 | |
| library; the other two are internal to the error handler.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The actual message texts are stored in an array of strings which is pointed to
 | |
| by the field err->jpeg_message_table.  The messages are numbered from 0 to
 | |
| err->last_jpeg_message, and it is these code numbers that are used in the
 | |
| JPEG library code.  You could replace the message texts (for instance, with
 | |
| messages in French or German) by changing the message table pointer.  See
 | |
| jerror.h for the default texts.  CAUTION: this table will almost certainly
 | |
| change or grow from one library version to the next.
 | |
| 
 | |
| It may be useful for an application to add its own message texts that are
 | |
| handled by the same mechanism.  The error handler supports a second "add-on"
 | |
| message table for this purpose.  To define an addon table, set the pointer
 | |
| err->addon_message_table and the message numbers err->first_addon_message and
 | |
| err->last_addon_message.  If you number the addon messages beginning at 1000
 | |
| or so, you won't have to worry about conflicts with the library's built-in
 | |
| messages.  See the sample applications cjpeg/djpeg for an example of using
 | |
| addon messages (the addon messages are defined in cderror.h).
 | |
| 
 | |
| Actual invocation of the error handler is done via macros defined in jerror.h:
 | |
| 	ERREXITn(...)	for fatal errors
 | |
| 	WARNMSn(...)	for corrupt-data warnings
 | |
| 	TRACEMSn(...)	for trace and informational messages.
 | |
| These macros store the message code and any additional parameters into the
 | |
| error handler struct, then invoke the error_exit() or emit_message() method.
 | |
| The variants of each macro are for varying numbers of additional parameters.
 | |
| The additional parameters are inserted into the generated message using
 | |
| standard printf() format codes.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See jerror.h and jerror.c for further details.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Compressed data handling (source and destination managers)
 | |
| ----------------------------------------------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| The JPEG compression library sends its compressed data to a "destination
 | |
| manager" module.  The default destination manager just writes the data to a
 | |
| memory buffer or to a stdio stream, but you can provide your own manager to
 | |
| do something else.  Similarly, the decompression library calls a "source
 | |
| manager" to obtain the compressed data; you can provide your own source
 | |
| manager if you want the data to come from somewhere other than a memory
 | |
| buffer or a stdio stream.
 | |
| 
 | |
| In both cases, compressed data is processed a bufferload at a time: the
 | |
| destination or source manager provides a work buffer, and the library invokes
 | |
| the manager only when the buffer is filled or emptied.  (You could define a
 | |
| one-character buffer to force the manager to be invoked for each byte, but
 | |
| that would be rather inefficient.)  The buffer's size and location are
 | |
| controlled by the manager, not by the library.  For example, the memory
 | |
| source manager just makes the buffer pointer and length point to the original
 | |
| data in memory.  In this case the buffer-reload procedure will be invoked
 | |
| only if the decompressor ran off the end of the datastream, which would
 | |
| indicate an erroneous datastream.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The work buffer is defined as an array of datatype JOCTET, which is generally
 | |
| "char" or "unsigned char".  On a machine where char is not exactly 8 bits
 | |
| wide, you must define JOCTET as a wider data type and then modify the data
 | |
| source and destination modules to transcribe the work arrays into 8-bit units
 | |
| on external storage.
 | |
| 
 | |
| A data destination manager struct contains a pointer and count defining the
 | |
| next byte to write in the work buffer and the remaining free space:
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	JOCTET * next_output_byte;  /* => next byte to write in buffer */
 | |
| 	size_t free_in_buffer;      /* # of byte spaces remaining in buffer */
 | |
| 
 | |
| The library increments the pointer and decrements the count until the buffer
 | |
| is filled.  The manager's empty_output_buffer method must reset the pointer
 | |
| and count.  The manager is expected to remember the buffer's starting address
 | |
| and total size in private fields not visible to the library.
 | |
| 
 | |
| A data destination manager provides three methods:
 | |
| 
 | |
| init_destination (j_compress_ptr cinfo)
 | |
| 	Initialize destination.  This is called by jpeg_start_compress()
 | |
| 	before any data is actually written.  It must initialize
 | |
| 	next_output_byte and free_in_buffer.  free_in_buffer must be
 | |
| 	initialized to a positive value.
 | |
| 
 | |
| empty_output_buffer (j_compress_ptr cinfo)
 | |
| 	This is called whenever the buffer has filled (free_in_buffer
 | |
| 	reaches zero).  In typical applications, it should write out the
 | |
| 	*entire* buffer (use the saved start address and buffer length;
 | |
| 	ignore the current state of next_output_byte and free_in_buffer).
 | |
| 	Then reset the pointer & count to the start of the buffer, and
 | |
| 	return TRUE indicating that the buffer has been dumped.
 | |
| 	free_in_buffer must be set to a positive value when TRUE is
 | |
| 	returned.  A FALSE return should only be used when I/O suspension is
 | |
| 	desired (this operating mode is discussed in the next section).
 | |
| 
 | |
| term_destination (j_compress_ptr cinfo)
 | |
| 	Terminate destination --- called by jpeg_finish_compress() after all
 | |
| 	data has been written.  In most applications, this must flush any
 | |
| 	data remaining in the buffer.  Use either next_output_byte or
 | |
| 	free_in_buffer to determine how much data is in the buffer.
 | |
| 
 | |
| term_destination() is NOT called by jpeg_abort() or jpeg_destroy().  If you
 | |
| want the destination manager to be cleaned up during an abort, you must do it
 | |
| yourself.
 | |
| 
 | |
| You will also need code to create a jpeg_destination_mgr struct, fill in its
 | |
| method pointers, and insert a pointer to the struct into the "dest" field of
 | |
| the JPEG compression object.  This can be done in-line in your setup code if
 | |
| you like, but it's probably cleaner to provide a separate routine similar to
 | |
| the jpeg_stdio_dest() or jpeg_mem_dest() routines of the supplied destination
 | |
| managers.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Decompression source managers follow a parallel design, but with some
 | |
| additional frammishes.  The source manager struct contains a pointer and count
 | |
| defining the next byte to read from the work buffer and the number of bytes
 | |
| remaining:
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	const JOCTET * next_input_byte; /* => next byte to read from buffer */
 | |
| 	size_t bytes_in_buffer;         /* # of bytes remaining in buffer */
 | |
| 
 | |
| The library increments the pointer and decrements the count until the buffer
 | |
| is emptied.  The manager's fill_input_buffer method must reset the pointer and
 | |
| count.  In most applications, the manager must remember the buffer's starting
 | |
| address and total size in private fields not visible to the library.
 | |
| 
 | |
| A data source manager provides five methods:
 | |
| 
 | |
| init_source (j_decompress_ptr cinfo)
 | |
| 	Initialize source.  This is called by jpeg_read_header() before any
 | |
| 	data is actually read.  Unlike init_destination(), it may leave
 | |
| 	bytes_in_buffer set to 0 (in which case a fill_input_buffer() call
 | |
| 	will occur immediately).
 | |
| 
 | |
| fill_input_buffer (j_decompress_ptr cinfo)
 | |
| 	This is called whenever bytes_in_buffer has reached zero and more
 | |
| 	data is wanted.  In typical applications, it should read fresh data
 | |
| 	into the buffer (ignoring the current state of next_input_byte and
 | |
| 	bytes_in_buffer), reset the pointer & count to the start of the
 | |
| 	buffer, and return TRUE indicating that the buffer has been reloaded.
 | |
| 	It is not necessary to fill the buffer entirely, only to obtain at
 | |
| 	least one more byte.  bytes_in_buffer MUST be set to a positive value
 | |
| 	if TRUE is returned.  A FALSE return should only be used when I/O
 | |
| 	suspension is desired (this mode is discussed in the next section).
 | |
| 
 | |
| skip_input_data (j_decompress_ptr cinfo, long num_bytes)
 | |
| 	Skip num_bytes worth of data.  The buffer pointer and count should
 | |
| 	be advanced over num_bytes input bytes, refilling the buffer as
 | |
| 	needed.  This is used to skip over a potentially large amount of
 | |
| 	uninteresting data (such as an APPn marker).  In some applications
 | |
| 	it may be possible to optimize away the reading of the skipped data,
 | |
| 	but it's not clear that being smart is worth much trouble; large
 | |
| 	skips are uncommon.  bytes_in_buffer may be zero on return.
 | |
| 	A zero or negative skip count should be treated as a no-op.
 | |
| 
 | |
| resync_to_restart (j_decompress_ptr cinfo, int desired)
 | |
| 	This routine is called only when the decompressor has failed to find
 | |
| 	a restart (RSTn) marker where one is expected.  Its mission is to
 | |
| 	find a suitable point for resuming decompression.  For most
 | |
| 	applications, we recommend that you just use the default resync
 | |
| 	procedure, jpeg_resync_to_restart().  However, if you are able to back
 | |
| 	up in the input data stream, or if you have a-priori knowledge about
 | |
| 	the likely location of restart markers, you may be able to do better.
 | |
| 	Read the read_restart_marker() and jpeg_resync_to_restart() routines
 | |
| 	in jdmarker.c if you think you'd like to implement your own resync
 | |
| 	procedure.
 | |
| 
 | |
| term_source (j_decompress_ptr cinfo)
 | |
| 	Terminate source --- called by jpeg_finish_decompress() after all
 | |
| 	data has been read.  Often a no-op.
 | |
| 
 | |
| For both fill_input_buffer() and skip_input_data(), there is no such thing
 | |
| as an EOF return.  If the end of the file has been reached, the routine has
 | |
| a choice of exiting via ERREXIT() or inserting fake data into the buffer.
 | |
| In most cases, generating a warning message and inserting a fake EOI marker
 | |
| is the best course of action --- this will allow the decompressor to output
 | |
| however much of the image is there.  In pathological cases, the decompressor
 | |
| may swallow the EOI and again demand data ... just keep feeding it fake EOIs.
 | |
| jdatasrc.c illustrates the recommended error recovery behavior.
 | |
| 
 | |
| term_source() is NOT called by jpeg_abort() or jpeg_destroy().  If you want
 | |
| the source manager to be cleaned up during an abort, you must do it yourself.
 | |
| 
 | |
| You will also need code to create a jpeg_source_mgr struct, fill in its method
 | |
| pointers, and insert a pointer to the struct into the "src" field of the JPEG
 | |
| decompression object.  This can be done in-line in your setup code if you
 | |
| like, but it's probably cleaner to provide a separate routine similar to the
 | |
| jpeg_stdio_src() or jpeg_mem_src() routines of the supplied source managers.
 | |
| 
 | |
| For more information, consult the memory and stdio source and destination
 | |
| managers in jdatasrc.c and jdatadst.c.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| I/O suspension
 | |
| --------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| Some applications need to use the JPEG library as an incremental memory-to-
 | |
| memory filter: when the compressed data buffer is filled or emptied, they want
 | |
| control to return to the outer loop, rather than expecting that the buffer can
 | |
| be emptied or reloaded within the data source/destination manager subroutine.
 | |
| The library supports this need by providing an "I/O suspension" mode, which we
 | |
| describe in this section.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The I/O suspension mode is not a panacea: nothing is guaranteed about the
 | |
| maximum amount of time spent in any one call to the library, so it will not
 | |
| eliminate response-time problems in single-threaded applications.  If you
 | |
| need guaranteed response time, we suggest you "bite the bullet" and implement
 | |
| a real multi-tasking capability.
 | |
| 
 | |
| To use I/O suspension, cooperation is needed between the calling application
 | |
| and the data source or destination manager; you will always need a custom
 | |
| source/destination manager.  (Please read the previous section if you haven't
 | |
| already.)  The basic idea is that the empty_output_buffer() or
 | |
| fill_input_buffer() routine is a no-op, merely returning FALSE to indicate
 | |
| that it has done nothing.  Upon seeing this, the JPEG library suspends
 | |
| operation and returns to its caller.  The surrounding application is
 | |
| responsible for emptying or refilling the work buffer before calling the
 | |
| JPEG library again.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Compression suspension:
 | |
| 
 | |
| For compression suspension, use an empty_output_buffer() routine that returns
 | |
| FALSE; typically it will not do anything else.  This will cause the
 | |
| compressor to return to the caller of jpeg_write_scanlines(), with the return
 | |
| value indicating that not all the supplied scanlines have been accepted.
