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Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001USING THE IJG JPEG LIBRARY
2
DRCa73e8702012-12-31 02:52:30 +00003This file was part of the Independent JPEG Group's software:
Alex Naidis6eb7d372016-10-16 23:10:08 +02004Copyright (C) 1994-2013, Thomas G. Lane, Guido Vollbeding.
DRCda13af62014-05-18 17:52:06 +00005libjpeg-turbo Modifications:
Leon Scroggins III3993b372018-07-16 10:43:45 -04006Copyright (C) 2010, 2014-2018, D. R. Commander.
DRCac30a1b2015-06-25 03:44:36 +00007Copyright (C) 2015, Google, Inc.
Alex Naidis6eb7d372016-10-16 23:10:08 +02008For conditions of distribution and use, see the accompanying README.ijg file.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00009
10
11This file describes how to use the IJG JPEG library within an application
12program. Read it if you want to write a program that uses the library.
13
Leon Scroggins III3993b372018-07-16 10:43:45 -040014The file example.txt provides heavily commented skeleton code for calling the
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +000015JPEG library. Also see jpeglib.h (the include file to be used by application
16programs) for full details about data structures and function parameter lists.
17The library source code, of course, is the ultimate reference.
18
19Note that there have been *major* changes from the application interface
20presented by IJG version 4 and earlier versions. The old design had several
21inherent limitations, and it had accumulated a lot of cruft as we added
22features while trying to minimize application-interface changes. We have
23sacrificed backward compatibility in the version 5 rewrite, but we think the
24improvements justify this.
25
26
27TABLE OF CONTENTS
28-----------------
29
30Overview:
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +000031 Functions provided by the library
32 Outline of typical usage
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +000033Basic library usage:
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +000034 Data formats
35 Compression details
36 Decompression details
Leon Scroggins IIIbd7903e2018-02-28 14:05:04 -050037 Partial image decompression
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +000038 Mechanics of usage: include files, linking, etc
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +000039Advanced features:
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +000040 Compression parameter selection
41 Decompression parameter selection
42 Special color spaces
43 Error handling
44 Compressed data handling (source and destination managers)
45 I/O suspension
46 Progressive JPEG support
47 Buffered-image mode
48 Abbreviated datastreams and multiple images
49 Special markers
Leon Scroggins III3993b372018-07-16 10:43:45 -040050 ICC profiles
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +000051 Raw (downsampled) image data
52 Really raw data: DCT coefficients
53 Progress monitoring
54 Memory management
55 Memory usage
56 Library compile-time options
57 Portability considerations
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +000058
59You should read at least the overview and basic usage sections before trying
60to program with the library. The sections on advanced features can be read
61if and when you need them.
62
63
64OVERVIEW
65========
66
67Functions provided by the library
68---------------------------------
69
70The IJG JPEG library provides C code to read and write JPEG-compressed image
71files. The surrounding application program receives or supplies image data a
72scanline at a time, using a straightforward uncompressed image format. All
73details of color conversion and other preprocessing/postprocessing can be
74handled by the library.
75
76The library includes a substantial amount of code that is not covered by the
77JPEG standard but is necessary for typical applications of JPEG. These
78functions preprocess the image before JPEG compression or postprocess it after
79decompression. They include colorspace conversion, downsampling/upsampling,
80and color quantization. The application indirectly selects use of this code
81by specifying the format in which it wishes to supply or receive image data.
82For example, if colormapped output is requested, then the decompression
83library automatically invokes color quantization.
84
85A wide range of quality vs. speed tradeoffs are possible in JPEG processing,
86and even more so in decompression postprocessing. The decompression library
87provides multiple implementations that cover most of the useful tradeoffs,
88ranging from very-high-quality down to fast-preview operation. On the
89compression side we have generally not provided low-quality choices, since
90compression is normally less time-critical. It should be understood that the
91low-quality modes may not meet the JPEG standard's accuracy requirements;
92nonetheless, they are useful for viewers.
93
94A word about functions *not* provided by the library. We handle a subset of
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +000095the ISO JPEG standard; most baseline, extended-sequential, and progressive
96JPEG processes are supported. (Our subset includes all features now in common
97use.) Unsupported ISO options include:
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +000098 * Hierarchical storage
99 * Lossless JPEG
100 * DNL marker
101 * Nonintegral subsampling ratios
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000102We support both 8- and 12-bit data precision, but this is a compile-time
103choice rather than a run-time choice; hence it is difficult to use both
104precisions in a single application.
105
106By itself, the library handles only interchange JPEG datastreams --- in
107particular the widely used JFIF file format. The library can be used by
108surrounding code to process interchange or abbreviated JPEG datastreams that
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +0000109are embedded in more complex file formats. (For example, this library is
110used by the free LIBTIFF library to support JPEG compression in TIFF.)
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000111
112
113Outline of typical usage
114------------------------
115
116The rough outline of a JPEG compression operation is:
117
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000118 Allocate and initialize a JPEG compression object
119 Specify the destination for the compressed data (eg, a file)
120 Set parameters for compression, including image size & colorspace
121 jpeg_start_compress(...);
122 while (scan lines remain to be written)
123 jpeg_write_scanlines(...);
124 jpeg_finish_compress(...);
125 Release the JPEG compression object
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000126
127A JPEG compression object holds parameters and working state for the JPEG
128library. We make creation/destruction of the object separate from starting
129or finishing compression of an image; the same object can be re-used for a
130series of image compression operations. This makes it easy to re-use the
131same parameter settings for a sequence of images. Re-use of a JPEG object
132also has important implications for processing abbreviated JPEG datastreams,
133as discussed later.
134
135The image data to be compressed is supplied to jpeg_write_scanlines() from
136in-memory buffers. If the application is doing file-to-file compression,
137reading image data from the source file is the application's responsibility.
138The library emits compressed data by calling a "data destination manager",
139which typically will write the data into a file; but the application can
140provide its own destination manager to do something else.
141
142Similarly, the rough outline of a JPEG decompression operation is:
143
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000144 Allocate and initialize a JPEG decompression object
145 Specify the source of the compressed data (eg, a file)
146 Call jpeg_read_header() to obtain image info
147 Set parameters for decompression
148 jpeg_start_decompress(...);
149 while (scan lines remain to be read)
150 jpeg_read_scanlines(...);
151 jpeg_finish_decompress(...);
152 Release the JPEG decompression object
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000153
154This is comparable to the compression outline except that reading the
155datastream header is a separate step. This is helpful because information
156about the image's size, colorspace, etc is available when the application
157selects decompression parameters. For example, the application can choose an
158output scaling ratio that will fit the image into the available screen size.
159
160The decompression library obtains compressed data by calling a data source
161manager, which typically will read the data from a file; but other behaviors
162can be obtained with a custom source manager. Decompressed data is delivered
163into in-memory buffers passed to jpeg_read_scanlines().
164
165It is possible to abort an incomplete compression or decompression operation
166by calling jpeg_abort(); or, if you do not need to retain the JPEG object,
167simply release it by calling jpeg_destroy().
168
169JPEG compression and decompression objects are two separate struct types.
170However, they share some common fields, and certain routines such as
171jpeg_destroy() can work on either type of object.
172
173The JPEG library has no static variables: all state is in the compression
174or decompression object. Therefore it is possible to process multiple
175compression and decompression operations concurrently, using multiple JPEG
176objects.
177
178Both compression and decompression can be done in an incremental memory-to-
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +0000179memory fashion, if suitable source/destination managers are used. See the
180section on "I/O suspension" for more details.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000181
182
183BASIC LIBRARY USAGE
184===================
185
186Data formats
187------------
188
189Before diving into procedural details, it is helpful to understand the
190image data format that the JPEG library expects or returns.
191
192The standard input image format is a rectangular array of pixels, with each
Thomas G. Lane489583f1996-02-07 00:00:00 +0000193pixel having the same number of "component" or "sample" values (color
194channels). You must specify how many components there are and the colorspace
195interpretation of the components. Most applications will use RGB data
196(three components per pixel) or grayscale data (one component per pixel).
197PLEASE NOTE THAT RGB DATA IS THREE SAMPLES PER PIXEL, GRAYSCALE ONLY ONE.
198A remarkable number of people manage to miss this, only to find that their
199programs don't work with grayscale JPEG files.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000200
Thomas G. Lane489583f1996-02-07 00:00:00 +0000201There is no provision for colormapped input. JPEG files are always full-color
202or full grayscale (or sometimes another colorspace such as CMYK). You can
203feed in a colormapped image by expanding it to full-color format. However
204JPEG often doesn't work very well with source data that has been colormapped,
205because of dithering noise. This is discussed in more detail in the JPEG FAQ
Alex Naidis6eb7d372016-10-16 23:10:08 +0200206and the other references mentioned in the README.ijg file.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000207
208Pixels are stored by scanlines, with each scanline running from left to
209right. The component values for each pixel are adjacent in the row; for
210example, R,G,B,R,G,B,R,G,B,... for 24-bit RGB color. Each scanline is an
211array of data type JSAMPLE --- which is typically "unsigned char", unless
212you've changed jmorecfg.h. (You can also change the RGB pixel layout, say
213to B,G,R order, by modifying jmorecfg.h. But see the restrictions listed in
214that file before doing so.)
215
216A 2-D array of pixels is formed by making a list of pointers to the starts of
217scanlines; so the scanlines need not be physically adjacent in memory. Even
218if you process just one scanline at a time, you must make a one-element
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +0000219pointer array to conform to this structure. Pointers to JSAMPLE rows are of
220type JSAMPROW, and the pointer to the pointer array is of type JSAMPARRAY.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000221
222The library accepts or supplies one or more complete scanlines per call.
223It is not possible to process part of a row at a time. Scanlines are always
224processed top-to-bottom. You can process an entire image in one call if you
225have it all in memory, but usually it's simplest to process one scanline at
226a time.
227
228For best results, source data values should have the precision specified by
229BITS_IN_JSAMPLE (normally 8 bits). For instance, if you choose to compress
230data that's only 6 bits/channel, you should left-justify each value in a
231byte before passing it to the compressor. If you need to compress data
232that has more than 8 bits/channel, compile with BITS_IN_JSAMPLE = 12.
233(See "Library compile-time options", later.)
234
Thomas G. Lane489583f1996-02-07 00:00:00 +0000235
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000236The data format returned by the decompressor is the same in all details,
Thomas G. Lane489583f1996-02-07 00:00:00 +0000237except that colormapped output is supported. (Again, a JPEG file is never
238colormapped. But you can ask the decompressor to perform on-the-fly color
239quantization to deliver colormapped output.) If you request colormapped
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000240output then the returned data array contains a single JSAMPLE per pixel;
241its value is an index into a color map. The color map is represented as
242a 2-D JSAMPARRAY in which each row holds the values of one color component,
243that is, colormap[i][j] is the value of the i'th color component for pixel
244value (map index) j. Note that since the colormap indexes are stored in
245JSAMPLEs, the maximum number of colors is limited by the size of JSAMPLE
246(ie, at most 256 colors for an 8-bit JPEG library).
247
248
249Compression details
250-------------------
251
252Here we revisit the JPEG compression outline given in the overview.
253
2541. Allocate and initialize a JPEG compression object.
255
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +0000256A JPEG compression object is a "struct jpeg_compress_struct". (It also has
257a bunch of subsidiary structures which are allocated via malloc(), but the
258application doesn't control those directly.) This struct can be just a local
259variable in the calling routine, if a single routine is going to execute the
260whole JPEG compression sequence. Otherwise it can be static or allocated
261from malloc().
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000262
263You will also need a structure representing a JPEG error handler. The part
264of this that the library cares about is a "struct jpeg_error_mgr". If you
265are providing your own error handler, you'll typically want to embed the
266jpeg_error_mgr struct in a larger structure; this is discussed later under
267"Error handling". For now we'll assume you are just using the default error
268handler. The default error handler will print JPEG error/warning messages
269on stderr, and it will call exit() if a fatal error occurs.
270
271You must initialize the error handler structure, store a pointer to it into
272the JPEG object's "err" field, and then call jpeg_create_compress() to
273initialize the rest of the JPEG object.
274
275Typical code for this step, if you are using the default error handler, is
276
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000277 struct jpeg_compress_struct cinfo;
278 struct jpeg_error_mgr jerr;
279 ...
280 cinfo.err = jpeg_std_error(&jerr);
281 jpeg_create_compress(&cinfo);
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000282
283jpeg_create_compress allocates a small amount of memory, so it could fail
284if you are out of memory. In that case it will exit via the error handler;
285that's why the error handler must be initialized first.
286
287
2882. Specify the destination for the compressed data (eg, a file).
289
290As previously mentioned, the JPEG library delivers compressed data to a
291"data destination" module. The library includes one data destination
292module which knows how to write to a stdio stream. You can use your own
293destination module if you want to do something else, as discussed later.
294
295If you use the standard destination module, you must open the target stdio
296stream beforehand. Typical code for this step looks like:
297
Alex Naidis6eb7d372016-10-16 23:10:08 +0200298 FILE *outfile;
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000299 ...
300 if ((outfile = fopen(filename, "wb")) == NULL) {
301 fprintf(stderr, "can't open %s\n", filename);
302 exit(1);
303 }
304 jpeg_stdio_dest(&cinfo, outfile);
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000305
306where the last line invokes the standard destination module.
307
308WARNING: it is critical that the binary compressed data be delivered to the
309output file unchanged. On non-Unix systems the stdio library may perform
310newline translation or otherwise corrupt binary data. To suppress this
311behavior, you may need to use a "b" option to fopen (as shown above), or use
312setmode() or another routine to put the stdio stream in binary mode. See
313cjpeg.c and djpeg.c for code that has been found to work on many systems.
314
315You can select the data destination after setting other parameters (step 3),
316if that's more convenient. You may not change the destination between
317calling jpeg_start_compress() and jpeg_finish_compress().
318
319
3203. Set parameters for compression, including image size & colorspace.
321
322You must supply information about the source image by setting the following
323fields in the JPEG object (cinfo structure):
324
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000325 image_width Width of image, in pixels
326 image_height Height of image, in pixels
327 input_components Number of color channels (samples per pixel)
328 in_color_space Color space of source image
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000329
330The image dimensions are, hopefully, obvious. JPEG supports image dimensions
331of 1 to 64K pixels in either direction. The input color space is typically
332RGB or grayscale, and input_components is 3 or 1 accordingly. (See "Special
333color spaces", later, for more info.) The in_color_space field must be
334assigned one of the J_COLOR_SPACE enum constants, typically JCS_RGB or
335JCS_GRAYSCALE.
336
337JPEG has a large number of compression parameters that determine how the
338image is encoded. Most applications don't need or want to know about all
339these parameters. You can set all the parameters to reasonable defaults by
340calling jpeg_set_defaults(); then, if there are particular values you want
341to change, you can do so after that. The "Compression parameter selection"
342section tells about all the parameters.
343
344You must set in_color_space correctly before calling jpeg_set_defaults(),
345because the defaults depend on the source image colorspace. However the
346other three source image parameters need not be valid until you call
347jpeg_start_compress(). There's no harm in calling jpeg_set_defaults() more
348than once, if that happens to be convenient.
349
350Typical code for a 24-bit RGB source image is
351
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000352 cinfo.image_width = Width; /* image width and height, in pixels */
353 cinfo.image_height = Height;
354 cinfo.input_components = 3; /* # of color components per pixel */
355 cinfo.in_color_space = JCS_RGB; /* colorspace of input image */
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000356
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000357 jpeg_set_defaults(&cinfo);
358 /* Make optional parameter settings here */
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000359
360
3614. jpeg_start_compress(...);
362
363After you have established the data destination and set all the necessary
364source image info and other parameters, call jpeg_start_compress() to begin
365a compression cycle. This will initialize internal state, allocate working
366storage, and emit the first few bytes of the JPEG datastream header.
367
368Typical code:
369
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000370 jpeg_start_compress(&cinfo, TRUE);
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000371
372The "TRUE" parameter ensures that a complete JPEG interchange datastream
373will be written. This is appropriate in most cases. If you think you might
374want to use an abbreviated datastream, read the section on abbreviated
375datastreams, below.
376
377Once you have called jpeg_start_compress(), you may not alter any JPEG
378parameters or other fields of the JPEG object until you have completed
379the compression cycle.
380
381
3825. while (scan lines remain to be written)
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000383 jpeg_write_scanlines(...);
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000384
385Now write all the required image data by calling jpeg_write_scanlines()
386one or more times. You can pass one or more scanlines in each call, up
387to the total image height. In most applications it is convenient to pass
388just one or a few scanlines at a time. The expected format for the passed
389data is discussed under "Data formats", above.
390
Leon Scroggins III3993b372018-07-16 10:43:45 -0400391Image data should be written in top-to-bottom scanline order.
392Rec. ITU-T T.81 | ISO/IEC 10918-1 says, "Applications determine which edges of
393a source image are defined as top, bottom, left, and right." However, if you
394want your files to be compatible with everyone else's, then top-to-bottom order
395must be used. If the source data must be read in bottom-to-top order, then you
396can use the JPEG library's virtual array mechanism to invert the data
397efficiently. Examples of this can be found in the sample application cjpeg.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000398
399The library maintains a count of the number of scanlines written so far
400in the next_scanline field of the JPEG object. Usually you can just use
401this variable as the loop counter, so that the loop test looks like
402"while (cinfo.next_scanline < cinfo.image_height)".
403
404Code for this step depends heavily on the way that you store the source data.
Leon Scroggins III3993b372018-07-16 10:43:45 -0400405example.txt shows the following code for the case of a full-size 2-D source
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000406array containing 3-byte RGB pixels:
407
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000408 JSAMPROW row_pointer[1]; /* pointer to a single row */
409 int row_stride; /* physical row width in buffer */
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000410
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000411 row_stride = image_width * 3; /* JSAMPLEs per row in image_buffer */
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000412
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000413 while (cinfo.next_scanline < cinfo.image_height) {
Leon Scroggins III3993b372018-07-16 10:43:45 -0400414 row_pointer[0] = &image_buffer[cinfo.next_scanline * row_stride];
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000415 jpeg_write_scanlines(&cinfo, row_pointer, 1);
416 }
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000417
418jpeg_write_scanlines() returns the number of scanlines actually written.
419This will normally be equal to the number passed in, so you can usually
420ignore the return value. It is different in just two cases:
421 * If you try to write more scanlines than the declared image height,
422 the additional scanlines are ignored.
423 * If you use a suspending data destination manager, output buffer overrun
424 will cause the compressor to return before accepting all the passed lines.
425 This feature is discussed under "I/O suspension", below. The normal
426 stdio destination manager will NOT cause this to happen.
427In any case, the return value is the same as the change in the value of
428next_scanline.
429
430
4316. jpeg_finish_compress(...);
432
433After all the image data has been written, call jpeg_finish_compress() to
434complete the compression cycle. This step is ESSENTIAL to ensure that the
435last bufferload of data is written to the data destination.
436jpeg_finish_compress() also releases working memory associated with the JPEG
437object.
438
439Typical code:
440
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000441 jpeg_finish_compress(&cinfo);
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000442
443If using the stdio destination manager, don't forget to close the output
Thomas G. Lane5ead57a1998-03-27 00:00:00 +0000444stdio stream (if necessary) afterwards.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000445
446If you have requested a multi-pass operating mode, such as Huffman code
447optimization, jpeg_finish_compress() will perform the additional passes using
448data buffered by the first pass. In this case jpeg_finish_compress() may take
449quite a while to complete. With the default compression parameters, this will
450not happen.
451
452It is an error to call jpeg_finish_compress() before writing the necessary
453total number of scanlines. If you wish to abort compression, call
454jpeg_abort() as discussed below.
455
456After completing a compression cycle, you may dispose of the JPEG object
457as discussed next, or you may use it to compress another image. In that case
458return to step 2, 3, or 4 as appropriate. If you do not change the
459destination manager, the new datastream will be written to the same target.
460If you do not change any JPEG parameters, the new datastream will be written
461with the same parameters as before. Note that you can change the input image
462dimensions freely between cycles, but if you change the input colorspace, you
463should call jpeg_set_defaults() to adjust for the new colorspace; and then
464you'll need to repeat all of step 3.
