* commit '15274b901acb75d6d2433e8578f3cfbc6f4f5fd9': (98 commits)
AppVeyor: Use SignPath release cert/only sign tags
xform fuzz: Use only xform opts to set entropy alg
jchuff.c: Test for out-of-range coefficients
turbojpeg.h: Make customFilter() proto match doc
ChangeLog.md: Fix typo
djpeg: Fix -map option with 12-bit data precision
Disallow color quantization with lossless decomp
tj3Transform: Calc dst buf size from xformed dims
README.md: Include link to project home page
AppVeyor: Only add installers to zip file
AppVeyor: Integrate with SignPath.io
Fix build warnings/errs w/ -DNO_GETENV/-DNO_PUTENV
GitHub: Fix x32 build
Bump version to 3.0.0
tjexample.c: Prevent integer overflow
Disallow merged upsampling with lossless decomp
SECURITY.md: Wordsmithing and clarifications
GitHub: Add security policy
ChangeLog.md: List CVE ID fixed by 9f756bc6
jpeg_crop_scanline: Fix calc w/sclg + 2x4,4x2 samp
...
- Eliminate unnecessary "www."
- Use HTTPS.
- Update Java, MSYS, tdm-gcc, and NSIS URLs.
- Update URL and title of Agner Fog's assembly language optimization
manual.
- Remove extraneous information about MASM and Borland Turbo Assembler
and outdated NASM URLs from the x86 assembly headers, and mention
Yasm.
The Gordian knot that 7fec5074f9 attempted
to unravel was caused by the fact that there are several
data-precision-dependent (JSAMPLE-dependent) fields and methods in the
exposed libjpeg API structures, and if you change the exposed libjpeg
API structures, then you have to change the whole API. If you change
the whole API, then you have to provide a whole new library to support
the new API, and that makes it difficult to support multiple data
precisions in the same application. (It is not impossible, as example.c
demonstrated, but using data-precision-dependent libjpeg API structures
would have made the cjpeg, djpeg, and jpegtran source code hard to read,
so it made more sense to build, install, and package 12-bit-specific
versions of those applications.)
Unfortunately, the result of that initial integration effort was an
unreadable and unmaintainable mess, which is a problem for a library
that is an ISO/ITU-T reference implementation. Also, as I dug into the
problem of lossless JPEG support, I realized that 16-bit lossless JPEG
images are a thing, and supporting yet another version of the libjpeg
API just for those images is untenable.
In fact, however, the touch points for JSAMPLE in the exposed libjpeg
API structures are minimal:
- The colormap and sample_range_limit fields in jpeg_decompress_struct
- The alloc_sarray() and access_virt_sarray() methods in
jpeg_memory_mgr
- jpeg_write_scanlines() and jpeg_write_raw_data()
- jpeg_read_scanlines() and jpeg_read_raw_data()
- jpeg_skip_scanlines() and jpeg_crop_scanline()
(This is subtle, but both of those functions use JSAMPLE-dependent
opaque structures behind the scenes.)
It is much more readable and maintainable to provide 12-bit-specific
versions of those six top-level API functions and to document that the
aforementioned methods and fields must be type-cast when using 12-bit
samples. Since that eliminates the need to provide a 12-bit-specific
version of the exposed libjpeg API structures, we can:
- Compile only the precision-dependent libjpeg modules (the
coefficient buffer controllers, the colorspace converters, the
DCT/IDCT managers, the main buffer controllers, the preprocessing
and postprocessing controller, the downsampler and upsamplers, the
quantizers, the integer DCT methods, and the IDCT methods) for
multiple data precisions.
- Introduce 12-bit-specific methods into the various internal
structures defined in jpegint.h.
- Create precision-independent data type, macro, method, field, and
function names that are prefixed by an underscore, and use an
internal header to convert those into precision-dependent data
type, macro, method, field, and function names, based on the value
of BITS_IN_JSAMPLE, when compiling the precision-dependent libjpeg
modules.
- Expose precision-dependent jinit*() functions for each of the
precision-dependent libjpeg modules.
- Abstract the precision-dependent libjpeg modules by calling the
appropriate precision-dependent jinit*() function, based on the
value of cinfo->data_precision, from top-level libjpeg API
functions.
* commit '8a2cad020171184a49fa8696df0b9e267f1cf2f6': (99 commits)
Build: Handle CMAKE_OSX_ARCHITECTURES=(i386|ppc)
Add Sponsor button for GitHub repository
Build: Support CMAKE_OSX_ARCHITECTURES
cjpeg: Fix FPE when compressing 0-width GIF
Fix build with Visual C++ and /std:c11 or /std:c17
Neon: Fix Huffman enc. error w/Visual Studio+Clang
Use CLZ compiler intrinsic for Windows/Arm builds
Build: Use correct SIMD exts w/VStudio IDE + Arm64
jcphuff.c: Fix compiler warning with clang-cl
Migrate from Travis CI to GitHub Actions
tjexample.c: Fix mem leak if tjTransform() fails
Build: Officially support Ninja
decompress_smooth_data(): Fix another uninit. read
LICENSE.md: Remove trailing whitespace
Build: Test for correct AArch32 RPM/DEBARCH value
LICENSE.md: Formatting tweak
Fix uninitialized read in decompress_smooth_data()
Fix buffer overrun with certain narrow prog JPEGs
Bump revision to 2.0.91 for post-beta fixes
Travis: Use Docker tag that matches Git branch
...
libjpeg-turbo has never really supported such compilers, since (AFAIK)
they are non-existent on any modern computing platform and thus
impossible for us to test. (Also, the TurboJPEG API would break without
unsigned chars.)