 | |
| The application must make more room in the output buffer, adjust the output
 | |
| buffer pointer/count appropriately, and then call jpeg_write_scanlines()
 | |
| again, pointing to the first unconsumed scanline.
 | |
| 
 | |
| When forced to suspend, the compressor will backtrack to a convenient stopping
 | |
| point (usually the start of the current MCU); it will regenerate some output
 | |
| data when restarted.  Therefore, although empty_output_buffer() is only
 | |
| called when the buffer is filled, you should NOT write out the entire buffer
 | |
| after a suspension.  Write only the data up to the current position of
 | |
| next_output_byte/free_in_buffer.  The data beyond that point will be
 | |
| regenerated after resumption.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Because of the backtracking behavior, a good-size output buffer is essential
 | |
| for efficiency; you don't want the compressor to suspend often.  (In fact, an
 | |
| overly small buffer could lead to infinite looping, if a single MCU required
 | |
| more data than would fit in the buffer.)  We recommend a buffer of at least
 | |
| several Kbytes.  You may want to insert explicit code to ensure that you don't
 | |
| call jpeg_write_scanlines() unless there is a reasonable amount of space in
 | |
| the output buffer; in other words, flush the buffer before trying to compress
 | |
| more data.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The compressor does not allow suspension while it is trying to write JPEG
 | |
| markers at the beginning and end of the file.  This means that:
 | |
|   * At the beginning of a compression operation, there must be enough free
 | |
|     space in the output buffer to hold the header markers (typically 600 or
 | |
|     so bytes).  The recommended buffer size is bigger than this anyway, so
 | |
|     this is not a problem as long as you start with an empty buffer.  However,
 | |
|     this restriction might catch you if you insert large special markers, such
 | |
|     as a JFIF thumbnail image, without flushing the buffer afterwards.
 | |
|   * When you call jpeg_finish_compress(), there must be enough space in the
 | |
|     output buffer to emit any buffered data and the final EOI marker.  In the
 | |
|     current implementation, half a dozen bytes should suffice for this, but
 | |
|     for safety's sake we recommend ensuring that at least 100 bytes are free
 | |
|     before calling jpeg_finish_compress().
 | |
| 
 | |
| A more significant restriction is that jpeg_finish_compress() cannot suspend.
 | |
| This means you cannot use suspension with multi-pass operating modes, namely
 | |
| Huffman code optimization and multiple-scan output.  Those modes write the
 | |
| whole file during jpeg_finish_compress(), which will certainly result in
 | |
| buffer overrun.  (Note that this restriction applies only to compression,
 | |
| not decompression.  The decompressor supports input suspension in all of its
 | |
| operating modes.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| Decompression suspension:
 | |
| 
 | |
| For decompression suspension, use a fill_input_buffer() routine that simply
 | |
| returns FALSE (except perhaps during error recovery, as discussed below).
 | |
| This will cause the decompressor to return to its caller with an indication
 | |
| that suspension has occurred.  This can happen at four places:
 | |
|   * jpeg_read_header(): will return JPEG_SUSPENDED.
 | |
|   * jpeg_start_decompress(): will return FALSE, rather than its usual TRUE.
 | |
|   * jpeg_read_scanlines(): will return the number of scanlines already
 | |
| 	completed (possibly 0).
 | |
|   * jpeg_finish_decompress(): will return FALSE, rather than its usual TRUE.
 | |
| The surrounding application must recognize these cases, load more data into
 | |
| the input buffer, and repeat the call.  In the case of jpeg_read_scanlines(),
 | |
| increment the passed pointers past any scanlines successfully read.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Just as with compression, the decompressor will typically backtrack to a
 | |
| convenient restart point before suspending.  When fill_input_buffer() is
 | |
| called, next_input_byte/bytes_in_buffer point to the current restart point,
 | |
| which is where the decompressor will backtrack to if FALSE is returned.
 | |
| The data beyond that position must NOT be discarded if you suspend; it needs
 | |
| to be re-read upon resumption.  In most implementations, you'll need to shift
 | |
| this data down to the start of your work buffer and then load more data after
 | |
| it.  Again, this behavior means that a several-Kbyte work buffer is essential
 | |
| for decent performance; furthermore, you should load a reasonable amount of
 | |
| new data before resuming decompression.  (If you loaded, say, only one new
 | |
| byte each time around, you could waste a LOT of cycles.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| The skip_input_data() source manager routine requires special care in a
 | |
| suspension scenario.  This routine is NOT granted the ability to suspend the
 | |
| decompressor; it can decrement bytes_in_buffer to zero, but no more.  If the
 | |
| requested skip distance exceeds the amount of data currently in the input
 | |
| buffer, then skip_input_data() must set bytes_in_buffer to zero and record the
 | |
| additional skip distance somewhere else.  The decompressor will immediately
 | |
| call fill_input_buffer(), which should return FALSE, which will cause a
 | |
| suspension return.  The surrounding application must then arrange to discard
 | |
| the recorded number of bytes before it resumes loading the input buffer.
 | |
| (Yes, this design is rather baroque, but it avoids complexity in the far more
 | |
| common case where a non-suspending source manager is used.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| If the input data has been exhausted, we recommend that you emit a warning
 | |
| and insert dummy EOI markers just as a non-suspending data source manager
 | |
| would do.  This can be handled either in the surrounding application logic or
 | |
| within fill_input_buffer(); the latter is probably more efficient.  If
 | |
| fill_input_buffer() knows that no more data is available, it can set the
 | |
| pointer/count to point to a dummy EOI marker and then return TRUE just as
 | |
| though it had read more data in a non-suspending situation.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The decompressor does not attempt to suspend within standard JPEG markers;
 | |
| instead it will backtrack to the start of the marker and reprocess the whole
 | |
| marker next time.  Hence the input buffer must be large enough to hold the
 | |
| longest standard marker in the file.  Standard JPEG markers should normally
 | |
| not exceed a few hundred bytes each (DHT tables are typically the longest).
 | |
| We recommend at least a 2K buffer for performance reasons, which is much
 | |
| larger than any correct marker is likely to be.  For robustness against
 | |
| damaged marker length counts, you may wish to insert a test in your
 | |
| application for the case that the input buffer is completely full and yet
 | |
| the decoder has suspended without consuming any data --- otherwise, if this
 | |
| situation did occur, it would lead to an endless loop.  (The library can't
 | |
| provide this test since it has no idea whether "the buffer is full", or
 | |
| even whether there is a fixed-size input buffer.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| The input buffer would need to be 64K to allow for arbitrary COM or APPn
 | |
| markers, but these are handled specially: they are either saved into allocated
 | |
| memory, or skipped over by calling skip_input_data().  In the former case,
 | |
| suspension is handled correctly, and in the latter case, the problem of
 | |
| buffer overrun is placed on skip_input_data's shoulders, as explained above.
 | |
| Note that if you provide your own marker handling routine for large markers,
 | |
| you should consider how to deal with buffer overflow.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Multiple-buffer management:
 | |
| 
 | |
| In some applications it is desirable to store the compressed data in a linked
 | |
| list of buffer areas, so as to avoid data copying.  This can be handled by
 | |
| having empty_output_buffer() or fill_input_buffer() set the pointer and count
 | |
| to reference the next available buffer; FALSE is returned only if no more
 | |
| buffers are available.  Although seemingly straightforward, there is a
 | |
| pitfall in this approach: the backtrack that occurs when FALSE is returned
 | |
| could back up into an earlier buffer.  For example, when fill_input_buffer()
 | |
| is called, the current pointer & count indicate the backtrack restart point.
 | |
| Since fill_input_buffer() will set the pointer and count to refer to a new
 | |
| buffer, the restart position must be saved somewhere else.  Suppose a second
 | |
| call to fill_input_buffer() occurs in the same library call, and no
 | |
| additional input data is available, so fill_input_buffer must return FALSE.
 | |
| If the JPEG library has not moved the pointer/count forward in the current
 | |
| buffer, then *the correct restart point is the saved position in the prior
 | |
| buffer*.  Prior buffers may be discarded only after the library establishes
 | |
| a restart point within a later buffer.  Similar remarks apply for output into
 | |
| a chain of buffers.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The library will never attempt to backtrack over a skip_input_data() call,
 | |
| so any skipped data can be permanently discarded.  You still have to deal
 | |
| with the case of skipping not-yet-received data, however.
 | |
| 
 | |
| It's much simpler to use only a single buffer; when fill_input_buffer() is
 | |
| called, move any unconsumed data (beyond the current pointer/count) down to
 | |
| the beginning of this buffer and then load new data into the remaining buffer
 | |
| space.  This approach requires a little more data copying but is far easier
 | |
| to get right.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Progressive JPEG support
 | |
| ------------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| Progressive JPEG rearranges the stored data into a series of scans of
 | |
| increasing quality.  In situations where a JPEG file is transmitted across a
 | |
| slow communications link, a decoder can generate a low-quality image very
 | |
| quickly from the first scan, then gradually improve the displayed quality as
 | |
| more scans are received.  The final image after all scans are complete is
 | |
| identical to that of a regular (sequential) JPEG file of the same quality
 | |
| setting.  Progressive JPEG files are often slightly smaller than equivalent
 | |
| sequential JPEG files, but the possibility of incremental display is the main
 | |
| reason for using progressive JPEG.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The IJG encoder library generates progressive JPEG files when given a
 | |
| suitable "scan script" defining how to divide the data into scans.
 | |
| Creation of progressive JPEG files is otherwise transparent to the encoder.
 | |
| Progressive JPEG files can also be read transparently by the decoder library.
 | |
| If the decoding application simply uses the library as defined above, it
 | |
| will receive a final decoded image without any indication that the file was
 | |
| progressive.  Of course, this approach does not allow incremental display.
 | |
| To perform incremental display, an application needs to use the decoder
 | |
| library's "buffered-image" mode, in which it receives a decoded image
 | |
| multiple times.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Each displayed scan requires about as much work to decode as a full JPEG
 | |
| image of the same size, so the decoder must be fairly fast in relation to the
 | |
| data transmission rate in order to make incremental display useful.  However,
 | |
| it is possible to skip displaying the image and simply add the incoming bits
 | |
| to the decoder's coefficient buffer.  This is fast because only Huffman
 | |
| decoding need be done, not IDCT, upsampling, colorspace conversion, etc.
 | |
| The IJG decoder library allows the application to switch dynamically between
 | |
| displaying the image and simply absorbing the incoming bits.  A properly
 | |
| coded application can automatically adapt the number of display passes to
 | |
| suit the time available as the image is received.  Also, a final
 | |
| higher-quality display cycle can be performed from the buffered data after
 | |
| the end of the file is reached.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Progressive compression:
 | |
| 
 | |
| To create a progressive JPEG file (or a multiple-scan sequential JPEG file),
 | |
| set the scan_info cinfo field to point to an array of scan descriptors, and
 | |
| perform compression as usual.  Instead of constructing your own scan list,
 | |
| you can call the jpeg_simple_progression() helper routine to create a
 | |
| recommended progression sequence; this method should be used by all
 | |
| applications that don't want to get involved in the nitty-gritty of
 | |
| progressive scan sequence design.  (If you want to provide user control of
 | |
| scan sequences, you may wish to borrow the scan script reading code found
 | |
| in rdswitch.c, so that you can read scan script files just like cjpeg's.)
 | |
| When scan_info is not NULL, the compression library will store DCT'd data
 | |
| into a buffer array as jpeg_write_scanlines() is called, and will emit all
 | |
| the requested scans during jpeg_finish_compress().  This implies that
 | |
| multiple-scan output cannot be created with a suspending data destination
 | |
| manager, since jpeg_finish_compress() does not support suspension.  We
 | |
| should also note that the compressor currently forces Huffman optimization
 | |
| mode when creating a progressive JPEG file, because the default Huffman
 | |
| tables are unsuitable for progressive files.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Progressive decompression:
 | |
| 
 | |
| When buffered-image mode is not used, the decoder library will read all of
 | |
| a multi-scan file during jpeg_start_decompress(), so that it can provide a
 | |
| final decoded image.  (Here "multi-scan" means either progressive or
 | |
| multi-scan sequential.)  This makes multi-scan files transparent to the
 | |
| decoding application.  However, existing applications that used suspending
 | |
| input with version 5 of the IJG library will need to be modified to check
 | |
| for a suspension return from jpeg_start_decompress().