465
466
4677. Release the JPEG compression object.
468
469When you are done with a JPEG compression object, destroy it by calling
Thomas G. Lane5ead57a1998-03-27 00:00:00 +0000470jpeg_destroy_compress(). This will free all subsidiary memory (regardless of
471the previous state of the object). Or you can call jpeg_destroy(), which
472works for either compression or decompression objects --- this may be more
473convenient if you are sharing code between compression and decompression
474cases. (Actually, these routines are equivalent except for the declared type
475of the passed pointer. To avoid gripes from ANSI C compilers, jpeg_destroy()
476should be passed a j_common_ptr.)
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000477
478If you allocated the jpeg_compress_struct structure from malloc(), freeing
479it is your responsibility --- jpeg_destroy() won't. Ditto for the error
480handler structure.
481
482Typical code:
483
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000484 jpeg_destroy_compress(&cinfo);
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000485
486
4878. Aborting.
488
489If you decide to abort a compression cycle before finishing, you can clean up
490in either of two ways:
491
492* If you don't need the JPEG object any more, just call
493 jpeg_destroy_compress() or jpeg_destroy() to release memory. This is
494 legitimate at any point after calling jpeg_create_compress() --- in fact,
495 it's safe even if jpeg_create_compress() fails.
496
Thomas G. Lane5ead57a1998-03-27 00:00:00 +0000497* If you want to re-use the JPEG object, call jpeg_abort_compress(), or call
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000498 jpeg_abort() which works on both compression and decompression objects.
499 This will return the object to an idle state, releasing any working memory.
500 jpeg_abort() is allowed at any time after successful object creation.
501
502Note that cleaning up the data destination, if required, is your
Thomas G. Lane5ead57a1998-03-27 00:00:00 +0000503responsibility; neither of these routines will call term_destination().
504(See "Compressed data handling", below, for more about that.)
505
506jpeg_destroy() and jpeg_abort() are the only safe calls to make on a JPEG
507object that has reported an error by calling error_exit (see "Error handling"
508for more info). The internal state of such an object is likely to be out of
509whack. Either of these two routines will return the object to a known state.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000510
511
512Decompression details
513---------------------
514
515Here we revisit the JPEG decompression outline given in the overview.
516
5171. Allocate and initialize a JPEG decompression object.
518
519This is just like initialization for compression, as discussed above,
520except that the object is a "struct jpeg_decompress_struct" and you
521call jpeg_create_decompress(). Error handling is exactly the same.
522
523Typical code:
524
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000525 struct jpeg_decompress_struct cinfo;
526 struct jpeg_error_mgr jerr;
527 ...
528 cinfo.err = jpeg_std_error(&jerr);
529 jpeg_create_decompress(&cinfo);
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000530
531(Both here and in the IJG code, we usually use variable name "cinfo" for
532both compression and decompression objects.)
533
534
5352. Specify the source of the compressed data (eg, a file).
536
537As previously mentioned, the JPEG library reads compressed data from a "data
538source" module. The library includes one data source module which knows how
539to read from a stdio stream. You can use your own source module if you want
540to do something else, as discussed later.
541
542If you use the standard source module, you must open the source stdio stream
543beforehand. Typical code for this step looks like:
544
Alex Naidis6eb7d372016-10-16 23:10:08 +0200545 FILE *infile;
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000546 ...
547 if ((infile = fopen(filename, "rb")) == NULL) {
548 fprintf(stderr, "can't open %s\n", filename);
549 exit(1);
550 }
551 jpeg_stdio_src(&cinfo, infile);
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000552
553where the last line invokes the standard source module.
554
555WARNING: it is critical that the binary compressed data be read unchanged.
556On non-Unix systems the stdio library may perform newline translation or
557otherwise corrupt binary data. To suppress this behavior, you may need to use
558a "b" option to fopen (as shown above), or use setmode() or another routine to
559put the stdio stream in binary mode. See cjpeg.c and djpeg.c for code that
560has been found to work on many systems.
561
562You may not change the data source between calling jpeg_read_header() and
563jpeg_finish_decompress(). If you wish to read a series of JPEG images from
564a single source file, you should repeat the jpeg_read_header() to
565jpeg_finish_decompress() sequence without reinitializing either the JPEG
566object or the data source module; this prevents buffered input data from
567being discarded.
568
569
5703. Call jpeg_read_header() to obtain image info.
571
572Typical code for this step is just
573
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000574 jpeg_read_header(&cinfo, TRUE);
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000575
576This will read the source datastream header markers, up to the beginning
577of the compressed data proper. On return, the image dimensions and other
578info have been stored in the JPEG object. The application may wish to
579consult this information before selecting decompression parameters.
580
581More complex code is necessary if
582 * A suspending data source is used --- in that case jpeg_read_header()
583 may return before it has read all the header data. See "I/O suspension",
584 below. The normal stdio source manager will NOT cause this to happen.
585 * Abbreviated JPEG files are to be processed --- see the section on
586 abbreviated datastreams. Standard applications that deal only in
587 interchange JPEG files need not be concerned with this case either.
588
589It is permissible to stop at this point if you just wanted to find out the
590image dimensions and other header info for a JPEG file. In that case,
591call jpeg_destroy() when you are done with the JPEG object, or call
592jpeg_abort() to return it to an idle state before selecting a new data
593source and reading another header.
594
595
5964. Set parameters for decompression.
597
598jpeg_read_header() sets appropriate default decompression parameters based on
599the properties of the image (in particular, its colorspace). However, you
600may well want to alter these defaults before beginning the decompression.
601For example, the default is to produce full color output from a color file.
602If you want colormapped output you must ask for it. Other options allow the
603returned image to be scaled and allow various speed/quality tradeoffs to be
604selected. "Decompression parameter selection", below, gives details.
605
606If the defaults are appropriate, nothing need be done at this step.
607
608Note that all default values are set by each call to jpeg_read_header().
609If you reuse a decompression object, you cannot expect your parameter
610settings to be preserved across cycles, as you can for compression.
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +0000611You must set desired parameter values each time.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000612
613
6145. jpeg_start_decompress(...);
615
616Once the parameter values are satisfactory, call jpeg_start_decompress() to
617begin decompression. This will initialize internal state, allocate working
618memory, and prepare for returning data.
619
620Typical code is just
621
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000622 jpeg_start_decompress(&cinfo);
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000623
624If you have requested a multi-pass operating mode, such as 2-pass color
625quantization, jpeg_start_decompress() will do everything needed before data
626output can begin. In this case jpeg_start_decompress() may take quite a while
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +0000627to complete. With a single-scan (non progressive) JPEG file and default
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000628decompression parameters, this will not happen; jpeg_start_decompress() will
629return quickly.
630
631After this call, the final output image dimensions, including any requested
632scaling, are available in the JPEG object; so is the selected colormap, if
633colormapped output has been requested. Useful fields include
634
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000635 output_width image width and height, as scaled
636 output_height
637 out_color_components # of color components in out_color_space
638 output_components # of color components returned per pixel
639 colormap the selected colormap, if any
640 actual_number_of_colors number of entries in colormap
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000641
642output_components is 1 (a colormap index) when quantizing colors; otherwise it
643equals out_color_components. It is the number of JSAMPLE values that will be
644emitted per pixel in the output arrays.
645
646Typically you will need to allocate data buffers to hold the incoming image.
647You will need output_width * output_components JSAMPLEs per scanline in your
648output buffer, and a total of output_height scanlines will be returned.
649
650Note: if you are using the JPEG library's internal memory manager to allocate
651data buffers (as djpeg does), then the manager's protocol requires that you
652request large buffers *before* calling jpeg_start_decompress(). This is a
653little tricky since the output_XXX fields are not normally valid then. You
654can make them valid by calling jpeg_calc_output_dimensions() after setting the
655relevant parameters (scaling, output color space, and quantization flag).
656
657
6586. while (scan lines remain to be read)
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000659 jpeg_read_scanlines(...);
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000660
661Now you can read the decompressed image data by calling jpeg_read_scanlines()
662one or more times. At each call, you pass in the maximum number of scanlines
663to be read (ie, the height of your working buffer); jpeg_read_scanlines()
664will return up to that many lines. The return value is the number of lines
665actually read. The format of the returned data is discussed under "Data
Thomas G. Lanea8b67c41995-03-15 00:00:00 +0000666formats", above. Don't forget that grayscale and color JPEGs will return
667different data formats!
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000668
669Image data is returned in top-to-bottom scanline order. If you must write
670out the image in bottom-to-top order, you can use the JPEG library's virtual
671array mechanism to invert the data efficiently. Examples of this can be
672found in the sample application djpeg.
673
674The library maintains a count of the number of scanlines returned so far
675in the output_scanline field of the JPEG object. Usually you can just use
676this variable as the loop counter, so that the loop test looks like
677"while (cinfo.output_scanline < cinfo.output_height)". (Note that the test
678should NOT be against image_height, unless you never use scaling. The
679image_height field is the height of the original unscaled image.)
Thomas G. Lane9ba2f5e1994-12-07 00:00:00 +0000680The return value always equals the change in the value of output_scanline.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000681
682If you don't use a suspending data source, it is safe to assume that
683jpeg_read_scanlines() reads at least one scanline per call, until the
Thomas G. Lane489583f1996-02-07 00:00:00 +0000684bottom of the image has been reached.
685
686If you use a buffer larger than one scanline, it is NOT safe to assume that
Thomas G. Lane5ead57a1998-03-27 00:00:00 +0000687jpeg_read_scanlines() fills it. (The current implementation returns only a
688few scanlines per call, no matter how large a buffer you pass.) So you must
689always provide a loop that calls jpeg_read_scanlines() repeatedly until the
690whole image has been read.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000691
692
6937. jpeg_finish_decompress(...);
694
695After all the image data has been read, call jpeg_finish_decompress() to
696complete the decompression cycle. This causes working memory associated
697with the JPEG object to be released.
698
699Typical code:
700
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000701 jpeg_finish_decompress(&cinfo);
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000702
703If using the stdio source manager, don't forget to close the source stdio
704stream if necessary.
705
706It is an error to call jpeg_finish_decompress() before reading the correct
Thomas G. Lane5ead57a1998-03-27 00:00:00 +0000707total number of scanlines. If you wish to abort decompression, call
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000708jpeg_abort() as discussed below.
709
710After completing a decompression cycle, you may dispose of the JPEG object as
711discussed next, or you may use it to decompress another image. In that case
712return to step 2 or 3 as appropriate. If you do not change the source
713manager, the next image will be read from the same source.
714
715
7168. Release the JPEG decompression object.
717
718When you are done with a JPEG decompression object, destroy it by calling
719jpeg_destroy_decompress() or jpeg_destroy(). The previous discussion of
720destroying compression objects applies here too.
721
722Typical code:
723
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000724 jpeg_destroy_decompress(&cinfo);
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000725
726
7279. Aborting.
728
729You can abort a decompression cycle by calling jpeg_destroy_decompress() or
730jpeg_destroy() if you don't need the JPEG object any more, or
731jpeg_abort_decompress() or jpeg_abort() if you want to reuse the object.
732The previous discussion of aborting compression cycles applies here too.
733
734
DRC0ef076f2016-02-19 18:32:10 -0600735Partial image decompression
736---------------------------
DRCac30a1b2015-06-25 03:44:36 +0000737
DRC0ef076f2016-02-19 18:32:10 -0600738Partial image decompression is convenient for performance-critical applications
739that wish to view only a portion of a large JPEG image without decompressing
740the whole thing. It it also useful in memory-constrained environments (such as
741on mobile devices.) This library provides the following functions to support
742partial image decompression:
743
7441. Skipping rows when decompressing
745
746 jpeg_skip_scanlines(j_decompress_ptr cinfo, JDIMENSION num_lines);
DRCac30a1b2015-06-25 03:44:36 +0000747
748This function provides application programmers with the ability to skip over
DRC0ef076f2016-02-19 18:32:10 -0600749multiple rows in the JPEG image.
DRCac30a1b2015-06-25 03:44:36 +0000750
751Suspending data sources are not supported by this function. Calling
752jpeg_skip_scanlines() with a suspending data source will result in undefined
753behavior.
754
755jpeg_skip_scanlines() will not allow skipping past the bottom of the image. If
756the value of num_lines is large enough to skip past the bottom of the image,
757then the function will skip to the end of the image instead.
758
759If the value of num_lines is valid, then jpeg_skip_scanlines() will always
760skip all of the input rows requested. There is no need to inspect the return
761value of the function in that case.
762
763Best results will be achieved by calling jpeg_skip_scanlines() for large chunks
764of rows. The function should be viewed as a way to quickly jump to a
765particular vertical offset in the JPEG image in order to decode a subset of the
766image. Used in this manner, it will provide significant performance
767improvements.
768
769Calling jpeg_skip_scanlines() for small values of num_lines has several
770potential drawbacks:
771 1) JPEG decompression occurs in blocks, so if jpeg_skip_scanlines() is
772 called from the middle of a decompression block, then it is likely that
773 much of the decompression work has already been done for the first
774 couple of rows that need to be skipped.
775 2) When this function returns, it must leave the decompressor in a state
776 such that it is ready to read the next line. This may involve
777 decompressing a block that must be partially skipped.
778These issues are especially tricky for cases in which upsampling requires
779context rows. In the worst case, jpeg_skip_scanlines() will perform similarly
780to jpeg_read_scanlines() (since it will actually call jpeg_read_scanlines().)
781
DRC0ef076f2016-02-19 18:32:10 -06007822. Decompressing partial scanlines
783
784 jpeg_crop_scanline (j_decompress_ptr cinfo, JDIMENSION *xoffset,
785 JDIMENSION *width)
786
787This function provides application programmers with the ability to decompress
788only a portion of each row in the JPEG image. It must be called after
789jpeg_start_decompress() and before any calls to jpeg_read_scanlines() or
790jpeg_skip_scanlines().
791
792If xoffset and width do not form a valid subset of the image row, then this
793function will generate an error. Note that if the output image is scaled, then
794xoffset and width are relative to the scaled image dimensions.
795
796xoffset and width are passed by reference because xoffset must fall on an iMCU
797boundary. If it doesn't, then it will be moved left to the nearest iMCU
798boundary, and width will be increased accordingly. If the calling program does
799not like the adjusted values of xoffset and width, then it can call
800jpeg_crop_scanline() again with new values (for instance, if it wants to move
801xoffset to the nearest iMCU boundary to the right instead of to the left.)
802
803After calling this function, cinfo->output_width will be set to the adjusted
804width. This value should be used when allocating an output buffer to pass to
805jpeg_read_scanlines().
806
807The output image from a partial-width decompression will be identical to the
808corresponding image region from a full decode, with one exception: The "fancy"
809(smooth) h2v2 (4:2:0) and h2v1 (4:2:2) upsampling algorithms fill in the
810missing chroma components by averaging the chroma components from neighboring
811pixels, except on the right and left edges of the image (where there are no
812neighboring pixels.) When performing a partial-width decompression, these
813"fancy" upsampling algorithms may treat the left and right edges of the partial
814image region as if they are the left and right edges of the image, meaning that
815the upsampling algorithm may be simplified. The result is that the pixels on
816the left or right edge of the partial image may not be exactly identical to the
817corresponding pixels in the original image.
818
DRCac30a1b2015-06-25 03:44:36 +0000819
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000820Mechanics of usage: include files, linking, etc
821-----------------------------------------------
822
823Applications using the JPEG library should include the header file jpeglib.h
824to obtain declarations of data types and routines. Before including
825jpeglib.h, include system headers that define at least the typedefs FILE and
826size_t. On ANSI-conforming systems, including <stdio.h> is sufficient; on
827older Unix systems, you may need <sys/types.h> to define size_t.
828
829If the application needs to refer to individual JPEG library error codes, also
830include jerror.h to define those symbols.
831
832jpeglib.h indirectly includes the files jconfig.h and jmorecfg.h. If you are
833installing the JPEG header files in a system directory, you will want to
834install all four files: jpeglib.h, jerror.h, jconfig.h, jmorecfg.h.
835
836The most convenient way to include the JPEG code into your executable program
837is to prepare a library file ("libjpeg.a", or a corresponding name on non-Unix
838machines) and reference it at your link step. If you use only half of the
839library (only compression or only decompression), only that much code will be
840included from the library, unless your linker is hopelessly brain-damaged.
Guido Vollbeding5996a252009-06-27 00:00:00 +0000841The supplied makefiles build libjpeg.a automatically (see install.txt).
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000842
Thomas G. Lane5ead57a1998-03-27 00:00:00 +0000843While you can build the JPEG library as a shared library if the whim strikes
844you, we don't really recommend it. The trouble with shared libraries is that
845at some point you'll probably try to substitute a new version of the library
846without recompiling the calling applications. That generally doesn't work
847because the parameter struct declarations usually change with each new
848version. In other words, the library's API is *not* guaranteed binary
849compatible across versions; we only try to ensure source-code compatibility.
850(In hindsight, it might have been smarter to hide the parameter structs from
851applications and introduce a ton of access functions instead. Too late now,
852however.)
853
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000854It may be worth pointing out that the core JPEG library does not actually
855require the stdio library: only the default source/destination managers and
856error handler need it. You can use the library in a stdio-less environment
857if you replace those modules and use jmemnobs.c (or another memory manager of
858your own devising). More info about the minimum system library requirements
859may be found in jinclude.h.
860
861
862ADVANCED FEATURES
863=================
864
865Compression parameter selection
866-------------------------------
867
868This section describes all the optional parameters you can set for JPEG
869compression, as well as the "helper" routines provided to assist in this
870task. Proper setting of some parameters requires detailed understanding
871of the JPEG standard; if you don't know what a parameter is for, it's best
Alex Naidis6eb7d372016-10-16 23:10:08 +0200872not to mess with it! See REFERENCES in the README.ijg file for pointers to
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000873more info about JPEG.
874
875It's a good idea to call jpeg_set_defaults() first, even if you plan to set
876all the parameters; that way your code is more likely to work with future JPEG
877libraries that have additional parameters. For the same reason, we recommend
878you use a helper routine where one is provided, in preference to twiddling
879cinfo fields directly.
880
881The helper routines are:
882
883jpeg_set_defaults (j_compress_ptr cinfo)
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000884 This routine sets all JPEG parameters to reasonable defaults, using
885 only the input image's color space (field in_color_space, which must
886 already be set in cinfo). Many applications will only need to use
887 this routine and perhaps jpeg_set_quality().
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000888
889jpeg_set_colorspace (j_compress_ptr cinfo, J_COLOR_SPACE colorspace)
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000890 Sets the JPEG file's colorspace (field jpeg_color_space) as specified,
891 and sets other color-space-dependent parameters appropriately. See
892 "Special color spaces", below, before using this. A large number of
893 parameters, including all per-component parameters, are set by this
894 routine; if you want to twiddle individual parameters you should call
895 jpeg_set_colorspace() before rather than after.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000896
897jpeg_default_colorspace (j_compress_ptr cinfo)
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000898 Selects an appropriate JPEG colorspace based on cinfo->in_color_space,
899 and calls jpeg_set_colorspace(). This is actually a subroutine of
900 jpeg_set_defaults(). It's broken out in case you want to change
901 just the colorspace-dependent JPEG parameters.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000902
903jpeg_set_quality (j_compress_ptr cinfo, int quality, boolean force_baseline)
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000904 Constructs JPEG quantization tables appropriate for the indicated
905 quality setting. The quality value is expressed on the 0..100 scale
906 recommended by IJG (cjpeg's "-quality" switch uses this routine).
907 Note that the exact mapping from quality values to tables may change
908 in future IJG releases as more is learned about DCT quantization.