Furthermore, the unified CMake-based build system introduced in 2.0
always defines HAVE_UNSIGNED_CHAR, so retaining other code paths is
pointless. Eliminating support for compilers without unsigned char
eliminates the need for the GETJSAMPLE() macro, which improves the
readability of many parts of the code as well as improving the
performance of writing Targa and Windows BMP files.
Fixes#317
Within the libjpeg API code, it seems to be more the convention than not
to separate the macro name and value by two or more spaces, which
improves general readability. Making this consistent across all of
libjpeg-turbo is less about my individual preferences and more about
making it easy to automatically detect variations from our chosen
formatting convention. I intend to release the script I'm using to
validate this stuff, once it matures and stabilizes a bit.
With rare exceptions ...
- Always separate line continuation characters by one space from
preceding code.
- Always use two-space indentation. Never use tabs.
- Always use K&R-style conditional blocks.
- Always surround operators with spaces, except in raw assembly code.
- Always put a space after, but not before, a comma.
- Never put a space between type casts and variables/function calls.
- Never put a space between the function name and the argument list in
function declarations and prototypes.
- Always surround braces ('{' and '}') with spaces.
- Always surround statements (if, for, else, catch, while, do, switch)
with spaces.
- Always attach pointer symbols ('*' and '**') to the variable or
function name.
- Always precede pointer symbols ('*' and '**') by a space in type
casts.
- Use the MIN() macro from jpegint.h within the libjpeg and TurboJPEG
API libraries (using min() from tjutil.h is still necessary for
TJBench.)
- Where it makes sense (particularly in the TurboJPEG code), put a blank
line after variable declaration blocks.
- Always separate statements in one-liners by two spaces.
The purpose of this was to ease maintenance on my part and also to make
it easier for contributors to figure out how to format patch
submissions. This was admittedly confusing (even to me sometimes) when
we had 3 or 4 different style conventions in the same source tree. The
new convention is more consistent with the formatting of other OSS code
bases.
This commit corrects deviations from the chosen formatting style in the
libjpeg API code and reformats the TurboJPEG API code such that it
conforms to the same standard.
NOTES:
- Although it is no longer necessary for the function name in function
declarations to begin in Column 1 (this was historically necessary
because of the ansi2knr utility, which allowed libjpeg to be built
with non-ANSI compilers), we retain that formatting for the libjpeg
code because it improves readability when using libjpeg's function
attribute macros (GLOBAL(), etc.)
- This reformatting project was accomplished with the help of AStyle and
Uncrustify, although neither was completely up to the task, and thus
a great deal of manual tweaking was required. Note to developers of
code formatting utilities: the libjpeg-turbo code base is an
excellent test bed, because AFAICT, it breaks every single one of the
utilities that are currently available.
- The legacy (MMX, SSE, 3DNow!) assembly code for i386 has been
formatted to match the SSE2 code (refer to
ff5685d5344273df321eb63a005eaae19d2496e3.) I hadn't intended to
bother with this, but the Loongson MMI implementation demonstrated
that there is still academic value to the MMX implementation, as an
algorithmic model for other 64-bit vector implementations. Thus, it
is desirable to improve its readability in the same manner as that of
the SSE2 implementation.
* libjpeg-turbo/master: (140 commits)
Increase severity of tjDecompressToYUV2() bug desc
Catch libjpeg errors in tjDecompressToYUV2()
BUILDING.md: Fix "... OR ..." indentation again
BUILDING.md: Fix confusing Windows build reqs
ChangeLog.md: Improve readability of plain text
change.log: Refer users to ChangeLog.md
Markdown version of ChangeLog.txt
Rename ChangeLog.txt
README.md: Link to BUILDING.md
BUILDING.md and README.md: Cosmetic tweaks
ChangeLog: "1.5 beta1" --> "1.4.90 (1.5 beta1)"
Java: Fix parallel make with autotools
Win/x64: Fix improper callee save of xmm8-xmm11
Bump TurboJPEG C API revision to 1.5
ChangeLog: Mention jpeg_crop_scanline() function
1.5 beta1
Fix v7/v8-compatible build
libjpeg API: Partial scanline decompression
Build: Make the NASM autoconf variable persistent
Use consistent/modern code formatting for dbl ptrs
...