 | |
| 
 | |
| To perform incremental display, an application must use the library's
 | |
| buffered-image mode.  This is described in the next section.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Buffered-image mode
 | |
| -------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| In buffered-image mode, the library stores the partially decoded image in a
 | |
| coefficient buffer, from which it can be read out as many times as desired.
 | |
| This mode is typically used for incremental display of progressive JPEG files,
 | |
| but it can be used with any JPEG file.  Each scan of a progressive JPEG file
 | |
| adds more data (more detail) to the buffered image.  The application can
 | |
| display in lockstep with the source file (one display pass per input scan),
 | |
| or it can allow input processing to outrun display processing.  By making
 | |
| input and display processing run independently, it is possible for the
 | |
| application to adapt progressive display to a wide range of data transmission
 | |
| rates.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The basic control flow for buffered-image decoding is
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	jpeg_create_decompress()
 | |
| 	set data source
 | |
| 	jpeg_read_header()
 | |
| 	set overall decompression parameters
 | |
| 	cinfo.buffered_image = TRUE;	/* select buffered-image mode */
 | |
| 	jpeg_start_decompress()
 | |
| 	for (each output pass) {
 | |
| 	    adjust output decompression parameters if required
 | |
| 	    jpeg_start_output()		/* start a new output pass */
 | |
| 	    for (all scanlines in image) {
 | |
| 	        jpeg_read_scanlines()
 | |
| 	        display scanlines
 | |
| 	    }
 | |
| 	    jpeg_finish_output()	/* terminate output pass */
 | |
| 	}
 | |
| 	jpeg_finish_decompress()
 | |
| 	jpeg_destroy_decompress()
 | |
| 
 | |
| This differs from ordinary unbuffered decoding in that there is an additional
 | |
| level of looping.  The application can choose how many output passes to make
 | |
| and how to display each pass.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The simplest approach to displaying progressive images is to do one display
 | |
| pass for each scan appearing in the input file.  In this case the outer loop
 | |
| condition is typically
 | |
| 	while (! jpeg_input_complete(&cinfo))
 | |
| and the start-output call should read
 | |
| 	jpeg_start_output(&cinfo, cinfo.input_scan_number);
 | |
| The second parameter to jpeg_start_output() indicates which scan of the input
 | |
| file is to be displayed; the scans are numbered starting at 1 for this
 | |
| purpose.  (You can use a loop counter starting at 1 if you like, but using
 | |
| the library's input scan counter is easier.)  The library automatically reads
 | |
| data as necessary to complete each requested scan, and jpeg_finish_output()
 | |
| advances to the next scan or end-of-image marker (hence input_scan_number
 | |
| will be incremented by the time control arrives back at jpeg_start_output()).
 | |
| With this technique, data is read from the input file only as needed, and
 | |
| input and output processing run in lockstep.
 | |
| 
 | |
| After reading the final scan and reaching the end of the input file, the
 | |
| buffered image remains available; it can be read additional times by
 | |
| repeating the jpeg_start_output()/jpeg_read_scanlines()/jpeg_finish_output()
 | |
| sequence.  For example, a useful technique is to use fast one-pass color
 | |
| quantization for display passes made while the image is arriving, followed by
 | |
| a final display pass using two-pass quantization for highest quality.  This
 | |
| is done by changing the library parameters before the final output pass.
 | |
| Changing parameters between passes is discussed in detail below.
 | |
| 
 | |
| In general the last scan of a progressive file cannot be recognized as such
 | |
| until after it is read, so a post-input display pass is the best approach if
 | |
| you want special processing in the final pass.
 | |
| 
 | |
| When done with the image, be sure to call jpeg_finish_decompress() to release
 | |
| the buffered image (or just use jpeg_destroy_decompress()).
 | |
| 
 | |
| If input data arrives faster than it can be displayed, the application can
 | |
| cause the library to decode input data in advance of what's needed to produce
 | |
| output.  This is done by calling the routine jpeg_consume_input().
 | |
| The return value is one of the following:
 | |
| 	JPEG_REACHED_SOS:    reached an SOS marker (the start of a new scan)
 | |
| 	JPEG_REACHED_EOI:    reached the EOI marker (end of image)
 | |
| 	JPEG_ROW_COMPLETED:  completed reading one MCU row of compressed data
 | |
| 	JPEG_SCAN_COMPLETED: completed reading last MCU row of current scan
 | |
| 	JPEG_SUSPENDED:      suspended before completing any of the above
 | |
| (JPEG_SUSPENDED can occur only if a suspending data source is used.)  This
 | |
| routine can be called at any time after initializing the JPEG object.  It
 | |
| reads some additional data and returns when one of the indicated significant
 | |
| events occurs.  (If called after the EOI marker is reached, it will
 | |
| immediately return JPEG_REACHED_EOI without attempting to read more data.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| The library's output processing will automatically call jpeg_consume_input()
 | |
| whenever the output processing overtakes the input; thus, simple lockstep
 | |
| display requires no direct calls to jpeg_consume_input().  But by adding
 | |
| calls to jpeg_consume_input(), you can absorb data in advance of what is
 | |
| being displayed.  This has two benefits:
 | |
|   * You can limit buildup of unprocessed data in your input buffer.
 | |
|   * You can eliminate extra display passes by paying attention to the
 | |
|     state of the library's input processing.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The first of these benefits only requires interspersing calls to
 | |
| jpeg_consume_input() with your display operations and any other processing
 | |
| you may be doing.  To avoid wasting cycles due to backtracking, it's best to
 | |
| call jpeg_consume_input() only after a hundred or so new bytes have arrived.
 | |
| This is discussed further under "I/O suspension", above.  (Note: the JPEG
 | |
| library currently is not thread-safe.  You must not call jpeg_consume_input()
 | |
| from one thread of control if a different library routine is working on the
 | |
| same JPEG object in another thread.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| When input arrives fast enough that more than one new scan is available
 | |
| before you start a new output pass, you may as well skip the output pass
 | |
| corresponding to the completed scan.  This occurs for free if you pass
 | |
| cinfo.input_scan_number as the target scan number to jpeg_start_output().
 | |
| The input_scan_number field is simply the index of the scan currently being
 | |
| consumed by the input processor.  You can ensure that this is up-to-date by
 | |
| emptying the input buffer just before calling jpeg_start_output(): call
 | |
| jpeg_consume_input() repeatedly until it returns JPEG_SUSPENDED or
 | |
| JPEG_REACHED_EOI.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The target scan number passed to jpeg_start_output() is saved in the
 | |
| cinfo.output_scan_number field.  The library's output processing calls
 | |
| jpeg_consume_input() whenever the current input scan number and row within
 | |
| that scan is less than or equal to the current output scan number and row.
 | |
| Thus, input processing can "get ahead" of the output processing but is not
 | |
| allowed to "fall behind".  You can achieve several different effects by
 | |
| manipulating this interlock rule.  For example, if you pass a target scan
 | |
| number greater than the current input scan number, the output processor will
 | |
| wait until that scan starts to arrive before producing any output.  (To avoid
 | |
| an infinite loop, the target scan number is automatically reset to the last
 | |
| scan number when the end of image is reached.  Thus, if you specify a large
 | |
| target scan number, the library will just absorb the entire input file and
 | |
| then perform an output pass.  This is effectively the same as what
 | |
| jpeg_start_decompress() does when you don't select buffered-image mode.)
 | |
| When you pass a target scan number equal to the current input scan number,
 | |
| the image is displayed no faster than the current input scan arrives.  The
 | |
| final possibility is to pass a target scan number less than the current input
 | |
| scan number; this disables the input/output interlock and causes the output
 | |
| processor to simply display whatever it finds in the image buffer, without
 | |
| waiting for input.  (However, the library will not accept a target scan
 | |
| number less than one, so you can't avoid waiting for the first scan.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| When data is arriving faster than the output display processing can advance
 | |
| through the image, jpeg_consume_input() will store data into the buffered
 | |
| image beyond the point at which the output processing is reading data out
 | |
| again.  If the input arrives fast enough, it may "wrap around" the buffer to
 | |
| the point where the input is more than one whole scan ahead of the output.
 | |
| If the output processing simply proceeds through its display pass without
 | |
| paying attention to the input, the effect seen on-screen is that the lower
 | |
| part of the image is one or more scans better in quality than the upper part.
 | |
| Then, when the next output scan is started, you have a choice of what target
 | |
| scan number to use.  The recommended choice is to use the current input scan
 | |
| number at that time, which implies that you've skipped the output scans
 | |
| corresponding to the input scans that were completed while you processed the
 | |
| previous output scan.  In this way, the decoder automatically adapts its
 | |
| speed to the arriving data, by skipping output scans as necessary to keep up
 | |
| with the arriving data.
 | |
| 
 | |
| When using this strategy, you'll want to be sure that you perform a final
 | |
| output pass after receiving all the data; otherwise your last display may not
 | |
| be full quality across the whole screen.  So the right outer loop logic is
 | |
| something like this:
 | |
| 	do {
 | |
| 	    absorb any waiting input by calling jpeg_consume_input()
 | |
| 	    final_pass = jpeg_input_complete(&cinfo);
 | |
| 	    adjust output decompression parameters if required
 | |
| 	    jpeg_start_output(&cinfo, cinfo.input_scan_number);
 | |
| 	    ...
 | |
| 	    jpeg_finish_output()
 | |
| 	} while (! final_pass);
 | |
| rather than quitting as soon as jpeg_input_complete() returns TRUE.  This
 | |
| arrangement makes it simple to use higher-quality decoding parameters
 | |
| for the final pass.  But if you don't want to use special parameters for
 | |
| the final pass, the right loop logic is like this:
 | |
| 	for (;;) {
 | |
| 	    absorb any waiting input by calling jpeg_consume_input()
 | |
| 	    jpeg_start_output(&cinfo, cinfo.input_scan_number);
 | |
| 	    ...
 | |
| 	    jpeg_finish_output()
 | |
| 	    if (jpeg_input_complete(&cinfo) &&
 | |
| 	        cinfo.input_scan_number == cinfo.output_scan_number)
 | |
| 	      break;
 | |
| 	}
 | |
| In this case you don't need to know in advance whether an output pass is to
 | |
| be the last one, so it's not necessary to have reached EOF before starting
 | |
| the final output pass; rather, what you want to test is whether the output
 | |
| pass was performed in sync with the final input scan.  This form of the loop
 | |
| will avoid an extra output pass whenever the decoder is able (or nearly able)
 | |
| to keep up with the incoming data.
 | |
| 
 | |
| When the data transmission speed is high, you might begin a display pass,
 | |
| then find that much or all of the file has arrived before you can complete
 | |
| the pass.  (You can detect this by noting the JPEG_REACHED_EOI return code
 | |
| from jpeg_consume_input(), or equivalently by testing jpeg_input_complete().)
 | |
| In this situation you may wish to abort the current display pass and start a
 | |
| new one using the newly arrived information.  To do so, just call
 | |
| jpeg_finish_output() and then start a new pass with jpeg_start_output().
 | |
| 
 | |
| A variant strategy is to abort and restart display if more than one complete
 | |
| scan arrives during an output pass; this can be detected by noting
 | |
| JPEG_REACHED_SOS returns and/or examining cinfo.input_scan_number.  This
 | |
| idea should be employed with caution, however, since the display process
 | |
| might never get to the bottom of the image before being aborted, resulting
 | |
| in the lower part of the screen being several passes worse than the upper.
 | |
| In most cases it's probably best to abort an output pass only if the whole
 | |
| file has arrived and you want to begin the final output pass immediately.