909 If the force_baseline parameter is TRUE, then the quantization table
910 entries are constrained to the range 1..255 for full JPEG baseline
911 compatibility. In the current implementation, this only makes a
912 difference for quality settings below 25, and it effectively prevents
913 very small/low quality files from being generated. The IJG decoder
914 is capable of reading the non-baseline files generated at low quality
915 settings when force_baseline is FALSE, but other decoders may not be.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000916
917jpeg_set_linear_quality (j_compress_ptr cinfo, int scale_factor,
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000918 boolean force_baseline)
919 Same as jpeg_set_quality() except that the generated tables are the
Leon Scroggins III3993b372018-07-16 10:43:45 -0400920 sample tables given in Annex K (Clause K.1) of
921 Rec. ITU-T T.81 (1992) | ISO/IEC 10918-1:1994, multiplied by the
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000922 specified scale factor (which is expressed as a percentage; thus
923 scale_factor = 100 reproduces the spec's tables). Note that larger
924 scale factors give lower quality. This entry point is useful for
925 conforming to the Adobe PostScript DCT conventions, but we do not
926 recommend linear scaling as a user-visible quality scale otherwise.
927 force_baseline again constrains the computed table entries to 1..255.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000928
929int jpeg_quality_scaling (int quality)
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000930 Converts a value on the IJG-recommended quality scale to a linear
931 scaling percentage. Note that this routine may change or go away
932 in future releases --- IJG may choose to adopt a scaling method that
933 can't be expressed as a simple scalar multiplier, in which case the
934 premise of this routine collapses. Caveat user.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000935
Guido Vollbeding5996a252009-06-27 00:00:00 +0000936jpeg_default_qtables (j_compress_ptr cinfo, boolean force_baseline)
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000937 [libjpeg v7+ API/ABI emulation only]
938 Set default quantization tables with linear q_scale_factor[] values
939 (see below).
Guido Vollbeding5996a252009-06-27 00:00:00 +0000940
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000941jpeg_add_quant_table (j_compress_ptr cinfo, int which_tbl,
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000942 const unsigned int *basic_table,
943 int scale_factor, boolean force_baseline)
944 Allows an arbitrary quantization table to be created. which_tbl
945 indicates which table slot to fill. basic_table points to an array
946 of 64 unsigned ints given in normal array order. These values are
947 multiplied by scale_factor/100 and then clamped to the range 1..65535
948 (or to 1..255 if force_baseline is TRUE).
949 CAUTION: prior to library version 6a, jpeg_add_quant_table expected
950 the basic table to be given in JPEG zigzag order. If you need to
951 write code that works with either older or newer versions of this
952 routine, you must check the library version number. Something like
953 "#if JPEG_LIB_VERSION >= 61" is the right test.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000954
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +0000955jpeg_simple_progression (j_compress_ptr cinfo)
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000956 Generates a default scan script for writing a progressive-JPEG file.
957 This is the recommended method of creating a progressive file,
958 unless you want to make a custom scan sequence. You must ensure that
959 the JPEG color space is set correctly before calling this routine.
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +0000960
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000961
962Compression parameters (cinfo fields) include:
963
Alex Naidis6eb7d372016-10-16 23:10:08 +0200964boolean arith_code
Leon Scroggins III3993b372018-07-16 10:43:45 -0400965 If TRUE, use arithmetic coding.
966 If FALSE, use Huffman coding.
Alex Naidis6eb7d372016-10-16 23:10:08 +0200967
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000968J_DCT_METHOD dct_method
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000969 Selects the algorithm used for the DCT step. Choices are:
970 JDCT_ISLOW: slow but accurate integer algorithm
971 JDCT_IFAST: faster, less accurate integer method
972 JDCT_FLOAT: floating-point method
973 JDCT_DEFAULT: default method (normally JDCT_ISLOW)
974 JDCT_FASTEST: fastest method (normally JDCT_IFAST)
DRC8940e6c2014-05-11 09:46:28 +0000975 In libjpeg-turbo, JDCT_IFAST is generally about 5-15% faster than
976 JDCT_ISLOW when using the x86/x86-64 SIMD extensions (results may vary
977 with other SIMD implementations, or when using libjpeg-turbo without
978 SIMD extensions.) For quality levels of 90 and below, there should be
979 little or no perceptible difference between the two algorithms. For
980 quality levels above 90, however, the difference between JDCT_IFAST and
981 JDCT_ISLOW becomes more pronounced. With quality=97, for instance,
982 JDCT_IFAST incurs generally about a 1-3 dB loss (in PSNR) relative to
983 JDCT_ISLOW, but this can be larger for some images. Do not use
984 JDCT_IFAST with quality levels above 97. The algorithm often
985 degenerates at quality=98 and above and can actually produce a more
DRC05524e62014-05-11 23:14:43 +0000986 lossy image than if lower quality levels had been used. Also, in
987 libjpeg-turbo, JDCT_IFAST is not fully accelerated for quality levels
988 above 97, so it will be slower than JDCT_ISLOW. JDCT_FLOAT is mainly a
989 legacy feature. It does not produce significantly more accurate
990 results than the ISLOW method, and it is much slower. The FLOAT method
991 may also give different results on different machines due to varying
992 roundoff behavior, whereas the integer methods should give the same
993 results on all machines.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +0000994
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +0000995J_COLOR_SPACE jpeg_color_space
996int num_components
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +0000997 The JPEG color space and corresponding number of components; see
998 "Special color spaces", below, for more info. We recommend using
999 jpeg_set_color_space() if you want to change these.
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00001000
1001boolean optimize_coding
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001002 TRUE causes the compressor to compute optimal Huffman coding tables
1003 for the image. This requires an extra pass over the data and
1004 therefore costs a good deal of space and time. The default is
1005 FALSE, which tells the compressor to use the supplied or default
1006 Huffman tables. In most cases optimal tables save only a few percent
1007 of file size compared to the default tables. Note that when this is
1008 TRUE, you need not supply Huffman tables at all, and any you do
1009 supply will be overwritten.
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00001010
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001011unsigned int restart_interval
1012int restart_in_rows
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001013 To emit restart markers in the JPEG file, set one of these nonzero.
1014 Set restart_interval to specify the exact interval in MCU blocks.
1015 Set restart_in_rows to specify the interval in MCU rows. (If
1016 restart_in_rows is not 0, then restart_interval is set after the
1017 image width in MCUs is computed.) Defaults are zero (no restarts).
1018 One restart marker per MCU row is often a good choice.
1019 NOTE: the overhead of restart markers is higher in grayscale JPEG
1020 files than in color files, and MUCH higher in progressive JPEGs.
1021 If you use restarts, you may want to use larger intervals in those
1022 cases.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001023
Alex Naidis6eb7d372016-10-16 23:10:08 +02001024const jpeg_scan_info *scan_info
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00001025int num_scans
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001026 By default, scan_info is NULL; this causes the compressor to write a
1027 single-scan sequential JPEG file. If not NULL, scan_info points to
1028 an array of scan definition records of length num_scans. The
1029 compressor will then write a JPEG file having one scan for each scan
1030 definition record. This is used to generate noninterleaved or
1031 progressive JPEG files. The library checks that the scan array
1032 defines a valid JPEG scan sequence. (jpeg_simple_progression creates
1033 a suitable scan definition array for progressive JPEG.) This is
1034 discussed further under "Progressive JPEG support".
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00001035
1036int smoothing_factor
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001037 If non-zero, the input image is smoothed; the value should be 1 for
1038 minimal smoothing to 100 for maximum smoothing. Consult jcsample.c
1039 for details of the smoothing algorithm. The default is zero.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001040
1041boolean write_JFIF_header
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001042 If TRUE, a JFIF APP0 marker is emitted. jpeg_set_defaults() and
1043 jpeg_set_colorspace() set this TRUE if a JFIF-legal JPEG color space
1044 (ie, YCbCr or grayscale) is selected, otherwise FALSE.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001045
Thomas G. Lane5ead57a1998-03-27 00:00:00 +00001046UINT8 JFIF_major_version
1047UINT8 JFIF_minor_version
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001048 The version number to be written into the JFIF marker.
1049 jpeg_set_defaults() initializes the version to 1.01 (major=minor=1).
1050 You should set it to 1.02 (major=1, minor=2) if you plan to write
1051 any JFIF 1.02 extension markers.
Thomas G. Lane5ead57a1998-03-27 00:00:00 +00001052
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001053UINT8 density_unit
1054UINT16 X_density
1055UINT16 Y_density
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001056 The resolution information to be written into the JFIF marker;
1057 not used otherwise. density_unit may be 0 for unknown,
1058 1 for dots/inch, or 2 for dots/cm. The default values are 0,1,1
1059 indicating square pixels of unknown size.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001060
1061boolean write_Adobe_marker
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001062 If TRUE, an Adobe APP14 marker is emitted. jpeg_set_defaults() and
1063 jpeg_set_colorspace() set this TRUE if JPEG color space RGB, CMYK,
1064 or YCCK is selected, otherwise FALSE. It is generally a bad idea
1065 to set both write_JFIF_header and write_Adobe_marker. In fact,
1066 you probably shouldn't change the default settings at all --- the
1067 default behavior ensures that the JPEG file's color space can be
1068 recognized by the decoder.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001069
Alex Naidis6eb7d372016-10-16 23:10:08 +02001070JQUANT_TBL *quant_tbl_ptrs[NUM_QUANT_TBLS]
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001071 Pointers to coefficient quantization tables, one per table slot,
1072 or NULL if no table is defined for a slot. Usually these should
1073 be set via one of the above helper routines; jpeg_add_quant_table()
1074 is general enough to define any quantization table. The other
1075 routines will set up table slot 0 for luminance quality and table
1076 slot 1 for chrominance.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001077
Guido Vollbeding5996a252009-06-27 00:00:00 +00001078int q_scale_factor[NUM_QUANT_TBLS]
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001079 [libjpeg v7+ API/ABI emulation only]
1080 Linear quantization scaling factors (0-100, default 100)
1081 for use with jpeg_default_qtables().
1082 See rdswitch.c and cjpeg.c for an example of usage.
1083 Note that the q_scale_factor[] values use "linear" scales, so JPEG
1084 quality levels chosen by the user must be converted to these scales
1085 using jpeg_quality_scaling(). Here is an example that corresponds to
1086 cjpeg -quality 90,70:
Guido Vollbeding5996a252009-06-27 00:00:00 +00001087
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001088 jpeg_set_defaults(cinfo);
Guido Vollbeding5996a252009-06-27 00:00:00 +00001089
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001090 /* Set luminance quality 90. */
1091 cinfo->q_scale_factor[0] = jpeg_quality_scaling(90);
1092 /* Set chrominance quality 70. */
1093 cinfo->q_scale_factor[1] = jpeg_quality_scaling(70);
Guido Vollbeding5996a252009-06-27 00:00:00 +00001094
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001095 jpeg_default_qtables(cinfo, force_baseline);
Guido Vollbeding5996a252009-06-27 00:00:00 +00001096
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001097 CAUTION: Setting separate quality levels for chrominance and luminance
1098 is mainly only useful if chrominance subsampling is disabled. 2x2
1099 chrominance subsampling (AKA "4:2:0") is the default, but you can
1100 explicitly disable subsampling as follows:
Guido Vollbeding5996a252009-06-27 00:00:00 +00001101
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001102 cinfo->comp_info[0].v_samp_factor = 1;
1103 cinfo->comp_info[0].h_samp_factor = 1;
Guido Vollbeding5996a252009-06-27 00:00:00 +00001104
Alex Naidis6eb7d372016-10-16 23:10:08 +02001105JHUFF_TBL *dc_huff_tbl_ptrs[NUM_HUFF_TBLS]
1106JHUFF_TBL *ac_huff_tbl_ptrs[NUM_HUFF_TBLS]
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001107 Pointers to Huffman coding tables, one per table slot, or NULL if
1108 no table is defined for a slot. Slots 0 and 1 are filled with the
1109 JPEG sample tables by jpeg_set_defaults(). If you need to allocate
1110 more table structures, jpeg_alloc_huff_table() may be used.
1111 Note that optimal Huffman tables can be computed for an image
1112 by setting optimize_coding, as discussed above; there's seldom
1113 any need to mess with providing your own Huffman tables.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001114
Guido Vollbeding5996a252009-06-27 00:00:00 +00001115
DRC30913542012-01-27 09:53:33 +00001116[libjpeg v7+ API/ABI emulation only]
1117The actual dimensions of the JPEG image that will be written to the file are
1118given by the following fields. These are computed from the input image
1119dimensions and the compression parameters by jpeg_start_compress(). You can
1120also call jpeg_calc_jpeg_dimensions() to obtain the values that will result
Guido Vollbeding5996a252009-06-27 00:00:00 +00001121from the current parameter settings. This can be useful if you are trying
1122to pick a scaling ratio that will get close to a desired target size.
Guido Vollbeding5996a252009-06-27 00:00:00 +00001123
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001124JDIMENSION jpeg_width Actual dimensions of output image.
Guido Vollbeding5996a252009-06-27 00:00:00 +00001125JDIMENSION jpeg_height
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001126
1127
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001128Per-component parameters are stored in the struct cinfo.comp_info[i] for
1129component number i. Note that components here refer to components of the
1130JPEG color space, *not* the source image color space. A suitably large
1131comp_info[] array is allocated by jpeg_set_defaults(); if you choose not
1132to use that routine, it's up to you to allocate the array.
1133
1134int component_id
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001135 The one-byte identifier code to be recorded in the JPEG file for
1136 this component. For the standard color spaces, we recommend you
1137 leave the default values alone.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001138
1139int h_samp_factor
1140int v_samp_factor
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001141 Horizontal and vertical sampling factors for the component; must
1142 be 1..4 according to the JPEG standard. Note that larger sampling
1143 factors indicate a higher-resolution component; many people find
1144 this behavior quite unintuitive. The default values are 2,2 for
1145 luminance components and 1,1 for chrominance components, except
1146 for grayscale where 1,1 is used.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001147
1148int quant_tbl_no
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001149 Quantization table number for component. The default value is
1150 0 for luminance components and 1 for chrominance components.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001151
1152int dc_tbl_no
1153int ac_tbl_no
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001154 DC and AC entropy coding table numbers. The default values are
1155 0 for luminance components and 1 for chrominance components.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001156
1157int component_index
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001158 Must equal the component's index in comp_info[]. (Beginning in
1159 release v6, the compressor library will fill this in automatically;
1160 you don't have to.)
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001161
1162
1163Decompression parameter selection
1164---------------------------------
1165
1166Decompression parameter selection is somewhat simpler than compression
1167parameter selection, since all of the JPEG internal parameters are
1168recorded in the source file and need not be supplied by the application.
1169(Unless you are working with abbreviated files, in which case see
1170"Abbreviated datastreams", below.) Decompression parameters control
1171the postprocessing done on the image to deliver it in a format suitable
1172for the application's use. Many of the parameters control speed/quality
1173tradeoffs, in which faster decompression may be obtained at the price of
1174a poorer-quality image. The defaults select the highest quality (slowest)
1175processing.
1176
1177The following fields in the JPEG object are set by jpeg_read_header() and
1178may be useful to the application in choosing decompression parameters:
1179
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001180JDIMENSION image_width Width and height of image
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001181JDIMENSION image_height
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001182int num_components Number of color components
1183J_COLOR_SPACE jpeg_color_space Colorspace of image
1184boolean saw_JFIF_marker TRUE if a JFIF APP0 marker was seen
1185 UINT8 JFIF_major_version Version information from JFIF marker
Thomas G. Lane5ead57a1998-03-27 00:00:00 +00001186 UINT8 JFIF_minor_version
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001187 UINT8 density_unit Resolution data from JFIF marker
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001188 UINT16 X_density
1189 UINT16 Y_density
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001190boolean saw_Adobe_marker TRUE if an Adobe APP14 marker was seen
1191 UINT8 Adobe_transform Color transform code from Adobe marker
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001192
1193The JPEG color space, unfortunately, is something of a guess since the JPEG
1194standard proper does not provide a way to record it. In practice most files
1195adhere to the JFIF or Adobe conventions, and the decoder will recognize these
1196correctly. See "Special color spaces", below, for more info.
1197
1198
1199The decompression parameters that determine the basic properties of the
1200returned image are:
1201
1202J_COLOR_SPACE out_color_space
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001203 Output color space. jpeg_read_header() sets an appropriate default
1204 based on jpeg_color_space; typically it will be RGB or grayscale.
1205 The application can change this field to request output in a different
1206 colorspace. For example, set it to JCS_GRAYSCALE to get grayscale
1207 output from a color file. (This is useful for previewing: grayscale
1208 output is faster than full color since the color components need not
1209 be processed.) Note that not all possible color space transforms are
1210 currently implemented; you may need to extend jdcolor.c if you want an
1211 unusual conversion.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001212
1213unsigned int scale_num, scale_denom
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001214 Scale the image by the fraction scale_num/scale_denom. Default is
1215 1/1, or no scaling. Currently, the only supported scaling ratios
1216 are M/8 with all M from 1 to 16, or any reduced fraction thereof (such
1217 as 1/2, 3/4, etc.) (The library design allows for arbitrary
1218 scaling ratios but this is not likely to be implemented any time soon.)
1219 Smaller scaling ratios permit significantly faster decoding since
1220 fewer pixels need be processed and a simpler IDCT method can be used.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001221
1222boolean quantize_colors
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001223 If set TRUE, colormapped output will be delivered. Default is FALSE,
1224 meaning that full-color output will be delivered.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001225
1226The next three parameters are relevant only if quantize_colors is TRUE.
1227
1228int desired_number_of_colors
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001229 Maximum number of colors to use in generating a library-supplied color
1230 map (the actual number of colors is returned in a different field).
1231 Default 256. Ignored when the application supplies its own color map.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001232
1233boolean two_pass_quantize
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001234 If TRUE, an extra pass over the image is made to select a custom color
1235 map for the image. This usually looks a lot better than the one-size-
1236 fits-all colormap that is used otherwise. Default is TRUE. Ignored
1237 when the application supplies its own color map.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001238
1239J_DITHER_MODE dither_mode
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001240 Selects color dithering method. Supported values are:
1241 JDITHER_NONE no dithering: fast, very low quality
1242 JDITHER_ORDERED ordered dither: moderate speed and quality
1243 JDITHER_FS Floyd-Steinberg dither: slow, high quality
1244 Default is JDITHER_FS. (At present, ordered dither is implemented
1245 only in the single-pass, standard-colormap case. If you ask for
1246 ordered dither when two_pass_quantize is TRUE or when you supply
1247 an external color map, you'll get F-S dithering.)
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001248
1249When quantize_colors is TRUE, the target color map is described by the next
1250two fields. colormap is set to NULL by jpeg_read_header(). The application
1251can supply a color map by setting colormap non-NULL and setting
1252actual_number_of_colors to the map size. Otherwise, jpeg_start_decompress()
1253selects a suitable color map and sets these two fields itself.
1254[Implementation restriction: at present, an externally supplied colormap is
1255only accepted for 3-component output color spaces.]
1256
1257JSAMPARRAY colormap
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001258 The color map, represented as a 2-D pixel array of out_color_components
1259 rows and actual_number_of_colors columns. Ignored if not quantizing.
1260 CAUTION: if the JPEG library creates its own colormap, the storage
1261 pointed to by this field is released by jpeg_finish_decompress().