 | |
| 
 | |
| When receiving data across a communication link, we recommend always using
 | |
| the current input scan number for the output target scan number; if a
 | |
| higher-quality final pass is to be done, it should be started (aborting any
 | |
| incomplete output pass) as soon as the end of file is received.  However,
 | |
| many other strategies are possible.  For example, the application can examine
 | |
| the parameters of the current input scan and decide whether to display it or
 | |
| not.  If the scan contains only chroma data, one might choose not to use it
 | |
| as the target scan, expecting that the scan will be small and will arrive
 | |
| quickly.  To skip to the next scan, call jpeg_consume_input() until it
 | |
| returns JPEG_REACHED_SOS or JPEG_REACHED_EOI.  Or just use the next higher
 | |
| number as the target scan for jpeg_start_output(); but that method doesn't
 | |
| let you inspect the next scan's parameters before deciding to display it.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| In buffered-image mode, jpeg_start_decompress() never performs input and
 | |
| thus never suspends.  An application that uses input suspension with
 | |
| buffered-image mode must be prepared for suspension returns from these
 | |
| routines:
 | |
| * jpeg_start_output() performs input only if you request 2-pass quantization
 | |
|   and the target scan isn't fully read yet.  (This is discussed below.)
 | |
| * jpeg_read_scanlines(), as always, returns the number of scanlines that it
 | |
|   was able to produce before suspending.
 | |
| * jpeg_finish_output() will read any markers following the target scan,
 | |
|   up to the end of the file or the SOS marker that begins another scan.
 | |
|   (But it reads no input if jpeg_consume_input() has already reached the
 | |
|   end of the file or a SOS marker beyond the target output scan.)
 | |
| * jpeg_finish_decompress() will read until the end of file, and thus can
 | |
|   suspend if the end hasn't already been reached (as can be tested by
 | |
|   calling jpeg_input_complete()).
 | |
| jpeg_start_output(), jpeg_finish_output(), and jpeg_finish_decompress()
 | |
| all return TRUE if they completed their tasks, FALSE if they had to suspend.
 | |
| In the event of a FALSE return, the application must load more input data
 | |
| and repeat the call.  Applications that use non-suspending data sources need
 | |
| not check the return values of these three routines.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| It is possible to change decoding parameters between output passes in the
 | |
| buffered-image mode.  The decoder library currently supports only very
 | |
| limited changes of parameters.  ONLY THE FOLLOWING parameter changes are
 | |
| allowed after jpeg_start_decompress() is called:
 | |
| * dct_method can be changed before each call to jpeg_start_output().
 | |
|   For example, one could use a fast DCT method for early scans, changing
 | |
|   to a higher quality method for the final scan.
 | |
| * dither_mode can be changed before each call to jpeg_start_output();
 | |
|   of course this has no impact if not using color quantization.  Typically
 | |
|   one would use ordered dither for initial passes, then switch to
 | |
|   Floyd-Steinberg dither for the final pass.  Caution: changing dither mode
 | |
|   can cause more memory to be allocated by the library.  Although the amount
 | |
|   of memory involved is not large (a scanline or so), it may cause the
 | |
|   initial max_memory_to_use specification to be exceeded, which in the worst
 | |
|   case would result in an out-of-memory failure.
 | |
| * do_block_smoothing can be changed before each call to jpeg_start_output().
 | |
|   This setting is relevant only when decoding a progressive JPEG image.
 | |
|   During the first DC-only scan, block smoothing provides a very "fuzzy" look
 | |
|   instead of the very "blocky" look seen without it; which is better seems a
 | |
|   matter of personal taste.  But block smoothing is nearly always a win
 | |
|   during later stages, especially when decoding a successive-approximation
 | |
|   image: smoothing helps to hide the slight blockiness that otherwise shows
 | |
|   up on smooth gradients until the lowest coefficient bits are sent.
 | |
| * Color quantization mode can be changed under the rules described below.
 | |
|   You *cannot* change between full-color and quantized output (because that
 | |
|   would alter the required I/O buffer sizes), but you can change which
 | |
|   quantization method is used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| When generating color-quantized output, changing quantization method is a
 | |
| very useful way of switching between high-speed and high-quality display.
 | |
| The library allows you to change among its three quantization methods:
 | |
| 1. Single-pass quantization to a fixed color cube.
 | |
|    Selected by cinfo.two_pass_quantize = FALSE and cinfo.colormap = NULL.
 | |
| 2. Single-pass quantization to an application-supplied colormap.
 | |
|    Selected by setting cinfo.colormap to point to the colormap (the value of
 | |
|    two_pass_quantize is ignored); also set cinfo.actual_number_of_colors.
 | |
| 3. Two-pass quantization to a colormap chosen specifically for the image.
 | |
|    Selected by cinfo.two_pass_quantize = TRUE and cinfo.colormap = NULL.
 | |
|    (This is the default setting selected by jpeg_read_header, but it is
 | |
|    probably NOT what you want for the first pass of progressive display!)
 | |
| These methods offer successively better quality and lesser speed.  However,
 | |
| only the first method is available for quantizing in non-RGB color spaces.
 | |
| 
 | |
| IMPORTANT: because the different quantizer methods have very different
 | |
| working-storage requirements, the library requires you to indicate which
 | |
| one(s) you intend to use before you call jpeg_start_decompress().  (If we did
 | |
| not require this, the max_memory_to_use setting would be a complete fiction.)
 | |
| You do this by setting one or more of these three cinfo fields to TRUE:
 | |
| 	enable_1pass_quant		Fixed color cube colormap
 | |
| 	enable_external_quant		Externally-supplied colormap
 | |
| 	enable_2pass_quant		Two-pass custom colormap
 | |
| All three are initialized FALSE by jpeg_read_header().  But
 | |
| jpeg_start_decompress() automatically sets TRUE the one selected by the
 | |
| current two_pass_quantize and colormap settings, so you only need to set the
 | |
| enable flags for any other quantization methods you plan to change to later.
 | |
| 
 | |
| After setting the enable flags correctly at jpeg_start_decompress() time, you
 | |
| can change to any enabled quantization method by setting two_pass_quantize
 | |
| and colormap properly just before calling jpeg_start_output().  The following
 | |
| special rules apply:
 | |
| 1. You must explicitly set cinfo.colormap to NULL when switching to 1-pass
 | |
|    or 2-pass mode from a different mode, or when you want the 2-pass
 | |
|    quantizer to be re-run to generate a new colormap.
 | |
| 2. To switch to an external colormap, or to change to a different external
 | |
|    colormap than was used on the prior pass, you must call
 | |
|    jpeg_new_colormap() after setting cinfo.colormap.
 | |
| NOTE: if you want to use the same colormap as was used in the prior pass,
 | |
| you should not do either of these things.  This will save some nontrivial
 | |
| switchover costs.
 | |
| (These requirements exist because cinfo.colormap will always be non-NULL
 | |
| after completing a prior output pass, since both the 1-pass and 2-pass
 | |
| quantizers set it to point to their output colormaps.  Thus you have to
 | |
| do one of these two things to notify the library that something has changed.
 | |
| Yup, it's a bit klugy, but it's necessary to do it this way for backwards
 | |
| compatibility.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| Note that in buffered-image mode, the library generates any requested colormap
 | |
| during jpeg_start_output(), not during jpeg_start_decompress().
 | |
| 
 | |
| When using two-pass quantization, jpeg_start_output() makes a pass over the
 | |
| buffered image to determine the optimum color map; it therefore may take a
 | |
| significant amount of time, whereas ordinarily it does little work.  The
 | |
| progress monitor hook is called during this pass, if defined.  It is also
 | |
| important to realize that if the specified target scan number is greater than
 | |
| or equal to the current input scan number, jpeg_start_output() will attempt
 | |
| to consume input as it makes this pass.  If you use a suspending data source,
 | |
| you need to check for a FALSE return from jpeg_start_output() under these
 | |
| conditions.  The combination of 2-pass quantization and a not-yet-fully-read
 | |
| target scan is the only case in which jpeg_start_output() will consume input.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Application authors who support buffered-image mode may be tempted to use it
 | |
| for all JPEG images, even single-scan ones.  This will work, but it is
 | |
| inefficient: there is no need to create an image-sized coefficient buffer for
 | |
| single-scan images.  Requesting buffered-image mode for such an image wastes
 | |
| memory.  Worse, it can cost time on large images, since the buffered data has
 | |
| to be swapped out or written to a temporary file.  If you are concerned about
 | |
| maximum performance on baseline JPEG files, you should use buffered-image
 | |
| mode only when the incoming file actually has multiple scans.  This can be
 | |
| tested by calling jpeg_has_multiple_scans(), which will return a correct
 | |
| result at any time after jpeg_read_header() completes.
 | |
| 
 | |
| It is also worth noting that when you use jpeg_consume_input() to let input
 | |
| processing get ahead of output processing, the resulting pattern of access to
 | |
| the coefficient buffer is quite nonsequential.  It's best to use the memory
 | |
| manager jmemnobs.c if you can (ie, if you have enough real or virtual main
 | |
| memory).  If not, at least make sure that max_memory_to_use is set as high as
 | |
| possible.  If the JPEG memory manager has to use a temporary file, you will
 | |
| probably see a lot of disk traffic and poor performance.  (This could be
 | |
| improved with additional work on the memory manager, but we haven't gotten
 | |
| around to it yet.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| In some applications it may be convenient to use jpeg_consume_input() for all
 | |
| input processing, including reading the initial markers; that is, you may
 | |
| wish to call jpeg_consume_input() instead of jpeg_read_header() during
 | |
| startup.  This works, but note that you must check for JPEG_REACHED_SOS and
 | |
| JPEG_REACHED_EOI return codes as the equivalent of jpeg_read_header's codes.
 | |
| Once the first SOS marker has been reached, you must call
 | |
| jpeg_start_decompress() before jpeg_consume_input() will consume more input;
 | |
| it'll just keep returning JPEG_REACHED_SOS until you do.  If you read a
 | |
| tables-only file this way, jpeg_consume_input() will return JPEG_REACHED_EOI
 | |
| without ever returning JPEG_REACHED_SOS; be sure to check for this case.
 | |
| If this happens, the decompressor will not read any more input until you call
 | |
| jpeg_abort() to reset it.  It is OK to call jpeg_consume_input() even when not
 | |
| using buffered-image mode, but in that case it's basically a no-op after the
 | |
| initial markers have been read: it will just return JPEG_SUSPENDED.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Abbreviated datastreams and multiple images
 | |
| -------------------------------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| A JPEG compression or decompression object can be reused to process multiple
 | |
| images.  This saves a small amount of time per image by eliminating the
 | |
| "create" and "destroy" operations, but that isn't the real purpose of the
 | |
| feature.  Rather, reuse of an object provides support for abbreviated JPEG
 | |
| datastreams.  Object reuse can also simplify processing a series of images in
 | |
| a single input or output file.  This section explains these features.
 | |
| 
 | |
| A JPEG file normally contains several hundred bytes worth of quantization
 | |
| and Huffman tables.  In a situation where many images will be stored or
 | |
| transmitted with identical tables, this may represent an annoying overhead.
 | |
| The JPEG standard therefore permits tables to be omitted.  The standard
 | |
| defines three classes of JPEG datastreams:
 | |
|   * "Interchange" datastreams contain an image and all tables needed to decode
 | |
|      the image.  These are the usual kind of JPEG file.
 | |
|   * "Abbreviated image" datastreams contain an image, but are missing some or
 | |
|     all of the tables needed to decode that image.
 | |
|   * "Abbreviated table specification" (henceforth "tables-only") datastreams
 | |
|     contain only table specifications.
 | |
| To decode an abbreviated image, it is necessary to load the missing table(s)
 | |
| into the decoder beforehand.  This can be accomplished by reading a separate
 | |
| tables-only file.  A variant scheme uses a series of images in which the first
 | |
| image is an interchange (complete) datastream, while subsequent ones are
 | |
| abbreviated and rely on the tables loaded by the first image.  It is assumed
 | |
| that once the decoder has read a table, it will remember that table until a
 | |
| new definition for the same table number is encountered.
 | |
| 
 | |
| It is the application designer's responsibility to figure out how to associate
 | |
| the correct tables with an abbreviated image.  While abbreviated datastreams
 | |
| can be useful in a closed environment, their use is strongly discouraged in
 | |
| any situation where data exchange with other applications might be needed.
 | |
| Caveat designer.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The JPEG library provides support for reading and writing any combination of
 | |
| tables-only datastreams and abbreviated images.  In both compression and
 | |
| decompression objects, a quantization or Huffman table will be retained for
 | |
| the lifetime of the object, unless it is overwritten by a new table definition.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| To create abbreviated image datastreams, it is only necessary to tell the
 | |
| compressor not to emit some or all of the tables it is using.  Each
 | |
| quantization and Huffman table struct contains a boolean field "sent_table",
 | |
| which normally is initialized to FALSE.  For each table used by the image, the
 | |
| header-writing process emits the table and sets sent_table = TRUE unless it is
 | |
| already TRUE.  (In normal usage, this prevents outputting the same table
 | |
| definition multiple times, as would otherwise occur because the chroma
 | |
| components typically share tables.)  Thus, setting this field to TRUE before
 | |
| calling jpeg_start_compress() will prevent the table from being written at
 | |
| all.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you want to create a "pure" abbreviated image file containing no tables,
 | |
| just call "jpeg_suppress_tables(&cinfo, TRUE)" after constructing all the
 | |
| tables.  If you want to emit some but not all tables, you'll need to set the
 | |
| individual sent_table fields directly.
 | |
| 
 | |
| To create an abbreviated image, you must also call jpeg_start_compress()
 | |
| with a second parameter of FALSE, not TRUE.  Otherwise jpeg_start_compress()
 | |
| will force all the sent_table fields to FALSE.  (This is a safety feature to
 | |
| prevent abbreviated images from being created accidentally.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| To create a tables-only file, perform the same parameter setup that you
 | |
| normally would, but instead of calling jpeg_start_compress() and so on, call
 | |
| jpeg_write_tables(&cinfo).  This will write an abbreviated datastream
 | |
| containing only SOI, DQT and/or DHT markers, and EOI.  All the quantization
 | |
| and Huffman tables that are currently defined in the compression object will
 | |
| be emitted unless their sent_tables flag is already TRUE, and then all the
 | |
| sent_tables flags will be set TRUE.
 | |
| 
 | |
| A sure-fire way to create matching tables-only and abbreviated image files
 | |
| is to proceed as follows:
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	create JPEG compression object
 | |
| 	set JPEG parameters
 | |
| 	set destination to tables-only file
 | |
| 	jpeg_write_tables(&cinfo);
 | |
| 	set destination to image file
 | |
| 	jpeg_start_compress(&cinfo, FALSE);
 | |
| 	write data...
 | |
| 	jpeg_finish_compress(&cinfo);
 | |
| 
 | |
| Since the JPEG parameters are not altered between writing the table file and
 | |
| the abbreviated image file, the same tables are sure to be used.  Of course,
 | |
| you can repeat the jpeg_start_compress() ... jpeg_finish_compress() sequence
 | |
| many times to produce many abbreviated image files matching the table file.
 | |
| 
 | |
| You cannot suppress output of the computed Huffman tables when Huffman
 | |
| optimization is selected.  (If you could, there'd be no way to decode the
 | |
| image...)  Generally, you don't want to set optimize_coding = TRUE when
 | |
| you are trying to produce abbreviated files.
 | |
| 
 | |
| In some cases you might want to compress an image using tables which are
 | |
| not stored in the application, but are defined in an interchange or
 | |
| tables-only file readable by the application.  This can be done by setting up
 | |
| a JPEG decompression object to read the specification file, then copying the
 | |
| tables into your compression object.  See jpeg_copy_critical_parameters()
 | |
| for an example of copying quantization tables.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| To read abbreviated image files, you simply need to load the proper tables
 | |
| into the decompression object before trying to read the abbreviated image.
 | |
| If the proper tables are stored in the application program, you can just
 | |
| allocate the table structs and fill in their contents directly.  For example,
 | |
| to load a fixed quantization table into table slot "n":
 | |
| 
 | |
|     if (cinfo.quant_tbl_ptrs[n] == NULL)
 | |
|       cinfo.quant_tbl_ptrs[n] = jpeg_alloc_quant_table((j_common_ptr) &cinfo);
 | |
|     quant_ptr = cinfo.quant_tbl_ptrs[n];	/* quant_ptr is JQUANT_TBL* */
 | |
|     for (i = 0; i < 64; i++) {
 | |
|       /* Qtable[] is desired quantization table, in natural array order */
 | |
|       quant_ptr->quantval[i] = Qtable[i];
 | |
|     }
 | |
| 
 | |
| Code to load a fixed Huffman table is typically (for AC table "n"):
 | |
| 
 | |
|     if (cinfo.ac_huff_tbl_ptrs[n] == NULL)
 | |
|       cinfo.ac_huff_tbl_ptrs[n] = jpeg_alloc_huff_table((j_common_ptr) &cinfo);
 | |
|     huff_ptr = cinfo.ac_huff_tbl_ptrs[n];	/* huff_ptr is JHUFF_TBL* */
 | |
|     for (i = 1; i <= 16; i++) {
 | |
|       /* counts[i] is number of Huffman codes of length i bits, i=1..16 */
 | |
|       huff_ptr->bits[i] = counts[i];
 | |
|     }
 | |
|     for (i = 0; i < 256; i++) {
 | |
|       /* symbols[] is the list of Huffman symbols, in code-length order */
 | |
|       huff_ptr->huffval[i] = symbols[i];
 | |
|     }
 | |
| 
 | |
| (Note that trying to set cinfo.quant_tbl_ptrs[n] to point directly at a
 | |
| constant JQUANT_TBL object is not safe.  If the incoming file happened to
 | |
| contain a quantization table definition, your master table would get
 | |
| overwritten!  Instead allocate a working table copy and copy the master table
 | |
| into it, as illustrated above.  Ditto for Huffman tables, of course.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| You might want to read the tables from a tables-only file, rather than
 | |
| hard-wiring them into your application.  The jpeg_read_header() call is
 | |
| sufficient to read a tables-only file.  You must pass a second parameter of
 | |
| FALSE to indicate that you do not require an image to be present.  Thus, the
 | |
| typical scenario is
 | |
| 
 | |
| 	create JPEG decompression object
 | |
| 	set source to tables-only file
 | |
| 	jpeg_read_header(&cinfo, FALSE);
 | |
| 	set source to abbreviated image file
 | |
| 	jpeg_read_header(&cinfo, TRUE);
 | |
| 	set decompression parameters
 | |
| 	jpeg_start_decompress(&cinfo);
 | |
| 	read data...
 | |
| 	jpeg_finish_decompress(&cinfo);
 | |
| 
 | |
| In some cases, you may want to read a file without knowing whether it contains
 | |
| an image or just tables.  In that case, pass FALSE and check the return value
 | |
| from jpeg_read_header(): it will be JPEG_HEADER_OK if an image was found,
 | |
| JPEG_HEADER_TABLES_ONLY if only tables were found.  (A third return value,
 | |
| JPEG_SUSPENDED, is possible when using a suspending data source manager.)
 | |
| Note that jpeg_read_header() will not complain if you read an abbreviated
 | |
| image for which you haven't loaded the missing tables; the missing-table check
 | |
| occurs later, in jpeg_start_decompress().
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| It is possible to read a series of images from a single source file by
 | |
| repeating the jpeg_read_header() ... jpeg_finish_decompress() sequence,
 | |
| without releasing/recreating the JPEG object or the data source module.
 | |
| (If you did reinitialize, any partial bufferload left in the data source
 | |
| buffer at the end of one image would be discarded, causing you to lose the
 | |
| start of the next image.)  When you use this method, stored tables are
 | |
| automatically carried forward, so some of the images can be abbreviated images
 | |
| that depend on tables from earlier images.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you intend to write a series of images into a single destination file,
 | |
| you might want to make a specialized data destination module that doesn't
 | |
| flush the output buffer at term_destination() time.  This would speed things
 | |
| up by some trifling amount.  Of course, you'd need to remember to flush the
 | |
| buffer after the last image.  You can make the later images be abbreviated
 | |
| ones by passing FALSE to jpeg_start_compress().
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Special markers
 | |
| ---------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| Some applications may need to insert or extract special data in the JPEG
 | |
| datastream.  The JPEG standard provides marker types "COM" (comment) and
 | |
| "APP0" through "APP15" (application) to hold application-specific data.
 | |
| Unfortunately, the use of these markers is not specified by the standard.
 | |
| COM markers are fairly widely used to hold user-supplied text.  The JFIF file
 | |
| format spec uses APP0 markers with specified initial strings to hold certain
 | |
| data.  Adobe applications use APP14 markers beginning with the string "Adobe"
 | |
| for miscellaneous data.  Other APPn markers are rarely seen, but might
 | |
| contain almost anything.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you wish to store user-supplied text, we recommend you use COM markers
 | |
| and place readable 7-bit ASCII text in them.  Newline conventions are not
 | |
| standardized --- expect to find LF (Unix style), CR/LF (DOS style), or CR
 | |
| (Mac style).  A robust COM reader should be able to cope with random binary
 | |
| garbage, including nulls, since some applications generate COM markers
 | |
| containing non-ASCII junk.  (But yours should not be one of them.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| For program-supplied data, use an APPn marker, and be sure to begin it with an
 | |
| identifying string so that you can tell whether the marker is actually yours.
 | |
| It's probably best to avoid using APP0 or APP14 for any private markers.
 | |
| (NOTE: the upcoming SPIFF standard will use APP8 markers; we recommend you
 | |
| not use APP8 markers for any private purposes, either.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| Keep in mind that at most 65533 bytes can be put into one marker, but you
 | |
| can have as many markers as you like.
 | |
| 
 | |
| By default, the IJG compression library will write a JFIF APP0 marker if the
 | |
| selected JPEG colorspace is grayscale or YCbCr, or an Adobe APP14 marker if
 | |
| the selected colorspace is RGB, CMYK, or YCCK.  You can disable this, but
 | |
| we don't recommend it.  The decompression library will recognize JFIF and
 | |
| Adobe markers and will set the JPEG colorspace properly when one is found.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| You can write special markers immediately following the datastream header by
 | |
| calling jpeg_write_marker() after jpeg_start_compress() and before the first
 | |
| call to jpeg_write_scanlines().  When you do this, the markers appear after
 | |
| the SOI and the JFIF APP0 and Adobe APP14 markers (if written), but before
 | |
| all else.  Specify the marker type parameter as "JPEG_COM" for COM or
 | |
| "JPEG_APP0 + n" for APPn.  (Actually, jpeg_write_marker will let you write
 | |
| any marker type, but we don't recommend writing any other kinds of marker.)
 | |
| For example, to write a user comment string pointed to by comment_text:
 | |
| 	jpeg_write_marker(cinfo, JPEG_COM, comment_text, strlen(comment_text));
 | |
| 
 | |
| If it's not convenient to store all the marker data in memory at once,
 | |
| you can instead call jpeg_write_m_header() followed by multiple calls to
 | |
| jpeg_write_m_byte().  If you do it this way, it's your responsibility to
 | |
| call jpeg_write_m_byte() exactly the number of times given in the length
 | |
| parameter to jpeg_write_m_header().  (This method lets you empty the
 | |
| output buffer partway through a marker, which might be important when
 | |
| using a suspending data destination module.  In any case, if you are using
 | |
| a suspending destination, you should flush its buffer after inserting
 | |
| any special markers.  See "I/O suspension".)
 | |
| 
 | |
| Or, if you prefer to synthesize the marker byte sequence yourself,
 | |
| you can just cram it straight into the data destination module.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you are writing JFIF 1.02 extension markers (thumbnail images), don't
 | |
| forget to set cinfo.JFIF_minor_version = 2 so that the encoder will write the
 | |
| correct JFIF version number in the JFIF header marker.  The library's default
 | |
| is to write version 1.01, but that's wrong if you insert any 1.02 extension
 | |
| markers.  (We could probably get away with just defaulting to 1.02, but there
 | |
| used to be broken decoders that would complain about unknown minor version
 | |
| numbers.  To reduce compatibility risks it's safest not to write 1.02 unless
 | |
| you are actually using 1.02 extensions.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| When reading, two methods of handling special markers are available:
 | |
| 1. You can ask the library to save the contents of COM and/or APPn markers
 | |
| into memory, and then examine them at your leisure afterwards.
 | |
| 2. You can supply your own routine to process COM and/or APPn markers
 | |
| on-the-fly as they are read.
 | |
| The first method is simpler to use, especially if you are using a suspending
 | |
| data source; writing a marker processor that copes with input suspension is
 | |
| not easy (consider what happens if the marker is longer than your available
 | |
| input buffer).  However, the second method conserves memory since the marker
 | |
| data need not be kept around after it's been processed.