1262 Copy the colormap somewhere else first, if you want to save it.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001263
1264int actual_number_of_colors
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001265 The number of colors in the color map.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001266
1267Additional decompression parameters that the application may set include:
1268
1269J_DCT_METHOD dct_method
DRC8940e6c2014-05-11 09:46:28 +00001270 Selects the algorithm used for the DCT step. Choices are:
1271 JDCT_ISLOW: slow but accurate integer algorithm
1272 JDCT_IFAST: faster, less accurate integer method
1273 JDCT_FLOAT: floating-point method
1274 JDCT_DEFAULT: default method (normally JDCT_ISLOW)
1275 JDCT_FASTEST: fastest method (normally JDCT_IFAST)
1276 In libjpeg-turbo, JDCT_IFAST is generally about 5-15% faster than
1277 JDCT_ISLOW when using the x86/x86-64 SIMD extensions (results may vary
1278 with other SIMD implementations, or when using libjpeg-turbo without
1279 SIMD extensions.) If the JPEG image was compressed using a quality
1280 level of 85 or below, then there should be little or no perceptible
1281 difference between the two algorithms. When decompressing images that
1282 were compressed using quality levels above 85, however, the difference
1283 between JDCT_IFAST and JDCT_ISLOW becomes more pronounced. With images
1284 compressed using quality=97, for instance, JDCT_IFAST incurs generally
1285 about a 4-6 dB loss (in PSNR) relative to JDCT_ISLOW, but this can be
1286 larger for some images. If you can avoid it, do not use JDCT_IFAST
1287 when decompressing images that were compressed using quality levels
1288 above 97. The algorithm often degenerates for such images and can
1289 actually produce a more lossy output image than if the JPEG image had
DRC05524e62014-05-11 23:14:43 +00001290 been compressed using lower quality levels. JDCT_FLOAT is mainly a
DRC8940e6c2014-05-11 09:46:28 +00001291 legacy feature. It does not produce significantly more accurate
1292 results than the ISLOW method, and it is much slower. The FLOAT method
1293 may also give different results on different machines due to varying
1294 roundoff behavior, whereas the integer methods should give the same
1295 results on all machines.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001296
1297boolean do_fancy_upsampling
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001298 If TRUE, do careful upsampling of chroma components. If FALSE,
1299 a faster but sloppier method is used. Default is TRUE. The visual
1300 impact of the sloppier method is often very small.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001301
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00001302boolean do_block_smoothing
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001303 If TRUE, interblock smoothing is applied in early stages of decoding
1304 progressive JPEG files; if FALSE, not. Default is TRUE. Early
1305 progression stages look "fuzzy" with smoothing, "blocky" without.
1306 In any case, block smoothing ceases to be applied after the first few
1307 AC coefficients are known to full accuracy, so it is relevant only
1308 when using buffered-image mode for progressive images.
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00001309
1310boolean enable_1pass_quant
1311boolean enable_external_quant
1312boolean enable_2pass_quant
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001313 These are significant only in buffered-image mode, which is
1314 described in its own section below.
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00001315
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001316
1317The output image dimensions are given by the following fields. These are
1318computed from the source image dimensions and the decompression parameters
1319by jpeg_start_decompress(). You can also call jpeg_calc_output_dimensions()
1320to obtain the values that will result from the current parameter settings.
1321This can be useful if you are trying to pick a scaling ratio that will get
1322close to a desired target size. It's also important if you are using the
1323JPEG library's memory manager to allocate output buffer space, because you
1324are supposed to request such buffers *before* jpeg_start_decompress().
1325
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001326JDIMENSION output_width Actual dimensions of output image.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001327JDIMENSION output_height
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001328int out_color_components Number of color components in out_color_space.
1329int output_components Number of color components returned.
1330int rec_outbuf_height Recommended height of scanline buffer.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001331
1332When quantizing colors, output_components is 1, indicating a single color map
1333index per pixel. Otherwise it equals out_color_components. The output arrays
1334are required to be output_width * output_components JSAMPLEs wide.
1335
1336rec_outbuf_height is the recommended minimum height (in scanlines) of the
1337buffer passed to jpeg_read_scanlines(). If the buffer is smaller, the
1338library will still work, but time will be wasted due to unnecessary data
1339copying. In high-quality modes, rec_outbuf_height is always 1, but some
1340faster, lower-quality modes set it to larger values (typically 2 to 4).
1341If you are going to ask for a high-speed processing mode, you may as well
1342go to the trouble of honoring rec_outbuf_height so as to avoid data copying.
Thomas G. Lane5ead57a1998-03-27 00:00:00 +00001343(An output buffer larger than rec_outbuf_height lines is OK, but won't
1344provide any material speed improvement over that height.)
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001345
1346
1347Special color spaces
1348--------------------
1349
1350The JPEG standard itself is "color blind" and doesn't specify any particular
1351color space. It is customary to convert color data to a luminance/chrominance
1352color space before compressing, since this permits greater compression. The
1353existing de-facto JPEG file format standards specify YCbCr or grayscale data
1354(JFIF), or grayscale, RGB, YCbCr, CMYK, or YCCK (Adobe). For special
1355applications such as multispectral images, other color spaces can be used,
1356but it must be understood that such files will be unportable.
1357
1358The JPEG library can handle the most common colorspace conversions (namely
1359RGB <=> YCbCr and CMYK <=> YCCK). It can also deal with data of an unknown
1360color space, passing it through without conversion. If you deal extensively
1361with an unusual color space, you can easily extend the library to understand
1362additional color spaces and perform appropriate conversions.
1363
1364For compression, the source data's color space is specified by field
1365in_color_space. This is transformed to the JPEG file's color space given
1366by jpeg_color_space. jpeg_set_defaults() chooses a reasonable JPEG color
1367space depending on in_color_space, but you can override this by calling
1368jpeg_set_colorspace(). Of course you must select a supported transformation.
1369jccolor.c currently supports the following transformations:
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001370 RGB => YCbCr
1371 RGB => GRAYSCALE
1372 YCbCr => GRAYSCALE
1373 CMYK => YCCK
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001374plus the null transforms: GRAYSCALE => GRAYSCALE, RGB => RGB,
1375YCbCr => YCbCr, CMYK => CMYK, YCCK => YCCK, and UNKNOWN => UNKNOWN.
1376
1377The de-facto file format standards (JFIF and Adobe) specify APPn markers that
1378indicate the color space of the JPEG file. It is important to ensure that
1379these are written correctly, or omitted if the JPEG file's color space is not
1380one of the ones supported by the de-facto standards. jpeg_set_colorspace()
1381will set the compression parameters to include or omit the APPn markers
1382properly, so long as it is told the truth about the JPEG color space.
1383For example, if you are writing some random 3-component color space without
1384conversion, don't try to fake out the library by setting in_color_space and
1385jpeg_color_space to JCS_YCbCr; use JCS_UNKNOWN. You may want to write an
1386APPn marker of your own devising to identify the colorspace --- see "Special
1387markers", below.
1388
1389When told that the color space is UNKNOWN, the library will default to using
1390luminance-quality compression parameters for all color components. You may
1391well want to change these parameters. See the source code for
1392jpeg_set_colorspace(), in jcparam.c, for details.
1393
1394For decompression, the JPEG file's color space is given in jpeg_color_space,
1395and this is transformed to the output color space out_color_space.
1396jpeg_read_header's setting of jpeg_color_space can be relied on if the file
1397conforms to JFIF or Adobe conventions, but otherwise it is no better than a
1398guess. If you know the JPEG file's color space for certain, you can override
1399jpeg_read_header's guess by setting jpeg_color_space. jpeg_read_header also
1400selects a default output color space based on (its guess of) jpeg_color_space;
1401set out_color_space to override this. Again, you must select a supported
1402transformation. jdcolor.c currently supports
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001403 YCbCr => RGB
1404 YCbCr => GRAYSCALE
1405 RGB => GRAYSCALE
1406 GRAYSCALE => RGB
1407 YCCK => CMYK
Thomas G. Lane5ead57a1998-03-27 00:00:00 +00001408as well as the null transforms. (Since GRAYSCALE=>RGB is provided, an
1409application can force grayscale JPEGs to look like color JPEGs if it only
1410wants to handle one case.)
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001411
1412The two-pass color quantizer, jquant2.c, is specialized to handle RGB data
1413(it weights distances appropriately for RGB colors). You'll need to modify
1414the code if you want to use it for non-RGB output color spaces. Note that
1415jquant2.c is used to map to an application-supplied colormap as well as for
1416the normal two-pass colormap selection process.
1417
1418CAUTION: it appears that Adobe Photoshop writes inverted data in CMYK JPEG
1419files: 0 represents 100% ink coverage, rather than 0% ink as you'd expect.
1420This is arguably a bug in Photoshop, but if you need to work with Photoshop
1421CMYK files, you will have to deal with it in your application. We cannot
1422"fix" this in the library by inverting the data during the CMYK<=>YCCK
1423transform, because that would break other applications, notably Ghostscript.
1424Photoshop versions prior to 3.0 write EPS files containing JPEG-encoded CMYK
1425data in the same inverted-YCCK representation used in bare JPEG files, but
1426the surrounding PostScript code performs an inversion using the PS image
1427operator. I am told that Photoshop 3.0 will write uninverted YCCK in
1428EPS/JPEG files, and will omit the PS-level inversion. (But the data
1429polarity used in bare JPEG files will not change in 3.0.) In either case,
1430the JPEG library must not invert the data itself, or else Ghostscript would
1431read these EPS files incorrectly.
1432
1433
1434Error handling
1435--------------
1436
1437When the default error handler is used, any error detected inside the JPEG
1438routines will cause a message to be printed on stderr, followed by exit().
1439You can supply your own error handling routines to override this behavior
1440and to control the treatment of nonfatal warnings and trace/debug messages.
Leon Scroggins III3993b372018-07-16 10:43:45 -04001441The file example.txt illustrates the most common case, which is to have the
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001442application regain control after an error rather than exiting.
1443
1444The JPEG library never writes any message directly; it always goes through
1445the error handling routines. Three classes of messages are recognized:
1446 * Fatal errors: the library cannot continue.
1447 * Warnings: the library can continue, but the data is corrupt, and a
1448 damaged output image is likely to result.
1449 * Trace/informational messages. These come with a trace level indicating
1450 the importance of the message; you can control the verbosity of the
1451 program by adjusting the maximum trace level that will be displayed.
1452
1453You may, if you wish, simply replace the entire JPEG error handling module
1454(jerror.c) with your own code. However, you can avoid code duplication by
1455only replacing some of the routines depending on the behavior you need.
1456This is accomplished by calling jpeg_std_error() as usual, but then overriding
1457some of the method pointers in the jpeg_error_mgr struct, as illustrated by
Leon Scroggins III3993b372018-07-16 10:43:45 -04001458example.txt.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001459
1460All of the error handling routines will receive a pointer to the JPEG object
1461(a j_common_ptr which points to either a jpeg_compress_struct or a
1462jpeg_decompress_struct; if you need to tell which, test the is_decompressor
1463field). This struct includes a pointer to the error manager struct in its
1464"err" field. Frequently, custom error handler routines will need to access
1465additional data which is not known to the JPEG library or the standard error
1466handler. The most convenient way to do this is to embed either the JPEG
1467object or the jpeg_error_mgr struct in a larger structure that contains
1468additional fields; then casting the passed pointer provides access to the
Leon Scroggins III3993b372018-07-16 10:43:45 -04001469additional fields. Again, see example.txt for one way to do it. (Beginning
Thomas G. Lane5ead57a1998-03-27 00:00:00 +00001470with IJG version 6b, there is also a void pointer "client_data" in each
1471JPEG object, which the application can also use to find related data.
1472The library does not touch client_data at all.)
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001473
1474The individual methods that you might wish to override are:
1475
1476error_exit (j_common_ptr cinfo)
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001477 Receives control for a fatal error. Information sufficient to
1478 generate the error message has been stored in cinfo->err; call
1479 output_message to display it. Control must NOT return to the caller;
1480 generally this routine will exit() or longjmp() somewhere.
1481 Typically you would override this routine to get rid of the exit()
1482 default behavior. Note that if you continue processing, you should
1483 clean up the JPEG object with jpeg_abort() or jpeg_destroy().
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001484
1485output_message (j_common_ptr cinfo)
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001486 Actual output of any JPEG message. Override this to send messages
1487 somewhere other than stderr. Note that this method does not know
1488 how to generate a message, only where to send it.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001489
Alex Naidis6eb7d372016-10-16 23:10:08 +02001490format_message (j_common_ptr cinfo, char *buffer)
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001491 Constructs a readable error message string based on the error info
1492 stored in cinfo->err. This method is called by output_message. Few
1493 applications should need to override this method. One possible
1494 reason for doing so is to implement dynamic switching of error message
1495 language.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001496
1497emit_message (j_common_ptr cinfo, int msg_level)
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001498 Decide whether or not to emit a warning or trace message; if so,
1499 calls output_message. The main reason for overriding this method
1500 would be to abort on warnings. msg_level is -1 for warnings,
1501 0 and up for trace messages.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001502
1503Only error_exit() and emit_message() are called from the rest of the JPEG
1504library; the other two are internal to the error handler.
1505
1506The actual message texts are stored in an array of strings which is pointed to
1507by the field err->jpeg_message_table. The messages are numbered from 0 to
1508err->last_jpeg_message, and it is these code numbers that are used in the
1509JPEG library code. You could replace the message texts (for instance, with
1510messages in French or German) by changing the message table pointer. See
1511jerror.h for the default texts. CAUTION: this table will almost certainly
1512change or grow from one library version to the next.
1513
1514It may be useful for an application to add its own message texts that are
1515handled by the same mechanism. The error handler supports a second "add-on"
1516message table for this purpose. To define an addon table, set the pointer
1517err->addon_message_table and the message numbers err->first_addon_message and
1518err->last_addon_message. If you number the addon messages beginning at 1000
1519or so, you won't have to worry about conflicts with the library's built-in
1520messages. See the sample applications cjpeg/djpeg for an example of using
1521addon messages (the addon messages are defined in cderror.h).
1522
1523Actual invocation of the error handler is done via macros defined in jerror.h:
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001524 ERREXITn(...) for fatal errors
1525 WARNMSn(...) for corrupt-data warnings
1526 TRACEMSn(...) for trace and informational messages.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001527These macros store the message code and any additional parameters into the
1528error handler struct, then invoke the error_exit() or emit_message() method.
1529The variants of each macro are for varying numbers of additional parameters.
1530The additional parameters are inserted into the generated message using
1531standard printf() format codes.
1532
1533See jerror.h and jerror.c for further details.
1534
1535
1536Compressed data handling (source and destination managers)
1537----------------------------------------------------------
1538
1539The JPEG compression library sends its compressed data to a "destination
1540manager" module. The default destination manager just writes the data to a
Guido Vollbeding989630f2010-01-10 00:00:00 +00001541memory buffer or to a stdio stream, but you can provide your own manager to
1542do something else. Similarly, the decompression library calls a "source
1543manager" to obtain the compressed data; you can provide your own source
1544manager if you want the data to come from somewhere other than a memory
1545buffer or a stdio stream.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001546
1547In both cases, compressed data is processed a bufferload at a time: the
1548destination or source manager provides a work buffer, and the library invokes
1549the manager only when the buffer is filled or emptied. (You could define a
1550one-character buffer to force the manager to be invoked for each byte, but
1551that would be rather inefficient.) The buffer's size and location are
Guido Vollbeding989630f2010-01-10 00:00:00 +00001552controlled by the manager, not by the library. For example, the memory
1553source manager just makes the buffer pointer and length point to the original
1554data in memory. In this case the buffer-reload procedure will be invoked
1555only if the decompressor ran off the end of the datastream, which would
1556indicate an erroneous datastream.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001557
1558The work buffer is defined as an array of datatype JOCTET, which is generally
1559"char" or "unsigned char". On a machine where char is not exactly 8 bits
1560wide, you must define JOCTET as a wider data type and then modify the data
1561source and destination modules to transcribe the work arrays into 8-bit units
1562on external storage.
1563
1564A data destination manager struct contains a pointer and count defining the
1565next byte to write in the work buffer and the remaining free space:
1566
Alex Naidis6eb7d372016-10-16 23:10:08 +02001567 JOCTET *next_output_byte; /* => next byte to write in buffer */
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001568 size_t free_in_buffer; /* # of byte spaces remaining in buffer */
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001569
1570The library increments the pointer and decrements the count until the buffer
1571is filled. The manager's empty_output_buffer method must reset the pointer
1572and count. The manager is expected to remember the buffer's starting address
1573and total size in private fields not visible to the library.
1574
1575A data destination manager provides three methods:
1576
1577init_destination (j_compress_ptr cinfo)
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001578 Initialize destination. This is called by jpeg_start_compress()
1579 before any data is actually written. It must initialize
1580 next_output_byte and free_in_buffer. free_in_buffer must be
1581 initialized to a positive value.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001582
1583empty_output_buffer (j_compress_ptr cinfo)
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001584 This is called whenever the buffer has filled (free_in_buffer
1585 reaches zero). In typical applications, it should write out the
1586 *entire* buffer (use the saved start address and buffer length;
1587 ignore the current state of next_output_byte and free_in_buffer).
1588 Then reset the pointer & count to the start of the buffer, and
1589 return TRUE indicating that the buffer has been dumped.
1590 free_in_buffer must be set to a positive value when TRUE is
1591 returned. A FALSE return should only be used when I/O suspension is
1592 desired (this operating mode is discussed in the next section).
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001593
1594term_destination (j_compress_ptr cinfo)
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001595 Terminate destination --- called by jpeg_finish_compress() after all
1596 data has been written. In most applications, this must flush any
1597 data remaining in the buffer. Use either next_output_byte or
1598 free_in_buffer to determine how much data is in the buffer.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001599
1600term_destination() is NOT called by jpeg_abort() or jpeg_destroy(). If you
1601want the destination manager to be cleaned up during an abort, you must do it
1602yourself.
1603
1604You will also need code to create a jpeg_destination_mgr struct, fill in its
1605method pointers, and insert a pointer to the struct into the "dest" field of
1606the JPEG compression object. This can be done in-line in your setup code if
1607you like, but it's probably cleaner to provide a separate routine similar to
Guido Vollbeding989630f2010-01-10 00:00:00 +00001608the jpeg_stdio_dest() or jpeg_mem_dest() routines of the supplied destination
1609managers.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001610
1611Decompression source managers follow a parallel design, but with some
1612additional frammishes. The source manager struct contains a pointer and count
1613defining the next byte to read from the work buffer and the number of bytes
1614remaining:
1615
Alex Naidis6eb7d372016-10-16 23:10:08 +02001616 const JOCTET *next_input_byte; /* => next byte to read from buffer */
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001617 size_t bytes_in_buffer; /* # of bytes remaining in buffer */
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001618
1619The library increments the pointer and decrements the count until the buffer
1620is emptied. The manager's fill_input_buffer method must reset the pointer and
1621count. In most applications, the manager must remember the buffer's starting
1622address and total size in private fields not visible to the library.
1623
1624A data source manager provides five methods:
1625
1626init_source (j_decompress_ptr cinfo)
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001627 Initialize source. This is called by jpeg_read_header() before any
1628 data is actually read. Unlike init_destination(), it may leave
1629 bytes_in_buffer set to 0 (in which case a fill_input_buffer() call
1630 will occur immediately).
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001631
1632fill_input_buffer (j_decompress_ptr cinfo)
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001633 This is called whenever bytes_in_buffer has reached zero and more
1634 data is wanted. In typical applications, it should read fresh data
1635 into the buffer (ignoring the current state of next_input_byte and
1636 bytes_in_buffer), reset the pointer & count to the start of the
1637 buffer, and return TRUE indicating that the buffer has been reloaded.
1638 It is not necessary to fill the buffer entirely, only to obtain at
1639 least one more byte. bytes_in_buffer MUST be set to a positive value
1640 if TRUE is returned. A FALSE return should only be used when I/O
1641 suspension is desired (this mode is discussed in the next section).
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001642
1643skip_input_data (j_decompress_ptr cinfo, long num_bytes)
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001644 Skip num_bytes worth of data. The buffer pointer and count should
1645 be advanced over num_bytes input bytes, refilling the buffer as
1646 needed. This is used to skip over a potentially large amount of
1647 uninteresting data (such as an APPn marker). In some applications
1648 it may be possible to optimize away the reading of the skipped data,
1649 but it's not clear that being smart is worth much trouble; large
1650 skips are uncommon. bytes_in_buffer may be zero on return.
1651 A zero or negative skip count should be treated as a no-op.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001652
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00001653resync_to_restart (j_decompress_ptr cinfo, int desired)
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001654 This routine is called only when the decompressor has failed to find
1655 a restart (RSTn) marker where one is expected. Its mission is to
1656 find a suitable point for resuming decompression. For most
1657 applications, we recommend that you just use the default resync
1658 procedure, jpeg_resync_to_restart(). However, if you are able to back
1659 up in the input data stream, or if you have a-priori knowledge about
1660 the likely location of restart markers, you may be able to do better.