 | |
| 
 | |
| For either method, you'd normally set up marker handling after creating a
 | |
| decompression object and before calling jpeg_read_header(), because the
 | |
| markers of interest will typically be near the head of the file and so will
 | |
| be scanned by jpeg_read_header.  Once you've established a marker handling
 | |
| method, it will be used for the life of that decompression object
 | |
| (potentially many datastreams), unless you change it.  Marker handling is
 | |
| determined separately for COM markers and for each APPn marker code.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| To save the contents of special markers in memory, call
 | |
| 	jpeg_save_markers(cinfo, marker_code, length_limit)
 | |
| where marker_code is the marker type to save, JPEG_COM or JPEG_APP0+n.
 | |
| (To arrange to save all the special marker types, you need to call this
 | |
| routine 17 times, for COM and APP0-APP15.)  If the incoming marker is longer
 | |
| than length_limit data bytes, only length_limit bytes will be saved; this
 | |
| parameter allows you to avoid chewing up memory when you only need to see the
 | |
| first few bytes of a potentially large marker.  If you want to save all the
 | |
| data, set length_limit to 0xFFFF; that is enough since marker lengths are only
 | |
| 16 bits.  As a special case, setting length_limit to 0 prevents that marker
 | |
| type from being saved at all.  (That is the default behavior, in fact.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| After jpeg_read_header() completes, you can examine the special markers by
 | |
| following the cinfo->marker_list pointer chain.  All the special markers in
 | |
| the file appear in this list, in order of their occurrence in the file (but
 | |
| omitting any markers of types you didn't ask for).  Both the original data
 | |
| length and the saved data length are recorded for each list entry; the latter
 | |
| will not exceed length_limit for the particular marker type.  Note that these
 | |
| lengths exclude the marker length word, whereas the stored representation
 | |
| within the JPEG file includes it.  (Hence the maximum data length is really
 | |
| only 65533.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| It is possible that additional special markers appear in the file beyond the
 | |
| SOS marker at which jpeg_read_header stops; if so, the marker list will be
 | |
| extended during reading of the rest of the file.  This is not expected to be
 | |
| common, however.  If you are short on memory you may want to reset the length
 | |
| limit to zero for all marker types after finishing jpeg_read_header, to
 | |
| ensure that the max_memory_to_use setting cannot be exceeded due to addition
 | |
| of later markers.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The marker list remains stored until you call jpeg_finish_decompress or
 | |
| jpeg_abort, at which point the memory is freed and the list is set to empty.
 | |
| (jpeg_destroy also releases the storage, of course.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| Note that the library is internally interested in APP0 and APP14 markers;
 | |
| if you try to set a small nonzero length limit on these types, the library
 | |
| will silently force the length up to the minimum it wants.  (But you can set
 | |
| a zero length limit to prevent them from being saved at all.)  Also, in a
 | |
| 16-bit environment, the maximum length limit may be constrained to less than
 | |
| 65533 by malloc() limitations.  It is therefore best not to assume that the
 | |
| effective length limit is exactly what you set it to be.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you want to supply your own marker-reading routine, you do it by calling
 | |
| jpeg_set_marker_processor().  A marker processor routine must have the
 | |
| signature
 | |
| 	boolean jpeg_marker_parser_method (j_decompress_ptr cinfo)
 | |
| Although the marker code is not explicitly passed, the routine can find it
 | |
| in cinfo->unread_marker.  At the time of call, the marker proper has been
 | |
| read from the data source module.  The processor routine is responsible for
 | |
| reading the marker length word and the remaining parameter bytes, if any.
 | |
| Return TRUE to indicate success.  (FALSE should be returned only if you are
 | |
| using a suspending data source and it tells you to suspend.  See the standard
 | |
| marker processors in jdmarker.c for appropriate coding methods if you need to
 | |
| use a suspending data source.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you override the default APP0 or APP14 processors, it is up to you to
 | |
| recognize JFIF and Adobe markers if you want colorspace recognition to occur
 | |
| properly.  We recommend copying and extending the default processors if you
 | |
| want to do that.  (A better idea is to save these marker types for later
 | |
| examination by calling jpeg_save_markers(); that method doesn't interfere
 | |
| with the library's own processing of these markers.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| jpeg_set_marker_processor() and jpeg_save_markers() are mutually exclusive
 | |
| --- if you call one it overrides any previous call to the other, for the
 | |
| particular marker type specified.
 | |
| 
 | |
| A simple example of an external COM processor can be found in djpeg.c.
 | |
| Also, see jpegtran.c for an example of using jpeg_save_markers.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Raw (downsampled) image data
 | |
| ----------------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| Some applications need to supply already-downsampled image data to the JPEG
 | |
| compressor, or to receive raw downsampled data from the decompressor.  The
 | |
| library supports this requirement by allowing the application to write or
 | |
| read raw data, bypassing the normal preprocessing or postprocessing steps.
 | |
| The interface is different from the standard one and is somewhat harder to
 | |
| use.  If your interest is merely in bypassing color conversion, we recommend
 | |
| that you use the standard interface and simply set jpeg_color_space =
 | |
| in_color_space (or jpeg_color_space = out_color_space for decompression).
 | |
| The mechanism described in this section is necessary only to supply or
 | |
| receive downsampled image data, in which not all components have the same
 | |
| dimensions.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| To compress raw data, you must supply the data in the colorspace to be used
 | |
| in the JPEG file (please read the earlier section on Special color spaces)
 | |
| and downsampled to the sampling factors specified in the JPEG parameters.
 | |
| You must supply the data in the format used internally by the JPEG library,
 | |
| namely a JSAMPIMAGE array.  This is an array of pointers to two-dimensional
 | |
| arrays, each of type JSAMPARRAY.  Each 2-D array holds the values for one
 | |
| color component.  This structure is necessary since the components are of
 | |
| different sizes.  If the image dimensions are not a multiple of the MCU size,
 | |
| you must also pad the data correctly (usually, this is done by replicating
 | |
| the last column and/or row).  The data must be padded to a multiple of a DCT
 | |
| block in each component: that is, each downsampled row must contain a
 | |
| multiple of block_size valid samples, and there must be a multiple of
 | |
| block_size sample rows for each component.  (For applications such as
 | |
| conversion of digital TV images, the standard image size is usually a
 | |
| multiple of the DCT block size, so that no padding need actually be done.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| The procedure for compression of raw data is basically the same as normal
 | |
| compression, except that you call jpeg_write_raw_data() in place of
 | |
| jpeg_write_scanlines().  Before calling jpeg_start_compress(), you must do
 | |
| the following:
 | |
|   * Set cinfo->raw_data_in to TRUE.  (It is set FALSE by jpeg_set_defaults().)
 | |
|     This notifies the library that you will be supplying raw data.
 | |
|     Furthermore, set cinfo->do_fancy_downsampling to FALSE if you want to use
 | |
|     real downsampled data.  (It is set TRUE by jpeg_set_defaults().)
 | |
|   * Ensure jpeg_color_space is correct --- an explicit jpeg_set_colorspace()
 | |
|     call is a good idea.  Note that since color conversion is bypassed,
 | |
|     in_color_space is ignored, except that jpeg_set_defaults() uses it to
 | |
|     choose the default jpeg_color_space setting.
 | |
|   * Ensure the sampling factors, cinfo->comp_info[i].h_samp_factor and
 | |
|     cinfo->comp_info[i].v_samp_factor, are correct.  Since these indicate the
 | |
|     dimensions of the data you are supplying, it's wise to set them
 | |
|     explicitly, rather than assuming the library's defaults are what you want.
 | |
| 
 | |
| To pass raw data to the library, call jpeg_write_raw_data() in place of
 | |
| jpeg_write_scanlines().  The two routines work similarly except that
 | |
| jpeg_write_raw_data takes a JSAMPIMAGE data array rather than JSAMPARRAY.
 | |
| The scanlines count passed to and returned from jpeg_write_raw_data is
 | |
| measured in terms of the component with the largest v_samp_factor.
 | |
| 
 | |
| jpeg_write_raw_data() processes one MCU row per call, which is to say
 | |
| v_samp_factor*block_size sample rows of each component.  The passed num_lines
 | |
| value must be at least max_v_samp_factor*block_size, and the return value
 | |
| will be exactly that amount (or possibly some multiple of that amount, in
 | |
| future library versions).  This is true even on the last call at the bottom
 | |
| of the image; don't forget to pad your data as necessary.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The required dimensions of the supplied data can be computed for each
 | |
| component as
 | |
| 	cinfo->comp_info[i].width_in_blocks*block_size  samples per row
 | |
| 	cinfo->comp_info[i].height_in_blocks*block_size rows in image
 | |
| after jpeg_start_compress() has initialized those fields.  If the valid data
 | |
| is smaller than this, it must be padded appropriately.  For some sampling
 | |
| factors and image sizes, additional dummy DCT blocks are inserted to make
 | |
| the image a multiple of the MCU dimensions.  The library creates such dummy
 | |
| blocks itself; it does not read them from your supplied data.  Therefore you
 | |
| need never pad by more than block_size samples.  An example may help here.
 | |
| Assume 2h2v downsampling of YCbCr data, that is
 | |
| 	cinfo->comp_info[0].h_samp_factor = 2		for Y
 | |
| 	cinfo->comp_info[0].v_samp_factor = 2
 | |
| 	cinfo->comp_info[1].h_samp_factor = 1		for Cb
 | |
| 	cinfo->comp_info[1].v_samp_factor = 1
 | |
| 	cinfo->comp_info[2].h_samp_factor = 1		for Cr
 | |
| 	cinfo->comp_info[2].v_samp_factor = 1
 | |
| and suppose that the nominal image dimensions (cinfo->image_width and
 | |
| cinfo->image_height) are 101x101 pixels.  Then jpeg_start_compress() will
 | |
| compute downsampled_width = 101 and width_in_blocks = 13 for Y,
 | |
| downsampled_width = 51 and width_in_blocks = 7 for Cb and Cr (and the same
 | |
| for the height fields).  You must pad the Y data to at least 13*8 = 104
 | |
| columns and rows, the Cb/Cr data to at least 7*8 = 56 columns and rows.  The
 | |
| MCU height is max_v_samp_factor = 2 DCT rows so you must pass at least 16
 | |
| scanlines on each call to jpeg_write_raw_data(), which is to say 16 actual
 | |
| sample rows of Y and 8 each of Cb and Cr.  A total of 7 MCU rows are needed,
 | |
| so you must pass a total of 7*16 = 112 "scanlines".  The last DCT block row
 | |
| of Y data is dummy, so it doesn't matter what you pass for it in the data
 | |
| arrays, but the scanlines count must total up to 112 so that all of the Cb
 | |
| and Cr data gets passed.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Output suspension is supported with raw-data compression: if the data
 | |
| destination module suspends, jpeg_write_raw_data() will return 0.
 | |
| In this case the same data rows must be passed again on the next call.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Decompression with raw data output implies bypassing all postprocessing.
 | |
| You must deal with the color space and sampling factors present in the
 | |
| incoming file.  If your application only handles, say, 2h1v YCbCr data,
 | |
| you must check for and fail on other color spaces or other sampling factors.
 | |
| The library will not convert to a different color space for you.
 | |
| 
 | |
| To obtain raw data output, set cinfo->raw_data_out = TRUE before
 | |
| jpeg_start_decompress() (it is set FALSE by jpeg_read_header()).  Be sure to
 | |
| verify that the color space and sampling factors are ones you can handle.
 | |
| Furthermore, set cinfo->do_fancy_upsampling = FALSE if you want to get real
 | |
| downsampled data (it is set TRUE by jpeg_read_header()).
 | |
| Then call jpeg_read_raw_data() in place of jpeg_read_scanlines().  The
 | |
| decompression process is otherwise the same as usual.
 | |
| 
 | |
| jpeg_read_raw_data() returns one MCU row per call, and thus you must pass a
 | |
| buffer of at least max_v_samp_factor*block_size scanlines (scanline counting
 | |
| is the same as for raw-data compression).  The buffer you pass must be large
 | |
| enough to hold the actual data plus padding to DCT-block boundaries.  As with
 | |
| compression, any entirely dummy DCT blocks are not processed so you need not
 | |
| allocate space for them, but the total scanline count includes them.  The
 | |
| above example of computing buffer dimensions for raw-data compression is
 | |
| equally valid for decompression.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Input suspension is supported with raw-data decompression: if the data source
 | |
| module suspends, jpeg_read_raw_data() will return 0.  You can also use
 | |
| buffered-image mode to read raw data in multiple passes.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Really raw data: DCT coefficients
 | |
| ---------------------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| It is possible to read or write the contents of a JPEG file as raw DCT
 | |
| coefficients.  This facility is mainly intended for use in lossless
 | |
| transcoding between different JPEG file formats.  Other possible applications
 | |
| include lossless cropping of a JPEG image, lossless reassembly of a
 | |
| multi-strip or multi-tile TIFF/JPEG file into a single JPEG datastream, etc.
 | |
| 
 | |
| To read the contents of a JPEG file as DCT coefficients, open the file and do
 | |
| jpeg_read_header() as usual.  But instead of calling jpeg_start_decompress()
 | |
| and jpeg_read_scanlines(), call jpeg_read_coefficients().  This will read the
 | |
| entire image into a set of virtual coefficient-block arrays, one array per
 | |
| component.  The return value is a pointer to an array of virtual-array
 | |
| descriptors.  Each virtual array can be accessed directly using the JPEG
 | |
| memory manager's access_virt_barray method (see Memory management, below,
 | |
| and also read structure.txt's discussion of virtual array handling).  Or,
 | |
| for simple transcoding to a different JPEG file format, the array list can
 | |
| just be handed directly to jpeg_write_coefficients().
 | |
| 
 | |
| Each block in the block arrays contains quantized coefficient values in
 | |
| normal array order (not JPEG zigzag order).  The block arrays contain only
 | |
| DCT blocks containing real data; any entirely-dummy blocks added to fill out
 | |
| interleaved MCUs at the right or bottom edges of the image are discarded
 | |
| during reading and are not stored in the block arrays.  (The size of each
 | |
| block array can be determined from the width_in_blocks and height_in_blocks
 | |
| fields of the component's comp_info entry.)  This is also the data format
 | |
| expected by jpeg_write_coefficients().
 | |
| 
 | |
| When you are done using the virtual arrays, call jpeg_finish_decompress()
 | |
| to release the array storage and return the decompression object to an idle
 | |
| state; or just call jpeg_destroy() if you don't need to reuse the object.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you use a suspending data source, jpeg_read_coefficients() will return
 | |
| NULL if it is forced to suspend; a non-NULL return value indicates successful
 | |
| completion.  You need not test for a NULL return value when using a
 | |
| non-suspending data source.
 | |
| 
 | |
| It is also possible to call jpeg_read_coefficients() to obtain access to the
 | |
| decoder's coefficient arrays during a normal decode cycle in buffered-image
 | |
| mode.  This frammish might be useful for progressively displaying an incoming
 | |
| image and then re-encoding it without loss.  To do this, decode in buffered-
 | |
| image mode as discussed previously, then call jpeg_read_coefficients() after
 | |
| the last jpeg_finish_output() call.  The arrays will be available for your use
 | |
| until you call jpeg_finish_decompress().
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| To write the contents of a JPEG file as DCT coefficients, you must provide
 | |
| the DCT coefficients stored in virtual block arrays.  You can either pass
 | |
| block arrays read from an input JPEG file by jpeg_read_coefficients(), or
 | |
| allocate virtual arrays from the JPEG compression object and fill them
 | |
| yourself.  In either case, jpeg_write_coefficients() is substituted for
 | |
| jpeg_start_compress() and jpeg_write_scanlines().  Thus the sequence is
 | |
|   * Create compression object
 | |
|   * Set all compression parameters as necessary
 | |
|   * Request virtual arrays if needed
 | |
|   * jpeg_write_coefficients()
 | |
|   * jpeg_finish_compress()
 | |
|   * Destroy or re-use compression object
 | |
| jpeg_write_coefficients() is passed a pointer to an array of virtual block
 | |
| array descriptors; the number of arrays is equal to cinfo.num_components.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The virtual arrays need only have been requested, not realized, before
 | |
| jpeg_write_coefficients() is called.  A side-effect of
 | |
| jpeg_write_coefficients() is to realize any virtual arrays that have been
 | |
| requested from the compression object's memory manager.  Thus, when obtaining
 | |
| the virtual arrays from the compression object, you should fill the arrays
 | |
| after calling jpeg_write_coefficients().  The data is actually written out
 | |
| when you call jpeg_finish_compress(); jpeg_write_coefficients() only writes
 | |
| the file header.
 | |
| 
 | |
| When writing raw DCT coefficients, it is crucial that the JPEG quantization
 | |
| tables and sampling factors match the way the data was encoded, or the
 | |
| resulting file will be invalid.  For transcoding from an existing JPEG file,
 | |
| we recommend using jpeg_copy_critical_parameters().  This routine initializes
 | |
| all the compression parameters to default values (like jpeg_set_defaults()),
 | |
| then copies the critical information from a source decompression object.
 | |
| The decompression object should have just been used to read the entire
 | |
| JPEG input file --- that is, it should be awaiting jpeg_finish_decompress().
 | |
| 
 | |
| jpeg_write_coefficients() marks all tables stored in the compression object
 | |
| as needing to be written to the output file (thus, it acts like
 | |
| jpeg_start_compress(cinfo, TRUE)).  This is for safety's sake, to avoid
 | |
| emitting abbreviated JPEG files by accident.  If you really want to emit an
 | |
| abbreviated JPEG file, call jpeg_suppress_tables(), or set the tables'
 | |
| individual sent_table flags, between calling jpeg_write_coefficients() and
 | |
| jpeg_finish_compress().
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Progress monitoring
 | |
| -------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| Some applications may need to regain control from the JPEG library every so
 | |
| often.  The typical use of this feature is to produce a percent-done bar or
 | |
| other progress display.  (For a simple example, see cjpeg.c or djpeg.c.)
 | |
| Although you do get control back frequently during the data-transferring pass
 | |
| (the jpeg_read_scanlines or jpeg_write_scanlines loop), any additional passes
 | |
| will occur inside jpeg_finish_compress or jpeg_start_decompress; those
 | |
| routines may take a long time to execute, and you don't get control back
 | |
| until they are done.
 | |
| 
 | |
| You can define a progress-monitor routine which will be called periodically
 | |
| by the library.  No guarantees are made about how often this call will occur,
 | |
| so we don't recommend you use it for mouse tracking or anything like that.
 | |
| At present, a call will occur once per MCU row, scanline, or sample row
 | |
| group, whichever unit is convenient for the current processing mode; so the
 | |
| wider the image, the longer the time between calls.  During the data
 | |
| transferring pass, only one call occurs per call of jpeg_read_scanlines or
 | |
| jpeg_write_scanlines, so don't pass a large number of scanlines at once if
 | |
| you want fine resolution in the progress count.  (If you really need to use
 | |
| the callback mechanism for time-critical tasks like mouse tracking, you could
 | |
| insert additional calls inside some of the library's inner loops.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| To establish a progress-monitor callback, create a struct jpeg_progress_mgr,
 | |
| fill in its progress_monitor field with a pointer to your callback routine,
 | |
| and set cinfo->progress to point to the struct.  The callback will be called
 | |
| whenever cinfo->progress is non-NULL.  (This pointer is set to NULL by
 | |
| jpeg_create_compress or jpeg_create_decompress; the library will not change
 | |
| it thereafter.  So if you allocate dynamic storage for the progress struct,
 | |
| make sure it will live as long as the JPEG object does.  Allocating from the
 | |
| JPEG memory manager with lifetime JPOOL_PERMANENT will work nicely.)  You
 | |
| can use the same callback routine for both compression and decompression.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The jpeg_progress_mgr struct contains four fields which are set by the library:
 | |
| 	long pass_counter;	/* work units completed in this pass */
 | |
| 	long pass_limit;	/* total number of work units in this pass */
 | |
| 	int completed_passes;	/* passes completed so far */
 | |
| 	int total_passes;	/* total number of passes expected */
 | |
| During any one pass, pass_counter increases from 0 up to (not including)
 | |
| pass_limit; the step size is usually but not necessarily 1.  The pass_limit
 | |
| value may change from one pass to another.  The expected total number of
 | |
| passes is in total_passes, and the number of passes already completed is in
 | |
| completed_passes.  Thus the fraction of work completed may be estimated as
 | |
| 		completed_passes + (pass_counter/pass_limit)
 | |
| 		--------------------------------------------
 | |
| 				total_passes
 | |
| ignoring the fact that the passes may not be equal amounts of work.
 | |
| 
 | |
| When decompressing, pass_limit can even change within a pass, because it
 | |
| depends on the number of scans in the JPEG file, which isn't always known in
 | |
| advance.  The computed fraction-of-work-done may jump suddenly (if the library
 | |
| discovers it has overestimated the number of scans) or even decrease (in the
 | |
| opposite case).  It is not wise to put great faith in the work estimate.
 | |
| 
 | |
| When using the decompressor's buffered-image mode, the progress monitor work
 | |
| estimate is likely to be completely unhelpful, because the library has no way
 | |
| to know how many output passes will be demanded of it.  Currently, the library
 | |
| sets total_passes based on the assumption that there will be one more output
 | |
| pass if the input file end hasn't yet been read (jpeg_input_complete() isn't
 | |
| TRUE), but no more output passes if the file end has been reached when the
 | |
| output pass is started.  This means that total_passes will rise as additional
 | |
| output passes are requested.  If you have a way of determining the input file
 | |
| size, estimating progress based on the fraction of the file that's been read
 | |
| will probably be more useful than using the library's value.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Memory management
 | |
| -----------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| This section covers some key facts about the JPEG library's built-in memory
 | |
| manager.  For more info, please read structure.txt's section about the memory
 | |
| manager, and consult the source code if necessary.
 | |
| 
 | |
| All memory and temporary file allocation within the library is done via the
 | |
| memory manager.  If necessary, you can replace the "back end" of the memory
 | |
| manager to control allocation yourself (for example, if you don't want the
 | |
| library to use malloc() and free() for some reason).
 | |
| 
 | |
| Some data is allocated "permanently" and will not be freed until the JPEG
 | |
| object is destroyed.  Most data is allocated "per image" and is freed by
 | |
| jpeg_finish_compress, jpeg_finish_decompress, or jpeg_abort.  You can call the
 | |
| memory manager yourself to allocate structures that will automatically be
 | |
| freed at these times.  Typical code for this is
 | |
|   ptr = (*cinfo->mem->alloc_small) ((j_common_ptr) cinfo, JPOOL_IMAGE, size);
 | |
| Use JPOOL_PERMANENT to get storage that lasts as long as the JPEG object.
 | |
| Use alloc_large instead of alloc_small for anything bigger than a few Kbytes.
 | |
| There are also alloc_sarray and alloc_barray routines that automatically
 | |
| build 2-D sample or block arrays.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The library's minimum space requirements to process an image depend on the
 | |
| image's width, but not on its height, because the library ordinarily works
 | |
| with "strip" buffers that are as wide as the image but just a few rows high.
 | |
| Some operating modes (eg, two-pass color quantization) require full-image
 | |
| buffers.  Such buffers are treated as "virtual arrays": only the current strip
 | |
| need be in memory, and the rest can be swapped out to a temporary file.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you use the simplest memory manager back end (jmemnobs.c), then no
 | |
| temporary files are used; virtual arrays are simply malloc()'d.  Images bigger
 | |
| than memory can be processed only if your system supports virtual memory.
 | |
| The other memory manager back ends support temporary files of various flavors
 | |
| and thus work in machines without virtual memory.  They may also be useful on
 | |
| Unix machines if you need to process images that exceed available swap space.
 | |
| 
 | |
| When using temporary files, the library will make the in-memory buffers for
 | |
| its virtual arrays just big enough to stay within a "maximum memory" setting.
 | |
| Your application can set this limit by setting cinfo->mem->max_memory_to_use
 | |
| after creating the JPEG object.  (Of course, there is still a minimum size for
 | |
| the buffers, so the max-memory setting is effective only if it is bigger than
 | |
| the minimum space needed.)  If you allocate any large structures yourself, you
 | |
| must allocate them before jpeg_start_compress() or jpeg_start_decompress() in
 | |
| order to have them counted against the max memory limit.  Also keep in mind
 | |
| that space allocated with alloc_small() is ignored, on the assumption that
 | |
| it's too small to be worth worrying about; so a reasonable safety margin
 | |
| should be left when setting max_memory_to_use.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you use the jmemname.c or jmemdos.c memory manager back end, it is
 | |
| important to clean up the JPEG object properly to ensure that the temporary
 | |
| files get deleted.  (This is especially crucial with jmemdos.c, where the
 | |
| "temporary files" may be extended-memory segments; if they are not freed,
 | |
| DOS will require a reboot to recover the memory.)  Thus, with these memory
 | |
| managers, it's a good idea to provide a signal handler that will trap any
 | |
| early exit from your program.  The handler should call either jpeg_abort()
 | |
| or jpeg_destroy() for any active JPEG objects.  A handler is not needed with
 | |
| jmemnobs.c, and shouldn't be necessary with jmemansi.c or jmemmac.c either,
 | |
| since the C library is supposed to take care of deleting files made with
 | |
| tmpfile().