1661 Read the read_restart_marker() and jpeg_resync_to_restart() routines
1662 in jdmarker.c if you think you'd like to implement your own resync
1663 procedure.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001664
1665term_source (j_decompress_ptr cinfo)
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001666 Terminate source --- called by jpeg_finish_decompress() after all
1667 data has been read. Often a no-op.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001668
1669For both fill_input_buffer() and skip_input_data(), there is no such thing
1670as an EOF return. If the end of the file has been reached, the routine has
1671a choice of exiting via ERREXIT() or inserting fake data into the buffer.
1672In most cases, generating a warning message and inserting a fake EOI marker
1673is the best course of action --- this will allow the decompressor to output
1674however much of the image is there. In pathological cases, the decompressor
1675may swallow the EOI and again demand data ... just keep feeding it fake EOIs.
1676jdatasrc.c illustrates the recommended error recovery behavior.
1677
1678term_source() is NOT called by jpeg_abort() or jpeg_destroy(). If you want
1679the source manager to be cleaned up during an abort, you must do it yourself.
1680
1681You will also need code to create a jpeg_source_mgr struct, fill in its method
1682pointers, and insert a pointer to the struct into the "src" field of the JPEG
1683decompression object. This can be done in-line in your setup code if you
1684like, but it's probably cleaner to provide a separate routine similar to the
Guido Vollbeding989630f2010-01-10 00:00:00 +00001685jpeg_stdio_src() or jpeg_mem_src() routines of the supplied source managers.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001686
Guido Vollbeding989630f2010-01-10 00:00:00 +00001687For more information, consult the memory and stdio source and destination
1688managers in jdatasrc.c and jdatadst.c.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001689
1690
1691I/O suspension
1692--------------
1693
1694Some applications need to use the JPEG library as an incremental memory-to-
1695memory filter: when the compressed data buffer is filled or emptied, they want
1696control to return to the outer loop, rather than expecting that the buffer can
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00001697be emptied or reloaded within the data source/destination manager subroutine.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001698The library supports this need by providing an "I/O suspension" mode, which we
1699describe in this section.
1700
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00001701The I/O suspension mode is not a panacea: nothing is guaranteed about the
1702maximum amount of time spent in any one call to the library, so it will not
1703eliminate response-time problems in single-threaded applications. If you
1704need guaranteed response time, we suggest you "bite the bullet" and implement
1705a real multi-tasking capability.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001706
1707To use I/O suspension, cooperation is needed between the calling application
1708and the data source or destination manager; you will always need a custom
1709source/destination manager. (Please read the previous section if you haven't
1710already.) The basic idea is that the empty_output_buffer() or
1711fill_input_buffer() routine is a no-op, merely returning FALSE to indicate
1712that it has done nothing. Upon seeing this, the JPEG library suspends
1713operation and returns to its caller. The surrounding application is
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00001714responsible for emptying or refilling the work buffer before calling the
1715JPEG library again.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001716
1717Compression suspension:
1718
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00001719For compression suspension, use an empty_output_buffer() routine that returns
1720FALSE; typically it will not do anything else. This will cause the
1721compressor to return to the caller of jpeg_write_scanlines(), with the return
1722value indicating that not all the supplied scanlines have been accepted.
1723The application must make more room in the output buffer, adjust the output
1724buffer pointer/count appropriately, and then call jpeg_write_scanlines()
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001725again, pointing to the first unconsumed scanline.
1726
1727When forced to suspend, the compressor will backtrack to a convenient stopping
1728point (usually the start of the current MCU); it will regenerate some output
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00001729data when restarted. Therefore, although empty_output_buffer() is only
1730called when the buffer is filled, you should NOT write out the entire buffer
1731after a suspension. Write only the data up to the current position of
1732next_output_byte/free_in_buffer. The data beyond that point will be
1733regenerated after resumption.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001734
1735Because of the backtracking behavior, a good-size output buffer is essential
1736for efficiency; you don't want the compressor to suspend often. (In fact, an
1737overly small buffer could lead to infinite looping, if a single MCU required
1738more data than would fit in the buffer.) We recommend a buffer of at least
1739several Kbytes. You may want to insert explicit code to ensure that you don't
1740call jpeg_write_scanlines() unless there is a reasonable amount of space in
1741the output buffer; in other words, flush the buffer before trying to compress
1742more data.
1743
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00001744The compressor does not allow suspension while it is trying to write JPEG
1745markers at the beginning and end of the file. This means that:
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001746 * At the beginning of a compression operation, there must be enough free
1747 space in the output buffer to hold the header markers (typically 600 or
1748 so bytes). The recommended buffer size is bigger than this anyway, so
1749 this is not a problem as long as you start with an empty buffer. However,
1750 this restriction might catch you if you insert large special markers, such
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00001751 as a JFIF thumbnail image, without flushing the buffer afterwards.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001752 * When you call jpeg_finish_compress(), there must be enough space in the
1753 output buffer to emit any buffered data and the final EOI marker. In the
1754 current implementation, half a dozen bytes should suffice for this, but
1755 for safety's sake we recommend ensuring that at least 100 bytes are free
1756 before calling jpeg_finish_compress().
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00001757
1758A more significant restriction is that jpeg_finish_compress() cannot suspend.
1759This means you cannot use suspension with multi-pass operating modes, namely
1760Huffman code optimization and multiple-scan output. Those modes write the
1761whole file during jpeg_finish_compress(), which will certainly result in
1762buffer overrun. (Note that this restriction applies only to compression,
1763not decompression. The decompressor supports input suspension in all of its
1764operating modes.)
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001765
1766Decompression suspension:
1767
1768For decompression suspension, use a fill_input_buffer() routine that simply
1769returns FALSE (except perhaps during error recovery, as discussed below).
1770This will cause the decompressor to return to its caller with an indication
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00001771that suspension has occurred. This can happen at four places:
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001772 * jpeg_read_header(): will return JPEG_SUSPENDED.
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00001773 * jpeg_start_decompress(): will return FALSE, rather than its usual TRUE.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001774 * jpeg_read_scanlines(): will return the number of scanlines already
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001775 completed (possibly 0).
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001776 * jpeg_finish_decompress(): will return FALSE, rather than its usual TRUE.
1777The surrounding application must recognize these cases, load more data into
1778the input buffer, and repeat the call. In the case of jpeg_read_scanlines(),
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00001779increment the passed pointers past any scanlines successfully read.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001780
1781Just as with compression, the decompressor will typically backtrack to a
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00001782convenient restart point before suspending. When fill_input_buffer() is
1783called, next_input_byte/bytes_in_buffer point to the current restart point,
1784which is where the decompressor will backtrack to if FALSE is returned.
1785The data beyond that position must NOT be discarded if you suspend; it needs
1786to be re-read upon resumption. In most implementations, you'll need to shift
1787this data down to the start of your work buffer and then load more data after
1788it. Again, this behavior means that a several-Kbyte work buffer is essential
1789for decent performance; furthermore, you should load a reasonable amount of
1790new data before resuming decompression. (If you loaded, say, only one new
1791byte each time around, you could waste a LOT of cycles.)
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001792
1793The skip_input_data() source manager routine requires special care in a
1794suspension scenario. This routine is NOT granted the ability to suspend the
1795decompressor; it can decrement bytes_in_buffer to zero, but no more. If the
1796requested skip distance exceeds the amount of data currently in the input
1797buffer, then skip_input_data() must set bytes_in_buffer to zero and record the
1798additional skip distance somewhere else. The decompressor will immediately
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00001799call fill_input_buffer(), which should return FALSE, which will cause a
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001800suspension return. The surrounding application must then arrange to discard
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00001801the recorded number of bytes before it resumes loading the input buffer.
1802(Yes, this design is rather baroque, but it avoids complexity in the far more
1803common case where a non-suspending source manager is used.)
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001804
1805If the input data has been exhausted, we recommend that you emit a warning
1806and insert dummy EOI markers just as a non-suspending data source manager
1807would do. This can be handled either in the surrounding application logic or
1808within fill_input_buffer(); the latter is probably more efficient. If
1809fill_input_buffer() knows that no more data is available, it can set the
1810pointer/count to point to a dummy EOI marker and then return TRUE just as
1811though it had read more data in a non-suspending situation.
1812
Thomas G. Lane5ead57a1998-03-27 00:00:00 +00001813The decompressor does not attempt to suspend within standard JPEG markers;
1814instead it will backtrack to the start of the marker and reprocess the whole
1815marker next time. Hence the input buffer must be large enough to hold the
1816longest standard marker in the file. Standard JPEG markers should normally
1817not exceed a few hundred bytes each (DHT tables are typically the longest).
1818We recommend at least a 2K buffer for performance reasons, which is much
1819larger than any correct marker is likely to be. For robustness against
1820damaged marker length counts, you may wish to insert a test in your
1821application for the case that the input buffer is completely full and yet
1822the decoder has suspended without consuming any data --- otherwise, if this
1823situation did occur, it would lead to an endless loop. (The library can't
1824provide this test since it has no idea whether "the buffer is full", or
1825even whether there is a fixed-size input buffer.)
1826
1827The input buffer would need to be 64K to allow for arbitrary COM or APPn
1828markers, but these are handled specially: they are either saved into allocated
1829memory, or skipped over by calling skip_input_data(). In the former case,
1830suspension is handled correctly, and in the latter case, the problem of
1831buffer overrun is placed on skip_input_data's shoulders, as explained above.
1832Note that if you provide your own marker handling routine for large markers,
1833you should consider how to deal with buffer overflow.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00001834
Thomas G. Lane9ba2f5e1994-12-07 00:00:00 +00001835Multiple-buffer management:
1836
1837In some applications it is desirable to store the compressed data in a linked
1838list of buffer areas, so as to avoid data copying. This can be handled by
1839having empty_output_buffer() or fill_input_buffer() set the pointer and count
1840to reference the next available buffer; FALSE is returned only if no more
1841buffers are available. Although seemingly straightforward, there is a
1842pitfall in this approach: the backtrack that occurs when FALSE is returned
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00001843could back up into an earlier buffer. For example, when fill_input_buffer()
1844is called, the current pointer & count indicate the backtrack restart point.
1845Since fill_input_buffer() will set the pointer and count to refer to a new
1846buffer, the restart position must be saved somewhere else. Suppose a second
1847call to fill_input_buffer() occurs in the same library call, and no
1848additional input data is available, so fill_input_buffer must return FALSE.
1849If the JPEG library has not moved the pointer/count forward in the current
1850buffer, then *the correct restart point is the saved position in the prior
1851buffer*. Prior buffers may be discarded only after the library establishes
1852a restart point within a later buffer. Similar remarks apply for output into
1853a chain of buffers.
1854
1855The library will never attempt to backtrack over a skip_input_data() call,
1856so any skipped data can be permanently discarded. You still have to deal
1857with the case of skipping not-yet-received data, however.
1858
1859It's much simpler to use only a single buffer; when fill_input_buffer() is
1860called, move any unconsumed data (beyond the current pointer/count) down to
1861the beginning of this buffer and then load new data into the remaining buffer
1862space. This approach requires a little more data copying but is far easier
1863to get right.
1864
1865
1866Progressive JPEG support
1867------------------------
1868
1869Progressive JPEG rearranges the stored data into a series of scans of
1870increasing quality. In situations where a JPEG file is transmitted across a
1871slow communications link, a decoder can generate a low-quality image very
1872quickly from the first scan, then gradually improve the displayed quality as
1873more scans are received. The final image after all scans are complete is
1874identical to that of a regular (sequential) JPEG file of the same quality
1875setting. Progressive JPEG files are often slightly smaller than equivalent
1876sequential JPEG files, but the possibility of incremental display is the main
1877reason for using progressive JPEG.
1878
1879The IJG encoder library generates progressive JPEG files when given a
1880suitable "scan script" defining how to divide the data into scans.
1881Creation of progressive JPEG files is otherwise transparent to the encoder.
1882Progressive JPEG files can also be read transparently by the decoder library.
1883If the decoding application simply uses the library as defined above, it
1884will receive a final decoded image without any indication that the file was
1885progressive. Of course, this approach does not allow incremental display.
1886To perform incremental display, an application needs to use the decoder
1887library's "buffered-image" mode, in which it receives a decoded image
1888multiple times.
1889
1890Each displayed scan requires about as much work to decode as a full JPEG
1891image of the same size, so the decoder must be fairly fast in relation to the
1892data transmission rate in order to make incremental display useful. However,
1893it is possible to skip displaying the image and simply add the incoming bits
1894to the decoder's coefficient buffer. This is fast because only Huffman
1895decoding need be done, not IDCT, upsampling, colorspace conversion, etc.
1896The IJG decoder library allows the application to switch dynamically between
1897displaying the image and simply absorbing the incoming bits. A properly
1898coded application can automatically adapt the number of display passes to
1899suit the time available as the image is received. Also, a final
1900higher-quality display cycle can be performed from the buffered data after
1901the end of the file is reached.
1902
1903Progressive compression:
1904
1905To create a progressive JPEG file (or a multiple-scan sequential JPEG file),
1906set the scan_info cinfo field to point to an array of scan descriptors, and
1907perform compression as usual. Instead of constructing your own scan list,
1908you can call the jpeg_simple_progression() helper routine to create a
1909recommended progression sequence; this method should be used by all
1910applications that don't want to get involved in the nitty-gritty of
1911progressive scan sequence design. (If you want to provide user control of
1912scan sequences, you may wish to borrow the scan script reading code found
1913in rdswitch.c, so that you can read scan script files just like cjpeg's.)
1914When scan_info is not NULL, the compression library will store DCT'd data
1915into a buffer array as jpeg_write_scanlines() is called, and will emit all
1916the requested scans during jpeg_finish_compress(). This implies that
1917multiple-scan output cannot be created with a suspending data destination
1918manager, since jpeg_finish_compress() does not support suspension. We
1919should also note that the compressor currently forces Huffman optimization
1920mode when creating a progressive JPEG file, because the default Huffman
1921tables are unsuitable for progressive files.
1922
1923Progressive decompression:
1924
1925When buffered-image mode is not used, the decoder library will read all of
1926a multi-scan file during jpeg_start_decompress(), so that it can provide a
1927final decoded image. (Here "multi-scan" means either progressive or
1928multi-scan sequential.) This makes multi-scan files transparent to the
1929decoding application. However, existing applications that used suspending
1930input with version 5 of the IJG library will need to be modified to check
1931for a suspension return from jpeg_start_decompress().
1932
1933To perform incremental display, an application must use the library's
1934buffered-image mode. This is described in the next section.
1935
1936
1937Buffered-image mode
1938-------------------
1939
1940In buffered-image mode, the library stores the partially decoded image in a
1941coefficient buffer, from which it can be read out as many times as desired.
1942This mode is typically used for incremental display of progressive JPEG files,
1943but it can be used with any JPEG file. Each scan of a progressive JPEG file
1944adds more data (more detail) to the buffered image. The application can
1945display in lockstep with the source file (one display pass per input scan),
1946or it can allow input processing to outrun display processing. By making
1947input and display processing run independently, it is possible for the
1948application to adapt progressive display to a wide range of data transmission
1949rates.
1950
1951The basic control flow for buffered-image decoding is
1952
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001953 jpeg_create_decompress()
1954 set data source
1955 jpeg_read_header()
1956 set overall decompression parameters
1957 cinfo.buffered_image = TRUE; /* select buffered-image mode */
1958 jpeg_start_decompress()
1959 for (each output pass) {
1960 adjust output decompression parameters if required
1961 jpeg_start_output() /* start a new output pass */
1962 for (all scanlines in image) {
1963 jpeg_read_scanlines()
1964 display scanlines
1965 }
1966 jpeg_finish_output() /* terminate output pass */
1967 }
1968 jpeg_finish_decompress()
1969 jpeg_destroy_decompress()
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00001970
1971This differs from ordinary unbuffered decoding in that there is an additional
1972level of looping. The application can choose how many output passes to make
1973and how to display each pass.
1974
1975The simplest approach to displaying progressive images is to do one display
1976pass for each scan appearing in the input file. In this case the outer loop
1977condition is typically
Leon Scroggins III3993b372018-07-16 10:43:45 -04001978 while (!jpeg_input_complete(&cinfo))
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00001979and the start-output call should read
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00001980 jpeg_start_output(&cinfo, cinfo.input_scan_number);
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00001981The second parameter to jpeg_start_output() indicates which scan of the input
1982file is to be displayed; the scans are numbered starting at 1 for this
1983purpose. (You can use a loop counter starting at 1 if you like, but using
1984the library's input scan counter is easier.) The library automatically reads
1985data as necessary to complete each requested scan, and jpeg_finish_output()
1986advances to the next scan or end-of-image marker (hence input_scan_number
1987will be incremented by the time control arrives back at jpeg_start_output()).
1988With this technique, data is read from the input file only as needed, and
1989input and output processing run in lockstep.
1990
1991After reading the final scan and reaching the end of the input file, the
1992buffered image remains available; it can be read additional times by
1993repeating the jpeg_start_output()/jpeg_read_scanlines()/jpeg_finish_output()
1994sequence. For example, a useful technique is to use fast one-pass color
1995quantization for display passes made while the image is arriving, followed by
1996a final display pass using two-pass quantization for highest quality. This
1997is done by changing the library parameters before the final output pass.
1998Changing parameters between passes is discussed in detail below.
1999
2000In general the last scan of a progressive file cannot be recognized as such
2001until after it is read, so a post-input display pass is the best approach if
2002you want special processing in the final pass.
2003
2004When done with the image, be sure to call jpeg_finish_decompress() to release
2005the buffered image (or just use jpeg_destroy_decompress()).
2006
2007If input data arrives faster than it can be displayed, the application can
2008cause the library to decode input data in advance of what's needed to produce
2009output. This is done by calling the routine jpeg_consume_input().
2010The return value is one of the following:
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00002011 JPEG_REACHED_SOS: reached an SOS marker (the start of a new scan)
2012 JPEG_REACHED_EOI: reached the EOI marker (end of image)
2013 JPEG_ROW_COMPLETED: completed reading one MCU row of compressed data
2014 JPEG_SCAN_COMPLETED: completed reading last MCU row of current scan
2015 JPEG_SUSPENDED: suspended before completing any of the above
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00002016(JPEG_SUSPENDED can occur only if a suspending data source is used.) This
2017routine can be called at any time after initializing the JPEG object. It
2018reads some additional data and returns when one of the indicated significant
2019events occurs. (If called after the EOI marker is reached, it will
2020immediately return JPEG_REACHED_EOI without attempting to read more data.)
2021
2022The library's output processing will automatically call jpeg_consume_input()
2023whenever the output processing overtakes the input; thus, simple lockstep
2024display requires no direct calls to jpeg_consume_input(). But by adding
2025calls to jpeg_consume_input(), you can absorb data in advance of what is
2026being displayed. This has two benefits:
2027 * You can limit buildup of unprocessed data in your input buffer.
2028 * You can eliminate extra display passes by paying attention to the
2029 state of the library's input processing.
2030
2031The first of these benefits only requires interspersing calls to
2032jpeg_consume_input() with your display operations and any other processing
2033you may be doing. To avoid wasting cycles due to backtracking, it's best to
2034call jpeg_consume_input() only after a hundred or so new bytes have arrived.
2035This is discussed further under "I/O suspension", above. (Note: the JPEG
2036library currently is not thread-safe. You must not call jpeg_consume_input()
2037from one thread of control if a different library routine is working on the
2038same JPEG object in another thread.)
2039
2040When input arrives fast enough that more than one new scan is available
2041before you start a new output pass, you may as well skip the output pass
2042corresponding to the completed scan. This occurs for free if you pass
2043cinfo.input_scan_number as the target scan number to jpeg_start_output().
2044The input_scan_number field is simply the index of the scan currently being
2045consumed by the input processor. You can ensure that this is up-to-date by
2046emptying the input buffer just before calling jpeg_start_output(): call
2047jpeg_consume_input() repeatedly until it returns JPEG_SUSPENDED or
2048JPEG_REACHED_EOI.
2049
2050The target scan number passed to jpeg_start_output() is saved in the
2051cinfo.output_scan_number field. The library's output processing calls
2052jpeg_consume_input() whenever the current input scan number and row within
Thomas G. Lane489583f1996-02-07 00:00:00 +00002053that scan is less than or equal to the current output scan number and row.
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00002054Thus, input processing can "get ahead" of the output processing but is not
2055allowed to "fall behind". You can achieve several different effects by
2056manipulating this interlock rule. For example, if you pass a target scan
2057number greater than the current input scan number, the output processor will
2058wait until that scan starts to arrive before producing any output. (To avoid
2059an infinite loop, the target scan number is automatically reset to the last
2060scan number when the end of image is reached. Thus, if you specify a large
2061target scan number, the library will just absorb the entire input file and
2062then perform an output pass. This is effectively the same as what
2063jpeg_start_decompress() does when you don't select buffered-image mode.)
2064When you pass a target scan number equal to the current input scan number,
2065the image is displayed no faster than the current input scan arrives. The
2066final possibility is to pass a target scan number less than the current input
2067scan number; this disables the input/output interlock and causes the output
2068processor to simply display whatever it finds in the image buffer, without
2069waiting for input. (However, the library will not accept a target scan
2070number less than one, so you can't avoid waiting for the first scan.)
2071
Thomas G. Lane489583f1996-02-07 00:00:00 +00002072When data is arriving faster than the output display processing can advance
2073through the image, jpeg_consume_input() will store data into the buffered
2074image beyond the point at which the output processing is reading data out
2075again. If the input arrives fast enough, it may "wrap around" the buffer to
2076the point where the input is more than one whole scan ahead of the output.
2077If the output processing simply proceeds through its display pass without
2078paying attention to the input, the effect seen on-screen is that the lower
2079part of the image is one or more scans better in quality than the upper part.
2080Then, when the next output scan is started, you have a choice of what target
2081scan number to use. The recommended choice is to use the current input scan
2082number at that time, which implies that you've skipped the output scans
2083corresponding to the input scans that were completed while you processed the
2084previous output scan. In this way, the decoder automatically adapts its
2085speed to the arriving data, by skipping output scans as necessary to keep up
2086with the arriving data.
2087
2088When using this strategy, you'll want to be sure that you perform a final
2089output pass after receiving all the data; otherwise your last display may not
2090be full quality across the whole screen. So the right outer loop logic is
2091something like this:
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00002092 do {
2093 absorb any waiting input by calling jpeg_consume_input()
2094 final_pass = jpeg_input_complete(&cinfo);
2095 adjust output decompression parameters if required
2096 jpeg_start_output(&cinfo, cinfo.input_scan_number);
2097 ...
2098 jpeg_finish_output()
Leon Scroggins III3993b372018-07-16 10:43:45 -04002099 } while (!final_pass);
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00002100rather than quitting as soon as jpeg_input_complete() returns TRUE. This
2101arrangement makes it simple to use higher-quality decoding parameters
2102for the final pass. But if you don't want to use special parameters for
2103the final pass, the right loop logic is like this:
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00002104 for (;;) {
2105 absorb any waiting input by calling jpeg_consume_input()
2106 jpeg_start_output(&cinfo, cinfo.input_scan_number);
2107 ...
2108 jpeg_finish_output()
2109 if (jpeg_input_complete(&cinfo) &&
2110 cinfo.input_scan_number == cinfo.output_scan_number)
2111 break;
2112 }
Thomas G. Lane489583f1996-02-07 00:00:00 +00002113In this case you don't need to know in advance whether an output pass is to
2114be the last one, so it's not necessary to have reached EOF before starting
2115the final output pass; rather, what you want to test is whether the output
2116pass was performed in sync with the final input scan. This form of the loop
2117will avoid an extra output pass whenever the decoder is able (or nearly able)
2118to keep up with the incoming data.
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00002119
2120When the data transmission speed is high, you might begin a display pass,
Thomas G. Lane489583f1996-02-07 00:00:00 +00002121then find that much or all of the file has arrived before you can complete
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00002122the pass. (You can detect this by noting the JPEG_REACHED_EOI return code
2123from jpeg_consume_input(), or equivalently by testing jpeg_input_complete().)
2124In this situation you may wish to abort the current display pass and start a
2125new one using the newly arrived information. To do so, just call
2126jpeg_finish_output() and then start a new pass with jpeg_start_output().
2127
2128A variant strategy is to abort and restart display if more than one complete
2129scan arrives during an output pass; this can be detected by noting
2130JPEG_REACHED_SOS returns and/or examining cinfo.input_scan_number. This
2131idea should be employed with caution, however, since the display process
2132might never get to the bottom of the image before being aborted, resulting
2133in the lower part of the screen being several passes worse than the upper.
2134In most cases it's probably best to abort an output pass only if the whole
2135file has arrived and you want to begin the final output pass immediately.
2136
2137When receiving data across a communication link, we recommend always using
2138the current input scan number for the output target scan number; if a
2139higher-quality final pass is to be done, it should be started (aborting any
2140incomplete output pass) as soon as the end of file is received. However,
2141many other strategies are possible. For example, the application can examine
2142the parameters of the current input scan and decide whether to display it or
2143not. If the scan contains only chroma data, one might choose not to use it
2144as the target scan, expecting that the scan will be small and will arrive
2145quickly. To skip to the next scan, call jpeg_consume_input() until it
2146returns JPEG_REACHED_SOS or JPEG_REACHED_EOI. Or just use the next higher
2147number as the target scan for jpeg_start_output(); but that method doesn't
2148let you inspect the next scan's parameters before deciding to display it.
2149
2150
2151In buffered-image mode, jpeg_start_decompress() never performs input and
2152thus never suspends. An application that uses input suspension with
2153buffered-image mode must be prepared for suspension returns from these
2154routines:
2155* jpeg_start_output() performs input only if you request 2-pass quantization
2156 and the target scan isn't fully read yet. (This is discussed below.)
2157* jpeg_read_scanlines(), as always, returns the number of scanlines that it
2158 was able to produce before suspending.
2159* jpeg_finish_output() will read any markers following the target scan,
Thomas G. Lane489583f1996-02-07 00:00:00 +00002160 up to the end of the file or the SOS marker that begins another scan.
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00002161 (But it reads no input if jpeg_consume_input() has already reached the
Thomas G. Lane489583f1996-02-07 00:00:00 +00002162 end of the file or a SOS marker beyond the target output scan.)
2163* jpeg_finish_decompress() will read until the end of file, and thus can
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00002164 suspend if the end hasn't already been reached (as can be tested by
2165 calling jpeg_input_complete()).
2166jpeg_start_output(), jpeg_finish_output(), and jpeg_finish_decompress()
2167all return TRUE if they completed their tasks, FALSE if they had to suspend.
2168In the event of a FALSE return, the application must load more input data
2169and repeat the call. Applications that use non-suspending data sources need
2170not check the return values of these three routines.
2171
2172
2173It is possible to change decoding parameters between output passes in the
2174buffered-image mode. The decoder library currently supports only very
2175limited changes of parameters. ONLY THE FOLLOWING parameter changes are
2176allowed after jpeg_start_decompress() is called:
2177* dct_method can be changed before each call to jpeg_start_output().
2178 For example, one could use a fast DCT method for early scans, changing
2179 to a higher quality method for the final scan.
2180* dither_mode can be changed before each call to jpeg_start_output();
2181 of course this has no impact if not using color quantization. Typically
2182 one would use ordered dither for initial passes, then switch to
2183 Floyd-Steinberg dither for the final pass. Caution: changing dither mode
2184 can cause more memory to be allocated by the library. Although the amount
2185 of memory involved is not large (a scanline or so), it may cause the
2186 initial max_memory_to_use specification to be exceeded, which in the worst
2187 case would result in an out-of-memory failure.
2188* do_block_smoothing can be changed before each call to jpeg_start_output().
2189 This setting is relevant only when decoding a progressive JPEG image.
2190 During the first DC-only scan, block smoothing provides a very "fuzzy" look
2191 instead of the very "blocky" look seen without it; which is better seems a
2192 matter of personal taste. But block smoothing is nearly always a win
2193 during later stages, especially when decoding a successive-approximation
2194 image: smoothing helps to hide the slight blockiness that otherwise shows
2195 up on smooth gradients until the lowest coefficient bits are sent.
2196* Color quantization mode can be changed under the rules described below.
2197 You *cannot* change between full-color and quantized output (because that
2198 would alter the required I/O buffer sizes), but you can change which
2199 quantization method is used.
2200
2201When generating color-quantized output, changing quantization method is a
2202very useful way of switching between high-speed and high-quality display.
2203The library allows you to change among its three quantization methods:
22041. Single-pass quantization to a fixed color cube.
2205 Selected by cinfo.two_pass_quantize = FALSE and cinfo.colormap = NULL.
22062. Single-pass quantization to an application-supplied colormap.
2207 Selected by setting cinfo.colormap to point to the colormap (the value of
2208 two_pass_quantize is ignored); also set cinfo.actual_number_of_colors.
22093. Two-pass quantization to a colormap chosen specifically for the image.
2210 Selected by cinfo.two_pass_quantize = TRUE and cinfo.colormap = NULL.
2211 (This is the default setting selected by jpeg_read_header, but it is
2212 probably NOT what you want for the first pass of progressive display!)
2213These methods offer successively better quality and lesser speed. However,
2214only the first method is available for quantizing in non-RGB color spaces.
2215
2216IMPORTANT: because the different quantizer methods have very different
2217working-storage requirements, the library requires you to indicate which
2218one(s) you intend to use before you call jpeg_start_decompress(). (If we did
2219not require this, the max_memory_to_use setting would be a complete fiction.)
2220You do this by setting one or more of these three cinfo fields to TRUE:
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00002221 enable_1pass_quant Fixed color cube colormap
2222 enable_external_quant Externally-supplied colormap
2223 enable_2pass_quant Two-pass custom colormap
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00002224All three are initialized FALSE by jpeg_read_header(). But
2225jpeg_start_decompress() automatically sets TRUE the one selected by the
2226current two_pass_quantize and colormap settings, so you only need to set the
2227enable flags for any other quantization methods you plan to change to later.
2228
2229After setting the enable flags correctly at jpeg_start_decompress() time, you
2230can change to any enabled quantization method by setting two_pass_quantize
2231and colormap properly just before calling jpeg_start_output(). The following
2232special rules apply:
22331. You must explicitly set cinfo.colormap to NULL when switching to 1-pass
2234 or 2-pass mode from a different mode, or when you want the 2-pass
2235 quantizer to be re-run to generate a new colormap.
22362. To switch to an external colormap, or to change to a different external
2237 colormap than was used on the prior pass, you must call
2238 jpeg_new_colormap() after setting cinfo.colormap.
2239NOTE: if you want to use the same colormap as was used in the prior pass,
2240you should not do either of these things. This will save some nontrivial
2241switchover costs.
2242(These requirements exist because cinfo.colormap will always be non-NULL
2243after completing a prior output pass, since both the 1-pass and 2-pass
2244quantizers set it to point to their output colormaps. Thus you have to
2245do one of these two things to notify the library that something has changed.
2246Yup, it's a bit klugy, but it's necessary to do it this way for backwards
2247compatibility.)
2248
2249Note that in buffered-image mode, the library generates any requested colormap
2250during jpeg_start_output(), not during jpeg_start_decompress().
2251
2252When using two-pass quantization, jpeg_start_output() makes a pass over the
2253buffered image to determine the optimum color map; it therefore may take a
2254significant amount of time, whereas ordinarily it does little work. The
2255progress monitor hook is called during this pass, if defined. It is also
2256important to realize that if the specified target scan number is greater than
2257or equal to the current input scan number, jpeg_start_output() will attempt
2258to consume input as it makes this pass. If you use a suspending data source,
2259you need to check for a FALSE return from jpeg_start_output() under these
2260conditions. The combination of 2-pass quantization and a not-yet-fully-read
2261target scan is the only case in which jpeg_start_output() will consume input.
2262
2263
2264Application authors who support buffered-image mode may be tempted to use it
2265for all JPEG images, even single-scan ones. This will work, but it is
2266inefficient: there is no need to create an image-sized coefficient buffer for
2267single-scan images. Requesting buffered-image mode for such an image wastes
2268memory. Worse, it can cost time on large images, since the buffered data has
2269to be swapped out or written to a temporary file. If you are concerned about
2270maximum performance on baseline JPEG files, you should use buffered-image
2271mode only when the incoming file actually has multiple scans. This can be
2272tested by calling jpeg_has_multiple_scans(), which will return a correct
2273result at any time after jpeg_read_header() completes.
2274
2275It is also worth noting that when you use jpeg_consume_input() to let input
2276processing get ahead of output processing, the resulting pattern of access to
2277the coefficient buffer is quite nonsequential. It's best to use the memory
2278manager jmemnobs.c if you can (ie, if you have enough real or virtual main
2279memory). If not, at least make sure that max_memory_to_use is set as high as
2280possible. If the JPEG memory manager has to use a temporary file, you will
2281probably see a lot of disk traffic and poor performance. (This could be
2282improved with additional work on the memory manager, but we haven't gotten
2283around to it yet.)
2284
2285In some applications it may be convenient to use jpeg_consume_input() for all
2286input processing, including reading the initial markers; that is, you may
2287wish to call jpeg_consume_input() instead of jpeg_read_header() during
2288startup. This works, but note that you must check for JPEG_REACHED_SOS and
2289JPEG_REACHED_EOI return codes as the equivalent of jpeg_read_header's codes.
2290Once the first SOS marker has been reached, you must call
2291jpeg_start_decompress() before jpeg_consume_input() will consume more input;
2292it'll just keep returning JPEG_REACHED_SOS until you do. If you read a
2293tables-only file this way, jpeg_consume_input() will return JPEG_REACHED_EOI
2294without ever returning JPEG_REACHED_SOS; be sure to check for this case.
2295If this happens, the decompressor will not read any more input until you call
2296jpeg_abort() to reset it. It is OK to call jpeg_consume_input() even when not
2297using buffered-image mode, but in that case it's basically a no-op after the
2298initial markers have been read: it will just return JPEG_SUSPENDED.
Thomas G. Lane9ba2f5e1994-12-07 00:00:00 +00002299
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00002300
2301Abbreviated datastreams and multiple images
2302-------------------------------------------
2303
2304A JPEG compression or decompression object can be reused to process multiple
2305images. This saves a small amount of time per image by eliminating the
2306"create" and "destroy" operations, but that isn't the real purpose of the
2307feature. Rather, reuse of an object provides support for abbreviated JPEG
2308datastreams. Object reuse can also simplify processing a series of images in
2309a single input or output file. This section explains these features.
2310
2311A JPEG file normally contains several hundred bytes worth of quantization
2312and Huffman tables. In a situation where many images will be stored or
2313transmitted with identical tables, this may represent an annoying overhead.
2314The JPEG standard therefore permits tables to be omitted. The standard
2315defines three classes of JPEG datastreams:
2316 * "Interchange" datastreams contain an image and all tables needed to decode
2317 the image. These are the usual kind of JPEG file.
2318 * "Abbreviated image" datastreams contain an image, but are missing some or
2319 all of the tables needed to decode that image.
2320 * "Abbreviated table specification" (henceforth "tables-only") datastreams
2321 contain only table specifications.
2322To decode an abbreviated image, it is necessary to load the missing table(s)
2323into the decoder beforehand. This can be accomplished by reading a separate
2324tables-only file. A variant scheme uses a series of images in which the first
2325image is an interchange (complete) datastream, while subsequent ones are
2326abbreviated and rely on the tables loaded by the first image. It is assumed
2327that once the decoder has read a table, it will remember that table until a
2328new definition for the same table number is encountered.
2329
2330It is the application designer's responsibility to figure out how to associate
2331the correct tables with an abbreviated image. While abbreviated datastreams
2332can be useful in a closed environment, their use is strongly discouraged in
2333any situation where data exchange with other applications might be needed.
2334Caveat designer.
2335
2336The JPEG library provides support for reading and writing any combination of
2337tables-only datastreams and abbreviated images. In both compression and
2338decompression objects, a quantization or Huffman table will be retained for
2339the lifetime of the object, unless it is overwritten by a new table definition.
2340
2341
2342To create abbreviated image datastreams, it is only necessary to tell the
2343compressor not to emit some or all of the tables it is using. Each
2344quantization and Huffman table struct contains a boolean field "sent_table",
2345which normally is initialized to FALSE. For each table used by the image, the
2346header-writing process emits the table and sets sent_table = TRUE unless it is
2347already TRUE. (In normal usage, this prevents outputting the same table
2348definition multiple times, as would otherwise occur because the chroma
2349components typically share tables.) Thus, setting this field to TRUE before
2350calling jpeg_start_compress() will prevent the table from being written at
2351all.
2352
2353If you want to create a "pure" abbreviated image file containing no tables,
2354just call "jpeg_suppress_tables(&cinfo, TRUE)" after constructing all the
2355tables. If you want to emit some but not all tables, you'll need to set the
2356individual sent_table fields directly.
2357
2358To create an abbreviated image, you must also call jpeg_start_compress()
2359with a second parameter of FALSE, not TRUE. Otherwise jpeg_start_compress()
2360will force all the sent_table fields to FALSE. (This is a safety feature to
2361prevent abbreviated images from being created accidentally.)
2362
2363To create a tables-only file, perform the same parameter setup that you
2364normally would, but instead of calling jpeg_start_compress() and so on, call
2365jpeg_write_tables(&cinfo). This will write an abbreviated datastream
2366containing only SOI, DQT and/or DHT markers, and EOI. All the quantization
2367and Huffman tables that are currently defined in the compression object will
2368be emitted unless their sent_tables flag is already TRUE, and then all the
2369sent_tables flags will be set TRUE.
2370
2371A sure-fire way to create matching tables-only and abbreviated image files
2372is to proceed as follows:
2373
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00002374 create JPEG compression object
2375 set JPEG parameters
2376 set destination to tables-only file
2377 jpeg_write_tables(&cinfo);
2378 set destination to image file
2379 jpeg_start_compress(&cinfo, FALSE);
2380 write data...
2381 jpeg_finish_compress(&cinfo);
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00002382
2383Since the JPEG parameters are not altered between writing the table file and
2384the abbreviated image file, the same tables are sure to be used. Of course,
2385you can repeat the jpeg_start_compress() ... jpeg_finish_compress() sequence
2386many times to produce many abbreviated image files matching the table file.
2387
2388You cannot suppress output of the computed Huffman tables when Huffman
2389optimization is selected. (If you could, there'd be no way to decode the
2390image...) Generally, you don't want to set optimize_coding = TRUE when
2391you are trying to produce abbreviated files.
2392
2393In some cases you might want to compress an image using tables which are
2394not stored in the application, but are defined in an interchange or
2395tables-only file readable by the application. This can be done by setting up
2396a JPEG decompression object to read the specification file, then copying the
Thomas G. Lane489583f1996-02-07 00:00:00 +00002397tables into your compression object. See jpeg_copy_critical_parameters()
2398for an example of copying quantization tables.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00002399
2400
2401To read abbreviated image files, you simply need to load the proper tables
2402into the decompression object before trying to read the abbreviated image.
2403If the proper tables are stored in the application program, you can just
Thomas G. Lane5ead57a1998-03-27 00:00:00 +00002404allocate the table structs and fill in their contents directly. For example,
2405to load a fixed quantization table into table slot "n":
2406
2407 if (cinfo.quant_tbl_ptrs[n] == NULL)
2408 cinfo.quant_tbl_ptrs[n] = jpeg_alloc_quant_table((j_common_ptr) &cinfo);
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00002409 quant_ptr = cinfo.quant_tbl_ptrs[n]; /* quant_ptr is JQUANT_TBL* */
Thomas G. Lane5ead57a1998-03-27 00:00:00 +00002410 for (i = 0; i < 64; i++) {
2411 /* Qtable[] is desired quantization table, in natural array order */
2412 quant_ptr->quantval[i] = Qtable[i];
2413 }
2414
2415Code to load a fixed Huffman table is typically (for AC table "n"):
2416
2417 if (cinfo.ac_huff_tbl_ptrs[n] == NULL)
2418 cinfo.ac_huff_tbl_ptrs[n] = jpeg_alloc_huff_table((j_common_ptr) &cinfo);
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00002419 huff_ptr = cinfo.ac_huff_tbl_ptrs[n]; /* huff_ptr is JHUFF_TBL* */
Thomas G. Lane5ead57a1998-03-27 00:00:00 +00002420 for (i = 1; i <= 16; i++) {
2421 /* counts[i] is number of Huffman codes of length i bits, i=1..16 */
2422 huff_ptr->bits[i] = counts[i];
2423 }
2424 for (i = 0; i < 256; i++) {
2425 /* symbols[] is the list of Huffman symbols, in code-length order */
2426 huff_ptr->huffval[i] = symbols[i];
2427 }
2428
2429(Note that trying to set cinfo.quant_tbl_ptrs[n] to point directly at a
2430constant JQUANT_TBL object is not safe. If the incoming file happened to
2431contain a quantization table definition, your master table would get
2432overwritten! Instead allocate a working table copy and copy the master table
2433into it, as illustrated above. Ditto for Huffman tables, of course.)