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Memory usage
 | |
| ------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| Working memory requirements while performing compression or decompression
 | |
| depend on image dimensions, image characteristics (such as colorspace and
 | |
| JPEG process), and operating mode (application-selected options).
 | |
| 
 | |
| As of v6b, the decompressor requires:
 | |
|  1. About 24K in more-or-less-fixed-size data.  This varies a bit depending
 | |
|     on operating mode and image characteristics (particularly color vs.
 | |
|     grayscale), but it doesn't depend on image dimensions.
 | |
|  2. Strip buffers (of size proportional to the image width) for IDCT and
 | |
|     upsampling results.  The worst case for commonly used sampling factors
 | |
|     is about 34 bytes * width in pixels for a color image.  A grayscale image
 | |
|     only needs about 8 bytes per pixel column.
 | |
|  3. A full-image DCT coefficient buffer is needed to decode a multi-scan JPEG
 | |
|     file (including progressive JPEGs), or whenever you select buffered-image
 | |
|     mode.  This takes 2 bytes/coefficient.  At typical 2x2 sampling, that's
 | |
|     3 bytes per pixel for a color image.  Worst case (1x1 sampling) requires
 | |
|     6 bytes/pixel.  For grayscale, figure 2 bytes/pixel.
 | |
|  4. To perform 2-pass color quantization, the decompressor also needs a
 | |
|     128K color lookup table and a full-image pixel buffer (3 bytes/pixel).
 | |
| This does not count any memory allocated by the application, such as a
 | |
| buffer to hold the final output image.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The above figures are valid for 8-bit JPEG data precision and a machine with
 | |
| 32-bit ints.  For 9-bit to 12-bit JPEG data, double the size of the strip
 | |
| buffers and quantization pixel buffer.  The "fixed-size" data will be
 | |
| somewhat smaller with 16-bit ints, larger with 64-bit ints.  Also, CMYK
 | |
| or other unusual color spaces will require different amounts of space.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The full-image coefficient and pixel buffers, if needed at all, do not
 | |
| have to be fully RAM resident; you can have the library use temporary
 | |
| files instead when the total memory usage would exceed a limit you set.
 | |
| (But if your OS supports virtual memory, it's probably better to just use
 | |
| jmemnobs and let the OS do the swapping.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| The compressor's memory requirements are similar, except that it has no need
 | |
| for color quantization.  Also, it needs a full-image DCT coefficient buffer
 | |
| if Huffman-table optimization is asked for, even if progressive mode is not
 | |
| requested.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you need more detailed information about memory usage in a particular
 | |
| situation, you can enable the MEM_STATS code in jmemmgr.c.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Library compile-time options
 | |
| ----------------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| A number of compile-time options are available by modifying jmorecfg.h.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The IJG code currently supports 8-bit to 12-bit sample data precision by
 | |
| defining BITS_IN_JSAMPLE as 8, 9, 10, 11, or 12.
 | |
| Note that a value larger than 8 causes JSAMPLE to be larger than a char,
 | |
| so it affects the surrounding application's image data.
 | |
| The sample applications cjpeg and djpeg can support deeper than 8-bit data
 | |
| only for PPM and GIF file formats; you must disable the other file formats
 | |
| to compile a 9-bit to 12-bit cjpeg or djpeg.  (install.txt has more
 | |
| information about that.)
 | |
| Run-time selection and conversion of data precision are currently not
 | |
| supported and may be added later.
 | |
| Exception:  The transcoding part (jpegtran) supports all settings in a
 | |
| single instance, since it operates on the level of DCT coefficients and
 | |
| not sample values.
 | |
| (If you need to include an 8-bit library and a 9-bit to 12-bit library for
 | |
| compression or decompression in a single application, you could probably do
 | |
| it by defining NEED_SHORT_EXTERNAL_NAMES for just one of the copies.  You'd
 | |
| have to access the 8-bit and the 9-bit to 12-bit copies from separate
 | |
| application source files.  This is untested ... if you try it, we'd like to
 | |
| hear whether it works!)
 | |
| 
 | |
| Note that the standard Huffman tables are only valid for 8-bit data precision.
 | |
| If you selected more than 8-bit data precision, cjpeg uses arithmetic coding
 | |
| by default.  The Huffman encoder normally uses entropy optimization to
 | |
| compute usable tables for higher precision.  Otherwise, you'll have to
 | |
| supply different default Huffman tables.  You may also want to supply your
 | |
| own DCT quantization tables; the existing quality-scaling code has been
 | |
| developed for 8-bit use, and probably doesn't generate especially good tables
 | |
| for 9-bit to 12-bit.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The maximum number of components (color channels) in the image is determined
 | |
| by MAX_COMPONENTS.  The JPEG standard allows up to 255 components, but we
 | |
| expect that few applications will need more than four or so.
 | |
| 
 | |
| On machines with unusual data type sizes, you may be able to improve
 | |
| performance or reduce memory space by tweaking the various typedefs in
 | |
| jmorecfg.h.  In particular, on some RISC CPUs, access to arrays of "short"s
 | |
| is quite slow; consider trading memory for speed by making JCOEF, INT16, and
 | |
| UINT16 be "int" or "unsigned int".  UINT8 is also a candidate to become int.
 | |
| You probably don't want to make JSAMPLE be int unless you have lots of memory
 | |
| to burn.
 | |
| 
 | |
| You can reduce the size of the library by compiling out various optional
 | |
| functions.  To do this, undefine xxx_SUPPORTED symbols as necessary.
 | |
| 
 | |
| You can also save a few K by not having text error messages in the library;
 | |
| the standard error message table occupies about 5Kb.  This is particularly
 | |
| reasonable for embedded applications where there's no good way to display 
 | |
| a message anyway.  To do this, remove the creation of the message table
 | |
| (jpeg_std_message_table[]) from jerror.c, and alter format_message to do
 | |
| something reasonable without it.  You could output the numeric value of the
 | |
| message code number, for example.  If you do this, you can also save a couple
 | |
| more K by modifying the TRACEMSn() macros in jerror.h to expand to nothing;
 | |
| you don't need trace capability anyway, right?
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Portability considerations
 | |
| --------------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| The JPEG library has been written to be extremely portable; the sample
 | |
| applications cjpeg and djpeg are slightly less so.  This section summarizes
 | |
| the design goals in this area.  (If you encounter any bugs that cause the
 | |
| library to be less portable than is claimed here, we'd appreciate hearing
 | |
| about them.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| The code works fine on ANSI C, C++, and pre-ANSI C compilers, using any of
 | |
| the popular system include file setups, and some not-so-popular ones too.
 | |
| See install.txt for configuration procedures.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The code is not dependent on the exact sizes of the C data types.  As
 | |
| distributed, we make the assumptions that
 | |
| 	char	is at least 8 bits wide
 | |
| 	short	is at least 16 bits wide
 | |
| 	int	is at least 16 bits wide
 | |
| 	long	is at least 32 bits wide
 | |
| (These are the minimum requirements of the ANSI C standard.)  Wider types will
 | |
| work fine, although memory may be used inefficiently if char is much larger
 | |
| than 8 bits or short is much bigger than 16 bits.  The code should work
 | |
| equally well with 16- or 32-bit ints.
 | |
| 
 | |
| In a system where these assumptions are not met, you may be able to make the
 | |
| code work by modifying the typedefs in jmorecfg.h.  However, you will probably
 | |
| have difficulty if int is less than 16 bits wide, since references to plain
 | |
| int abound in the code.
 | |
| 
 | |
| char can be either signed or unsigned, although the code runs faster if an
 | |
| unsigned char type is available.  If char is wider than 8 bits, you will need
 | |
| to redefine JOCTET and/or provide custom data source/destination managers so
 | |
| that JOCTET represents exactly 8 bits of data on external storage.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The JPEG library proper does not assume ASCII representation of characters.
 | |
| But some of the image file I/O modules in cjpeg/djpeg do have ASCII
 | |
| dependencies in file-header manipulation; so does cjpeg's select_file_type()
 | |
| routine.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The JPEG library does not rely heavily on the C library.  In particular, C
 | |
| stdio is used only by the data source/destination modules and the error
 | |
| handler, all of which are application-replaceable.  (cjpeg/djpeg are more
 | |
| heavily dependent on stdio.)  malloc and free are called only from the memory
 | |
| manager "back end" module, so you can use a different memory allocator by
 | |
| replacing that one file.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The code generally assumes that C names must be unique in the first 15
 | |
| characters.  However, global function names can be made unique in the
 | |
| first 6 characters by defining NEED_SHORT_EXTERNAL_NAMES.
 | |
| 
 | |
| More info about porting the code may be gleaned by reading jconfig.txt,
 | |
| jmorecfg.h, and jinclude.h.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Notes for MS-DOS implementors
 | |
| -----------------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| The IJG code is designed to work efficiently in 80x86 "small" or "medium"
 | |
| memory models (i.e., data pointers are 16 bits unless explicitly declared
 | |
| "far"; code pointers can be either size).  You may be able to use small
 | |
| model to compile cjpeg or djpeg by itself, but you will probably have to use
 | |
| medium model for any larger application.  This won't make much difference in
 | |
| performance.  You *will* take a noticeable performance hit if you use a
 | |
| large-data memory model (perhaps 10%-25%), and you should avoid "huge" model
 | |
| if at all possible.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The JPEG library typically needs 2Kb-3Kb of stack space.  It will also
 | |
| malloc about 20K-30K of near heap space while executing (and lots of far
 | |
| heap, but that doesn't count in this calculation).  This figure will vary
 | |
| depending on selected operating mode, and to a lesser extent on image size.
 | |
| There is also about 5Kb-6Kb of constant data which will be allocated in the
 | |
| near data segment (about 4Kb of this is the error message table).
 | |
| Thus you have perhaps 20K available for other modules' static data and near
 | |
| heap space before you need to go to a larger memory model.  The C library's
 | |
| static data will account for several K of this, but that still leaves a good
 | |
| deal for your needs.  (If you are tight on space, you could reduce the sizes
 | |
| of the I/O buffers allocated by jdatasrc.c and jdatadst.c, say from 4K to
 | |
| 1K.  Another possibility is to move the error message table to far memory;
 | |
| this should be doable with only localized hacking on jerror.c.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| About 2K of the near heap space is "permanent" memory that will not be
 | |
| released until you destroy the JPEG object.  This is only an issue if you
 | |
| save a JPEG object between compression or decompression operations.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Far data space may also be a tight resource when you are dealing with large
 | |
| images.  The most memory-intensive case is decompression with two-pass color
 | |
| quantization, or single-pass quantization to an externally supplied color
 | |
| map.  This requires a 128Kb color lookup table plus strip buffers amounting
 | |
| to about 40 bytes per column for typical sampling ratios (eg, about 25600
 | |
| bytes for a 640-pixel-wide image).  You may not be able to process wide
 | |
| images if you have large data structures of your own.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Of course, all of these concerns vanish if you use a 32-bit flat-memory-model
 | |
| compiler, such as DJGPP or Watcom C.  We highly recommend flat model if you
 | |
| can use it; the JPEG library is significantly faster in flat model.
 |