2434
2435You might want to read the tables from a tables-only file, rather than
2436hard-wiring them into your application. The jpeg_read_header() call is
2437sufficient to read a tables-only file. You must pass a second parameter of
2438FALSE to indicate that you do not require an image to be present. Thus, the
2439typical scenario is
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00002440
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00002441 create JPEG decompression object
2442 set source to tables-only file
2443 jpeg_read_header(&cinfo, FALSE);
2444 set source to abbreviated image file
2445 jpeg_read_header(&cinfo, TRUE);
2446 set decompression parameters
2447 jpeg_start_decompress(&cinfo);
2448 read data...
2449 jpeg_finish_decompress(&cinfo);
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00002450
2451In some cases, you may want to read a file without knowing whether it contains
2452an image or just tables. In that case, pass FALSE and check the return value
2453from jpeg_read_header(): it will be JPEG_HEADER_OK if an image was found,
2454JPEG_HEADER_TABLES_ONLY if only tables were found. (A third return value,
2455JPEG_SUSPENDED, is possible when using a suspending data source manager.)
2456Note that jpeg_read_header() will not complain if you read an abbreviated
2457image for which you haven't loaded the missing tables; the missing-table check
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00002458occurs later, in jpeg_start_decompress().
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00002459
2460
2461It is possible to read a series of images from a single source file by
2462repeating the jpeg_read_header() ... jpeg_finish_decompress() sequence,
2463without releasing/recreating the JPEG object or the data source module.
2464(If you did reinitialize, any partial bufferload left in the data source
2465buffer at the end of one image would be discarded, causing you to lose the
2466start of the next image.) When you use this method, stored tables are
2467automatically carried forward, so some of the images can be abbreviated images
2468that depend on tables from earlier images.
2469
2470If you intend to write a series of images into a single destination file,
2471you might want to make a specialized data destination module that doesn't
2472flush the output buffer at term_destination() time. This would speed things
2473up by some trifling amount. Of course, you'd need to remember to flush the
2474buffer after the last image. You can make the later images be abbreviated
2475ones by passing FALSE to jpeg_start_compress().
2476
2477
2478Special markers
2479---------------
2480
2481Some applications may need to insert or extract special data in the JPEG
2482datastream. The JPEG standard provides marker types "COM" (comment) and
2483"APP0" through "APP15" (application) to hold application-specific data.
2484Unfortunately, the use of these markers is not specified by the standard.
2485COM markers are fairly widely used to hold user-supplied text. The JFIF file
2486format spec uses APP0 markers with specified initial strings to hold certain
2487data. Adobe applications use APP14 markers beginning with the string "Adobe"
2488for miscellaneous data. Other APPn markers are rarely seen, but might
2489contain almost anything.
2490
2491If you wish to store user-supplied text, we recommend you use COM markers
2492and place readable 7-bit ASCII text in them. Newline conventions are not
2493standardized --- expect to find LF (Unix style), CR/LF (DOS style), or CR
2494(Mac style). A robust COM reader should be able to cope with random binary
2495garbage, including nulls, since some applications generate COM markers
2496containing non-ASCII junk. (But yours should not be one of them.)
2497
2498For program-supplied data, use an APPn marker, and be sure to begin it with an
2499identifying string so that you can tell whether the marker is actually yours.
2500It's probably best to avoid using APP0 or APP14 for any private markers.
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00002501(NOTE: the upcoming SPIFF standard will use APP8 markers; we recommend you
2502not use APP8 markers for any private purposes, either.)
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00002503
2504Keep in mind that at most 65533 bytes can be put into one marker, but you
2505can have as many markers as you like.
2506
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00002507By default, the IJG compression library will write a JFIF APP0 marker if the
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00002508selected JPEG colorspace is grayscale or YCbCr, or an Adobe APP14 marker if
2509the selected colorspace is RGB, CMYK, or YCCK. You can disable this, but
2510we don't recommend it. The decompression library will recognize JFIF and
2511Adobe markers and will set the JPEG colorspace properly when one is found.
2512
Thomas G. Lane5ead57a1998-03-27 00:00:00 +00002513
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00002514You can write special markers immediately following the datastream header by
2515calling jpeg_write_marker() after jpeg_start_compress() and before the first
2516call to jpeg_write_scanlines(). When you do this, the markers appear after
2517the SOI and the JFIF APP0 and Adobe APP14 markers (if written), but before
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00002518all else. Specify the marker type parameter as "JPEG_COM" for COM or
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00002519"JPEG_APP0 + n" for APPn. (Actually, jpeg_write_marker will let you write
2520any marker type, but we don't recommend writing any other kinds of marker.)
2521For example, to write a user comment string pointed to by comment_text:
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00002522 jpeg_write_marker(cinfo, JPEG_COM, comment_text, strlen(comment_text));
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00002523
Thomas G. Lane5ead57a1998-03-27 00:00:00 +00002524If it's not convenient to store all the marker data in memory at once,
2525you can instead call jpeg_write_m_header() followed by multiple calls to
2526jpeg_write_m_byte(). If you do it this way, it's your responsibility to
2527call jpeg_write_m_byte() exactly the number of times given in the length
2528parameter to jpeg_write_m_header(). (This method lets you empty the
2529output buffer partway through a marker, which might be important when
2530using a suspending data destination module. In any case, if you are using
2531a suspending destination, you should flush its buffer after inserting
2532any special markers. See "I/O suspension".)
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00002533
Thomas G. Lane5ead57a1998-03-27 00:00:00 +00002534Or, if you prefer to synthesize the marker byte sequence yourself,
2535you can just cram it straight into the data destination module.
2536
2537If you are writing JFIF 1.02 extension markers (thumbnail images), don't
2538forget to set cinfo.JFIF_minor_version = 2 so that the encoder will write the
2539correct JFIF version number in the JFIF header marker. The library's default
2540is to write version 1.01, but that's wrong if you insert any 1.02 extension
2541markers. (We could probably get away with just defaulting to 1.02, but there
2542used to be broken decoders that would complain about unknown minor version
2543numbers. To reduce compatibility risks it's safest not to write 1.02 unless
2544you are actually using 1.02 extensions.)
2545
2546
2547When reading, two methods of handling special markers are available:
25481. You can ask the library to save the contents of COM and/or APPn markers
2549into memory, and then examine them at your leisure afterwards.
25502. You can supply your own routine to process COM and/or APPn markers
2551on-the-fly as they are read.
2552The first method is simpler to use, especially if you are using a suspending
2553data source; writing a marker processor that copes with input suspension is
2554not easy (consider what happens if the marker is longer than your available
2555input buffer). However, the second method conserves memory since the marker
2556data need not be kept around after it's been processed.
2557
2558For either method, you'd normally set up marker handling after creating a
2559decompression object and before calling jpeg_read_header(), because the
2560markers of interest will typically be near the head of the file and so will
2561be scanned by jpeg_read_header. Once you've established a marker handling
2562method, it will be used for the life of that decompression object
2563(potentially many datastreams), unless you change it. Marker handling is
2564determined separately for COM markers and for each APPn marker code.
2565
2566
2567To save the contents of special markers in memory, call
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00002568 jpeg_save_markers(cinfo, marker_code, length_limit)
Thomas G. Lane5ead57a1998-03-27 00:00:00 +00002569where marker_code is the marker type to save, JPEG_COM or JPEG_APP0+n.
2570(To arrange to save all the special marker types, you need to call this
2571routine 17 times, for COM and APP0-APP15.) If the incoming marker is longer
2572than length_limit data bytes, only length_limit bytes will be saved; this
2573parameter allows you to avoid chewing up memory when you only need to see the
2574first few bytes of a potentially large marker. If you want to save all the
2575data, set length_limit to 0xFFFF; that is enough since marker lengths are only
257616 bits. As a special case, setting length_limit to 0 prevents that marker
2577type from being saved at all. (That is the default behavior, in fact.)
2578
2579After jpeg_read_header() completes, you can examine the special markers by
2580following the cinfo->marker_list pointer chain. All the special markers in
2581the file appear in this list, in order of their occurrence in the file (but
2582omitting any markers of types you didn't ask for). Both the original data
2583length and the saved data length are recorded for each list entry; the latter
2584will not exceed length_limit for the particular marker type. Note that these
2585lengths exclude the marker length word, whereas the stored representation
2586within the JPEG file includes it. (Hence the maximum data length is really
2587only 65533.)
2588
2589It is possible that additional special markers appear in the file beyond the
2590SOS marker at which jpeg_read_header stops; if so, the marker list will be
2591extended during reading of the rest of the file. This is not expected to be
2592common, however. If you are short on memory you may want to reset the length
2593limit to zero for all marker types after finishing jpeg_read_header, to
2594ensure that the max_memory_to_use setting cannot be exceeded due to addition
2595of later markers.
2596
2597The marker list remains stored until you call jpeg_finish_decompress or
2598jpeg_abort, at which point the memory is freed and the list is set to empty.
2599(jpeg_destroy also releases the storage, of course.)
2600
2601Note that the library is internally interested in APP0 and APP14 markers;
2602if you try to set a small nonzero length limit on these types, the library
2603will silently force the length up to the minimum it wants. (But you can set
2604a zero length limit to prevent them from being saved at all.) Also, in a
260516-bit environment, the maximum length limit may be constrained to less than
260665533 by malloc() limitations. It is therefore best not to assume that the
2607effective length limit is exactly what you set it to be.
2608
2609
2610If you want to supply your own marker-reading routine, you do it by calling
2611jpeg_set_marker_processor(). A marker processor routine must have the
2612signature
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00002613 boolean jpeg_marker_parser_method (j_decompress_ptr cinfo)
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00002614Although the marker code is not explicitly passed, the routine can find it
2615in cinfo->unread_marker. At the time of call, the marker proper has been
2616read from the data source module. The processor routine is responsible for
2617reading the marker length word and the remaining parameter bytes, if any.
2618Return TRUE to indicate success. (FALSE should be returned only if you are
2619using a suspending data source and it tells you to suspend. See the standard
2620marker processors in jdmarker.c for appropriate coding methods if you need to
2621use a suspending data source.)
2622
2623If you override the default APP0 or APP14 processors, it is up to you to
2624recognize JFIF and Adobe markers if you want colorspace recognition to occur
2625properly. We recommend copying and extending the default processors if you
Thomas G. Lane5ead57a1998-03-27 00:00:00 +00002626want to do that. (A better idea is to save these marker types for later
2627examination by calling jpeg_save_markers(); that method doesn't interfere
2628with the library's own processing of these markers.)
2629
2630jpeg_set_marker_processor() and jpeg_save_markers() are mutually exclusive
2631--- if you call one it overrides any previous call to the other, for the
2632particular marker type specified.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00002633
2634A simple example of an external COM processor can be found in djpeg.c.
Thomas G. Lane5ead57a1998-03-27 00:00:00 +00002635Also, see jpegtran.c for an example of using jpeg_save_markers.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00002636
2637
Leon Scroggins III3993b372018-07-16 10:43:45 -04002638ICC profiles
2639------------
2640
2641Two functions are provided for writing and reading International Color
2642Consortium (ICC) device profiles embedded in JFIF JPEG image files:
2643
2644 void jpeg_write_icc_profile (j_compress_ptr cinfo,
2645 const JOCTET *icc_data_ptr,
2646 unsigned int icc_data_len);
2647 boolean jpeg_read_icc_profile (j_decompress_ptr cinfo,
2648 JOCTET **icc_data_ptr,
2649 unsigned int *icc_data_len);
2650
2651The ICC has defined a standard for including such data in JPEG "APP2" markers.
2652The aforementioned functions do not know anything about the internal structure
2653of the ICC profile data; they just know how to embed the profile data into a
2654JPEG file while writing it, or to extract the profile data from a JPEG file
2655while reading it.
2656
2657jpeg_write_icc_profile() must be called after calling jpeg_start_compress() and
2658before the first call to jpeg_write_scanlines() or jpeg_write_raw_data(). This
2659ordering ensures that the APP2 marker(s) will appear after the SOI and JFIF or
2660Adobe markers, but before all other data.
2661
2662jpeg_read_icc_profile() returns TRUE if an ICC profile was found and FALSE
2663otherwise. If an ICC profile was found, then the function will allocate a
2664memory region containing the profile and will return a pointer to that memory
2665region in *icc_data_ptr, as well as the length of the region in *icc_data_len.
2666This memory region is allocated by the library using malloc() and must be freed
2667by the caller using free() when the memory region is no longer needed. Callers
2668wishing to use jpeg_read_icc_profile() must call
2669
2670 jpeg_save_markers(cinfo, JPEG_APP0 + 2, 0xFFFF);
2671
2672prior to calling jpeg_read_header(). jpeg_read_icc_profile() can be called at
2673any point between jpeg_read_header() and jpeg_finish_decompress().
2674
2675
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00002676Raw (downsampled) image data
2677----------------------------
2678
2679Some applications need to supply already-downsampled image data to the JPEG
2680compressor, or to receive raw downsampled data from the decompressor. The
2681library supports this requirement by allowing the application to write or
2682read raw data, bypassing the normal preprocessing or postprocessing steps.
2683The interface is different from the standard one and is somewhat harder to
2684use. If your interest is merely in bypassing color conversion, we recommend
2685that you use the standard interface and simply set jpeg_color_space =
2686in_color_space (or jpeg_color_space = out_color_space for decompression).
2687The mechanism described in this section is necessary only to supply or
2688receive downsampled image data, in which not all components have the same
2689dimensions.
2690
2691
2692To compress raw data, you must supply the data in the colorspace to be used
2693in the JPEG file (please read the earlier section on Special color spaces)
2694and downsampled to the sampling factors specified in the JPEG parameters.
2695You must supply the data in the format used internally by the JPEG library,
2696namely a JSAMPIMAGE array. This is an array of pointers to two-dimensional
2697arrays, each of type JSAMPARRAY. Each 2-D array holds the values for one
2698color component. This structure is necessary since the components are of
2699different sizes. If the image dimensions are not a multiple of the MCU size,
2700you must also pad the data correctly (usually, this is done by replicating
2701the last column and/or row). The data must be padded to a multiple of a DCT
2702block in each component: that is, each downsampled row must contain a
2703multiple of 8 valid samples, and there must be a multiple of 8 sample rows
2704for each component. (For applications such as conversion of digital TV
2705images, the standard image size is usually a multiple of the DCT block size,
2706so that no padding need actually be done.)
2707
2708The procedure for compression of raw data is basically the same as normal
2709compression, except that you call jpeg_write_raw_data() in place of
2710jpeg_write_scanlines(). Before calling jpeg_start_compress(), you must do
2711the following:
2712 * Set cinfo->raw_data_in to TRUE. (It is set FALSE by jpeg_set_defaults().)
2713 This notifies the library that you will be supplying raw data.
2714 * Ensure jpeg_color_space is correct --- an explicit jpeg_set_colorspace()
2715 call is a good idea. Note that since color conversion is bypassed,
2716 in_color_space is ignored, except that jpeg_set_defaults() uses it to
2717 choose the default jpeg_color_space setting.
2718 * Ensure the sampling factors, cinfo->comp_info[i].h_samp_factor and
2719 cinfo->comp_info[i].v_samp_factor, are correct. Since these indicate the
2720 dimensions of the data you are supplying, it's wise to set them
2721 explicitly, rather than assuming the library's defaults are what you want.
2722
2723To pass raw data to the library, call jpeg_write_raw_data() in place of
2724jpeg_write_scanlines(). The two routines work similarly except that
2725jpeg_write_raw_data takes a JSAMPIMAGE data array rather than JSAMPARRAY.
2726The scanlines count passed to and returned from jpeg_write_raw_data is
2727measured in terms of the component with the largest v_samp_factor.
2728
2729jpeg_write_raw_data() processes one MCU row per call, which is to say
2730v_samp_factor*DCTSIZE sample rows of each component. The passed num_lines
2731value must be at least max_v_samp_factor*DCTSIZE, and the return value will
2732be exactly that amount (or possibly some multiple of that amount, in future
2733library versions). This is true even on the last call at the bottom of the
2734image; don't forget to pad your data as necessary.
2735
2736The required dimensions of the supplied data can be computed for each
2737component as
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00002738 cinfo->comp_info[i].width_in_blocks*DCTSIZE samples per row
2739 cinfo->comp_info[i].height_in_blocks*DCTSIZE rows in image
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00002740after jpeg_start_compress() has initialized those fields. If the valid data
2741is smaller than this, it must be padded appropriately. For some sampling
2742factors and image sizes, additional dummy DCT blocks are inserted to make
2743the image a multiple of the MCU dimensions. The library creates such dummy
2744blocks itself; it does not read them from your supplied data. Therefore you
2745need never pad by more than DCTSIZE samples. An example may help here.
2746Assume 2h2v downsampling of YCbCr data, that is
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00002747 cinfo->comp_info[0].h_samp_factor = 2 for Y
2748 cinfo->comp_info[0].v_samp_factor = 2
2749 cinfo->comp_info[1].h_samp_factor = 1 for Cb
2750 cinfo->comp_info[1].v_samp_factor = 1
2751 cinfo->comp_info[2].h_samp_factor = 1 for Cr
2752 cinfo->comp_info[2].v_samp_factor = 1
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00002753and suppose that the nominal image dimensions (cinfo->image_width and
2754cinfo->image_height) are 101x101 pixels. Then jpeg_start_compress() will
2755compute downsampled_width = 101 and width_in_blocks = 13 for Y,
2756downsampled_width = 51 and width_in_blocks = 7 for Cb and Cr (and the same
2757for the height fields). You must pad the Y data to at least 13*8 = 104
2758columns and rows, the Cb/Cr data to at least 7*8 = 56 columns and rows. The
2759MCU height is max_v_samp_factor = 2 DCT rows so you must pass at least 16
2760scanlines on each call to jpeg_write_raw_data(), which is to say 16 actual
2761sample rows of Y and 8 each of Cb and Cr. A total of 7 MCU rows are needed,
2762so you must pass a total of 7*16 = 112 "scanlines". The last DCT block row
2763of Y data is dummy, so it doesn't matter what you pass for it in the data
2764arrays, but the scanlines count must total up to 112 so that all of the Cb
2765and Cr data gets passed.
2766
Thomas G. Lanea8b67c41995-03-15 00:00:00 +00002767Output suspension is supported with raw-data compression: if the data
2768destination module suspends, jpeg_write_raw_data() will return 0.
2769In this case the same data rows must be passed again on the next call.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00002770
2771
2772Decompression with raw data output implies bypassing all postprocessing:
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00002773you cannot ask for rescaling or color quantization, for instance. More
2774seriously, you must deal with the color space and sampling factors present in
2775the incoming file. If your application only handles, say, 2h1v YCbCr data,
2776you must check for and fail on other color spaces or other sampling factors.
2777The library will not convert to a different color space for you.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00002778
2779To obtain raw data output, set cinfo->raw_data_out = TRUE before
2780jpeg_start_decompress() (it is set FALSE by jpeg_read_header()). Be sure to
2781verify that the color space and sampling factors are ones you can handle.
2782Then call jpeg_read_raw_data() in place of jpeg_read_scanlines(). The
2783decompression process is otherwise the same as usual.
2784
2785jpeg_read_raw_data() returns one MCU row per call, and thus you must pass a
2786buffer of at least max_v_samp_factor*DCTSIZE scanlines (scanline counting is
2787the same as for raw-data compression). The buffer you pass must be large
2788enough to hold the actual data plus padding to DCT-block boundaries. As with
2789compression, any entirely dummy DCT blocks are not processed so you need not
2790allocate space for them, but the total scanline count includes them. The
2791above example of computing buffer dimensions for raw-data compression is
2792equally valid for decompression.
2793
2794Input suspension is supported with raw-data decompression: if the data source
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00002795module suspends, jpeg_read_raw_data() will return 0. You can also use
2796buffered-image mode to read raw data in multiple passes.
2797
2798
2799Really raw data: DCT coefficients
2800---------------------------------
2801
2802It is possible to read or write the contents of a JPEG file as raw DCT
2803coefficients. This facility is mainly intended for use in lossless
2804transcoding between different JPEG file formats. Other possible applications
2805include lossless cropping of a JPEG image, lossless reassembly of a
2806multi-strip or multi-tile TIFF/JPEG file into a single JPEG datastream, etc.
2807
2808To read the contents of a JPEG file as DCT coefficients, open the file and do
2809jpeg_read_header() as usual. But instead of calling jpeg_start_decompress()
2810and jpeg_read_scanlines(), call jpeg_read_coefficients(). This will read the
2811entire image into a set of virtual coefficient-block arrays, one array per
2812component. The return value is a pointer to an array of virtual-array
2813descriptors. Each virtual array can be accessed directly using the JPEG
2814memory manager's access_virt_barray method (see Memory management, below,
Guido Vollbeding5996a252009-06-27 00:00:00 +00002815and also read structure.txt's discussion of virtual array handling). Or,
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00002816for simple transcoding to a different JPEG file format, the array list can
2817just be handed directly to jpeg_write_coefficients().
2818
Thomas G. Lane5ead57a1998-03-27 00:00:00 +00002819Each block in the block arrays contains quantized coefficient values in
2820normal array order (not JPEG zigzag order). The block arrays contain only
2821DCT blocks containing real data; any entirely-dummy blocks added to fill out
2822interleaved MCUs at the right or bottom edges of the image are discarded
2823during reading and are not stored in the block arrays. (The size of each
2824block array can be determined from the width_in_blocks and height_in_blocks
2825fields of the component's comp_info entry.) This is also the data format
2826expected by jpeg_write_coefficients().
2827
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00002828When you are done using the virtual arrays, call jpeg_finish_decompress()
2829to release the array storage and return the decompression object to an idle
2830state; or just call jpeg_destroy() if you don't need to reuse the object.
2831
2832If you use a suspending data source, jpeg_read_coefficients() will return
2833NULL if it is forced to suspend; a non-NULL return value indicates successful
2834completion. You need not test for a NULL return value when using a
2835non-suspending data source.
2836
Thomas G. Lane5ead57a1998-03-27 00:00:00 +00002837It is also possible to call jpeg_read_coefficients() to obtain access to the
2838decoder's coefficient arrays during a normal decode cycle in buffered-image
2839mode. This frammish might be useful for progressively displaying an incoming
2840image and then re-encoding it without loss. To do this, decode in buffered-
2841image mode as discussed previously, then call jpeg_read_coefficients() after
2842the last jpeg_finish_output() call. The arrays will be available for your use
2843until you call jpeg_finish_decompress().
2844
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00002845
2846To write the contents of a JPEG file as DCT coefficients, you must provide
2847the DCT coefficients stored in virtual block arrays. You can either pass
2848block arrays read from an input JPEG file by jpeg_read_coefficients(), or
2849allocate virtual arrays from the JPEG compression object and fill them
2850yourself. In either case, jpeg_write_coefficients() is substituted for
2851jpeg_start_compress() and jpeg_write_scanlines(). Thus the sequence is
2852 * Create compression object
2853 * Set all compression parameters as necessary
2854 * Request virtual arrays if needed
2855 * jpeg_write_coefficients()
2856 * jpeg_finish_compress()
2857 * Destroy or re-use compression object
2858jpeg_write_coefficients() is passed a pointer to an array of virtual block
2859array descriptors; the number of arrays is equal to cinfo.num_components.
2860
2861The virtual arrays need only have been requested, not realized, before
2862jpeg_write_coefficients() is called. A side-effect of
2863jpeg_write_coefficients() is to realize any virtual arrays that have been
2864requested from the compression object's memory manager. Thus, when obtaining
2865the virtual arrays from the compression object, you should fill the arrays
2866after calling jpeg_write_coefficients(). The data is actually written out
2867when you call jpeg_finish_compress(); jpeg_write_coefficients() only writes
2868the file header.
2869
2870When writing raw DCT coefficients, it is crucial that the JPEG quantization
2871tables and sampling factors match the way the data was encoded, or the
2872resulting file will be invalid. For transcoding from an existing JPEG file,
2873we recommend using jpeg_copy_critical_parameters(). This routine initializes
2874all the compression parameters to default values (like jpeg_set_defaults()),
2875then copies the critical information from a source decompression object.
2876The decompression object should have just been used to read the entire
2877JPEG input file --- that is, it should be awaiting jpeg_finish_decompress().
2878
2879jpeg_write_coefficients() marks all tables stored in the compression object
2880as needing to be written to the output file (thus, it acts like
2881jpeg_start_compress(cinfo, TRUE)). This is for safety's sake, to avoid
2882emitting abbreviated JPEG files by accident. If you really want to emit an
2883abbreviated JPEG file, call jpeg_suppress_tables(), or set the tables'
2884individual sent_table flags, between calling jpeg_write_coefficients() and
2885jpeg_finish_compress().
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00002886
2887
2888Progress monitoring
2889-------------------
2890
2891Some applications may need to regain control from the JPEG library every so
2892often. The typical use of this feature is to produce a percent-done bar or
2893other progress display. (For a simple example, see cjpeg.c or djpeg.c.)
2894Although you do get control back frequently during the data-transferring pass
2895(the jpeg_read_scanlines or jpeg_write_scanlines loop), any additional passes
2896will occur inside jpeg_finish_compress or jpeg_start_decompress; those
2897routines may take a long time to execute, and you don't get control back
2898until they are done.
2899
2900You can define a progress-monitor routine which will be called periodically
2901by the library. No guarantees are made about how often this call will occur,
2902so we don't recommend you use it for mouse tracking or anything like that.
2903At present, a call will occur once per MCU row, scanline, or sample row
2904group, whichever unit is convenient for the current processing mode; so the
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00002905wider the image, the longer the time between calls. During the data
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00002906transferring pass, only one call occurs per call of jpeg_read_scanlines or
2907jpeg_write_scanlines, so don't pass a large number of scanlines at once if
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00002908you want fine resolution in the progress count. (If you really need to use
2909the callback mechanism for time-critical tasks like mouse tracking, you could
2910insert additional calls inside some of the library's inner loops.)
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00002911
2912To establish a progress-monitor callback, create a struct jpeg_progress_mgr,
2913fill in its progress_monitor field with a pointer to your callback routine,
2914and set cinfo->progress to point to the struct. The callback will be called
2915whenever cinfo->progress is non-NULL. (This pointer is set to NULL by
2916jpeg_create_compress or jpeg_create_decompress; the library will not change
2917it thereafter. So if you allocate dynamic storage for the progress struct,
2918make sure it will live as long as the JPEG object does. Allocating from the
2919JPEG memory manager with lifetime JPOOL_PERMANENT will work nicely.) You
2920can use the same callback routine for both compression and decompression.
2921
2922The jpeg_progress_mgr struct contains four fields which are set by the library:
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00002923 long pass_counter; /* work units completed in this pass */
2924 long pass_limit; /* total number of work units in this pass */
2925 int completed_passes; /* passes completed so far */
2926 int total_passes; /* total number of passes expected */
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00002927During any one pass, pass_counter increases from 0 up to (not including)
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00002928pass_limit; the step size is usually but not necessarily 1. The pass_limit
2929value may change from one pass to another. The expected total number of
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00002930passes is in total_passes, and the number of passes already completed is in
2931completed_passes. Thus the fraction of work completed may be estimated as
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00002932 completed_passes + (pass_counter/pass_limit)
2933 --------------------------------------------
2934 total_passes
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00002935ignoring the fact that the passes may not be equal amounts of work.
2936
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00002937When decompressing, pass_limit can even change within a pass, because it
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00002938depends on the number of scans in the JPEG file, which isn't always known in
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00002939advance. The computed fraction-of-work-done may jump suddenly (if the library
2940discovers it has overestimated the number of scans) or even decrease (in the
2941opposite case). It is not wise to put great faith in the work estimate.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00002942
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00002943When using the decompressor's buffered-image mode, the progress monitor work
2944estimate is likely to be completely unhelpful, because the library has no way
2945to know how many output passes will be demanded of it. Currently, the library
2946sets total_passes based on the assumption that there will be one more output
2947pass if the input file end hasn't yet been read (jpeg_input_complete() isn't
2948TRUE), but no more output passes if the file end has been reached when the
2949output pass is started. This means that total_passes will rise as additional
2950output passes are requested. If you have a way of determining the input file
2951size, estimating progress based on the fraction of the file that's been read
2952will probably be more useful than using the library's value.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00002953
2954
2955Memory management
2956-----------------
2957
2958This section covers some key facts about the JPEG library's built-in memory
Guido Vollbeding5996a252009-06-27 00:00:00 +00002959manager. For more info, please read structure.txt's section about the memory
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00002960manager, and consult the source code if necessary.
2961
2962All memory and temporary file allocation within the library is done via the
2963memory manager. If necessary, you can replace the "back end" of the memory
2964manager to control allocation yourself (for example, if you don't want the
2965library to use malloc() and free() for some reason).
2966
2967Some data is allocated "permanently" and will not be freed until the JPEG
2968object is destroyed. Most data is allocated "per image" and is freed by
2969jpeg_finish_compress, jpeg_finish_decompress, or jpeg_abort. You can call the
2970memory manager yourself to allocate structures that will automatically be
2971freed at these times. Typical code for this is
Leon Scroggins III3993b372018-07-16 10:43:45 -04002972 ptr = (*cinfo->mem->alloc_small) ((j_common_ptr)cinfo, JPOOL_IMAGE, size);
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00002973Use JPOOL_PERMANENT to get storage that lasts as long as the JPEG object.
2974Use alloc_large instead of alloc_small for anything bigger than a few Kbytes.
2975There are also alloc_sarray and alloc_barray routines that automatically
2976build 2-D sample or block arrays.
2977
2978The library's minimum space requirements to process an image depend on the
2979image's width, but not on its height, because the library ordinarily works
2980with "strip" buffers that are as wide as the image but just a few rows high.
2981Some operating modes (eg, two-pass color quantization) require full-image
2982buffers. Such buffers are treated as "virtual arrays": only the current strip
2983need be in memory, and the rest can be swapped out to a temporary file.
2984
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00002985When using temporary files, the library will make the in-memory buffers for
2986its virtual arrays just big enough to stay within a "maximum memory" setting.
2987Your application can set this limit by setting cinfo->mem->max_memory_to_use
2988after creating the JPEG object. (Of course, there is still a minimum size for
2989the buffers, so the max-memory setting is effective only if it is bigger than
2990the minimum space needed.) If you allocate any large structures yourself, you
2991must allocate them before jpeg_start_compress() or jpeg_start_decompress() in
2992order to have them counted against the max memory limit. Also keep in mind
2993that space allocated with alloc_small() is ignored, on the assumption that
Thomas G. Lanebc79e061995-08-02 00:00:00 +00002994it's too small to be worth worrying about; so a reasonable safety margin
2995should be left when setting max_memory_to_use.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00002996
Leon Scroggins IIIbd7903e2018-02-28 14:05:04 -05002997NOTE: Unless you develop your own memory manager back end, then temporary files
2998will never be used. The back end provided in libjpeg-turbo (jmemnobs.c) simply
2999malloc()s and free()s virtual arrays, and an error occurs if the required
3000memory exceeds the limit specified in cinfo->mem->max_memory_to_use.
3001
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00003002
Thomas G. Lane5ead57a1998-03-27 00:00:00 +00003003Memory usage
3004------------
3005
3006Working memory requirements while performing compression or decompression
3007depend on image dimensions, image characteristics (such as colorspace and
3008JPEG process), and operating mode (application-selected options).
3009
3010As of v6b, the decompressor requires:
3011 1. About 24K in more-or-less-fixed-size data. This varies a bit depending
3012 on operating mode and image characteristics (particularly color vs.
3013 grayscale), but it doesn't depend on image dimensions.
3014 2. Strip buffers (of size proportional to the image width) for IDCT and
3015 upsampling results. The worst case for commonly used sampling factors
3016 is about 34 bytes * width in pixels for a color image. A grayscale image
3017 only needs about 8 bytes per pixel column.
3018 3. A full-image DCT coefficient buffer is needed to decode a multi-scan JPEG
3019 file (including progressive JPEGs), or whenever you select buffered-image
3020 mode. This takes 2 bytes/coefficient. At typical 2x2 sampling, that's
3021 3 bytes per pixel for a color image. Worst case (1x1 sampling) requires
3022 6 bytes/pixel. For grayscale, figure 2 bytes/pixel.
3023 4. To perform 2-pass color quantization, the decompressor also needs a
3024 128K color lookup table and a full-image pixel buffer (3 bytes/pixel).
3025This does not count any memory allocated by the application, such as a
3026buffer to hold the final output image.
3027
3028The above figures are valid for 8-bit JPEG data precision and a machine with
302932-bit ints. For 12-bit JPEG data, double the size of the strip buffers and
3030quantization pixel buffer. The "fixed-size" data will be somewhat smaller
3031with 16-bit ints, larger with 64-bit ints. Also, CMYK or other unusual
3032color spaces will require different amounts of space.
3033
3034The full-image coefficient and pixel buffers, if needed at all, do not
3035have to be fully RAM resident; you can have the library use temporary
3036files instead when the total memory usage would exceed a limit you set.
3037(But if your OS supports virtual memory, it's probably better to just use
3038jmemnobs and let the OS do the swapping.)
3039
3040The compressor's memory requirements are similar, except that it has no need
3041for color quantization. Also, it needs a full-image DCT coefficient buffer
3042if Huffman-table optimization is asked for, even if progressive mode is not
3043requested.
3044
3045If you need more detailed information about memory usage in a particular
3046situation, you can enable the MEM_STATS code in jmemmgr.c.
3047
3048
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00003049Library compile-time options
3050----------------------------
3051
3052A number of compile-time options are available by modifying jmorecfg.h.
3053
3054The JPEG standard provides for both the baseline 8-bit DCT process and
Thomas G. Lane5ead57a1998-03-27 00:00:00 +00003055a 12-bit DCT process. The IJG code supports 12-bit lossy JPEG if you define
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00003056BITS_IN_JSAMPLE as 12 rather than 8. Note that this causes JSAMPLE to be
3057larger than a char, so it affects the surrounding application's image data.
Thomas G. Lane9ba2f5e1994-12-07 00:00:00 +00003058The sample applications cjpeg and djpeg can support 12-bit mode only for PPM
3059and GIF file formats; you must disable the other file formats to compile a
Guido Vollbeding5996a252009-06-27 00:00:00 +0000306012-bit cjpeg or djpeg. (install.txt has more information about that.)
Thomas G. Lanea8b67c41995-03-15 00:00:00 +00003061At present, a 12-bit library can handle *only* 12-bit images, not both
DRC52ded872014-05-15 20:30:16 +00003062precisions.
Thomas G. Lanea8b67c41995-03-15 00:00:00 +00003063
3064Note that a 12-bit library always compresses in Huffman optimization mode,
3065in order to generate valid Huffman tables. This is necessary because our
3066default Huffman tables only cover 8-bit data. If you need to output 12-bit
3067files in one pass, you'll have to supply suitable default Huffman tables.
Thomas G. Lane5ead57a1998-03-27 00:00:00 +00003068You may also want to supply your own DCT quantization tables; the existing
3069quality-scaling code has been developed for 8-bit use, and probably doesn't
3070generate especially good tables for 12-bit.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00003071
3072The maximum number of components (color channels) in the image is determined
3073by MAX_COMPONENTS. The JPEG standard allows up to 255 components, but we
3074expect that few applications will need more than four or so.
3075
3076On machines with unusual data type sizes, you may be able to improve
3077performance or reduce memory space by tweaking the various typedefs in
3078jmorecfg.h. In particular, on some RISC CPUs, access to arrays of "short"s
3079is quite slow; consider trading memory for speed by making JCOEF, INT16, and
3080UINT16 be "int" or "unsigned int". UINT8 is also a candidate to become int.
3081You probably don't want to make JSAMPLE be int unless you have lots of memory
3082to burn.
3083
3084You can reduce the size of the library by compiling out various optional
3085functions. To do this, undefine xxx_SUPPORTED symbols as necessary.
3086
Thomas G. Lane5ead57a1998-03-27 00:00:00 +00003087You can also save a few K by not having text error messages in the library;
3088the standard error message table occupies about 5Kb. This is particularly
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00003089reasonable for embedded applications where there's no good way to display
Thomas G. Lane5ead57a1998-03-27 00:00:00 +00003090a message anyway. To do this, remove the creation of the message table
3091(jpeg_std_message_table[]) from jerror.c, and alter format_message to do
3092something reasonable without it. You could output the numeric value of the
3093message code number, for example. If you do this, you can also save a couple
3094more K by modifying the TRACEMSn() macros in jerror.h to expand to nothing;
3095you don't need trace capability anyway, right?
3096
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00003097
3098Portability considerations
3099--------------------------
3100
3101The JPEG library has been written to be extremely portable; the sample
3102applications cjpeg and djpeg are slightly less so. This section summarizes
3103the design goals in this area. (If you encounter any bugs that cause the
3104library to be less portable than is claimed here, we'd appreciate hearing
3105about them.)
3106
DRCfced14c2014-05-21 04:13:09 +00003107The code works fine on ANSI C and C++ compilers, using any of the popular
3108system include file setups, and some not-so-popular ones too.
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00003109
3110The code is not dependent on the exact sizes of the C data types. As
3111distributed, we make the assumptions that
DRCb7753512014-05-11 09:36:25 +00003112 char is at least 8 bits wide
3113 short is at least 16 bits wide
3114 int is at least 16 bits wide
3115 long is at least 32 bits wide
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00003116(These are the minimum requirements of the ANSI C standard.) Wider types will
3117work fine, although memory may be used inefficiently if char is much larger
3118than 8 bits or short is much bigger than 16 bits. The code should work
3119equally well with 16- or 32-bit ints.
3120
3121In a system where these assumptions are not met, you may be able to make the
3122code work by modifying the typedefs in jmorecfg.h. However, you will probably
3123have difficulty if int is less than 16 bits wide, since references to plain
3124int abound in the code.
3125
3126char can be either signed or unsigned, although the code runs faster if an
3127unsigned char type is available. If char is wider than 8 bits, you will need
3128to redefine JOCTET and/or provide custom data source/destination managers so
3129that JOCTET represents exactly 8 bits of data on external storage.
3130
3131The JPEG library proper does not assume ASCII representation of characters.
3132But some of the image file I/O modules in cjpeg/djpeg do have ASCII
3133dependencies in file-header manipulation; so does cjpeg's select_file_type()
3134routine.
3135
3136The JPEG library does not rely heavily on the C library. In particular, C
3137stdio is used only by the data source/destination modules and the error
3138handler, all of which are application-replaceable. (cjpeg/djpeg are more
3139heavily dependent on stdio.) malloc and free are called only from the memory
3140manager "back end" module, so you can use a different memory allocator by
3141replacing that one file.
3142
Guido Vollbeding5996a252009-06-27 00:00:00 +00003143More info about porting the code may be gleaned by reading jconfig.txt,
Thomas G. Lane36a4ccc1994-09-24 00:00:00 +00003144jmorecfg.h, and jinclude.h.