* libjpeg-turbo/1.4.x: (94 commits)
CMakeLists.txt: Clarify that Un*x isn't supported
Catch libjpeg errors in tjDecompressToYUV2()
cjpeg: Fix buf overrun caused by bad bin PPM input
Add version/build info to global string table
Ensure that default Huffman tables are initialized
Fix memory leak when running tjunittest -yuv
Prevent overread when decoding malformed JPEG
Guard against wrap-around in alloc functions
Fix Visual C++ compiler warnings
rdppm.c: formatting tweaks
jmemmgr.c: formatting tweaks
TurboJPEG: Avoid dangling pointers
Update Android build instr. for ARMv8, PIE, etc.
Makefile.am: formatting tweak
Update build instructions for new autoconf, GitHub
1.4.3
Regression: Allow co-install of 32-bit/64-bit RPMs
Build: Use FILEPATH type for NASM CMake variable
Comment formatting tweaks
Fix 'make dist'
...
Tag 1.4.1 release
* tag '1.4.1': (427 commits)
Now that the TurboJPEG API is reporting libjpeg warnings as errors, an "Invalid SOS parameters for sequential JPEG" warning surfaced in tjDecodeYUV*(). This was caused by the Se member of jpeg_decompress_struct being set to 0 (it is normally set to a non-zero value when the start-of-scan markers are read, but there are no SOS markers in this case, because we're not actually decompressing a JPEG file.)
Fix a segfault that occured in the MIPS DSPr2 fancy upsampling routine when downsampled_width==3. Because the DSPr2 code unrolls the loop for the middle columns (refer to jdsample.c), it has the effect of performing two column iterations, and that only works properly if the number of columns (minus the first and last) is >= 2. For the specific case of downsampled_width==3, this patch skips to the second iteration of the unrolled column loop.
If a warning (such as "Premature end of JPEG file") is triggered in the underlying libjpeg API, make sure that the TurboJPEG API function returns -1. Unlike errors, however, libjpeg warnings do not make the TurboJPEG functions abort.
Back out r1555 and r1548. Using setenv() didn't fix the iOS simulator issue. It just replaced an undefined _putenv$UNIX2003 symbol with an undefined _setenv$UNIX2003 symbol. The correct solution seems to be to use -D_NONSTD_SOURCE when generating our official builds.
Fix the Windows build. I remember now why I used putenv() originally-- because Windows doesn't have setenv(). We could use _putenv_s(), but older versions of MinGW don't have that either. Fortunately, since all of the environment values we're setting in turbojpeg.c are static, we can just map setenv() to putenv() using a macro. NOTE: we still have to use _putenv_s() in turbojpeg-jni.c, but at least people who may need to build with an older version of MinGW can still do so by disabling the Java build.
Allow building only static or only shared libraries on Windows
__WORDSIZE doesn't seem to be available on platforms other than Mac or Linux, and best practices are for user-level code not to rely on it anyhow, since it's meant to be an internal macro. Fortunately, autoconf already has a way of determining the word size at configure time, so it can be passed into the compiler. This should work on any platform and has been tested on all of the Un*x platforms we support (Linux, Mac, FreeBSD, Solaris.)
Unless you define _ANSI_SOURCE, then putenv() on Mac is renamed to putenv$UNIX2003(), and this causes problems when trying to link an i386 iOS application (for the simulator) against the TurboJPEG static library. It's easiest to just use setenv() instead.
Fix a bug in the 64-bit Huffman encoder that Google discovered when encoding some very specific (and proprietary) aerial images using quality=98, an optimized Huffman table, and the ISLOW DCT. These images were causing the Huffman bit buffer to overflow, because the code for encoding the DC coefficient was using the equivalent of the 32-bit version of EMIT_BITS(). Thus, when 64-bit code was used, the DC coefficient code was not properly checking how many bits were in the buffer before attempting to add more bits to it. This issue appears to have existed in all versions of libjpeg-turbo.
Restore backward compatibility with MSVC < 2010 (broken by r1541)
Oops. OS X doesn't define __WORDSIZE unless you include stdint.h, so apparently the Huffman codec hasn't ever been fully accelerated on 64-bit OS X.
Allow the executables and libraries outside of the sharedlib/ directory to be linked against msvcr*.dll instead of libcmt*.lib. This is reported to be necessary when building libjpeg-turbo for use with C#.
Surround the usage of getenv() in the TurboJPEG API with #ifndef NO_GETENV so that developers can add -DNO_GETENV to the C flags when building for platforms that don't have getenv(). Currently this is known to be necessary when building for Windows Phone.
If libjpeg-turbo is configured with a non-default prefix, such as /usr, then use the docdir variable defined by autoconf 2.60 and later, if available. This will, for instance, install the documentation under /usr/share/doc/libjpeg-turbo by default if prefix=/usr, unless docdir is overridden. When using earlier versions of autoconf, docdir is set to ${datadir}/doc, as it always has been.
Enable silent build rules for the NASM objects, if the source is configured with automake 1.11 or later. NOTE: the build still spits out "error: ignoring unknown tag NASM" for each object, but unfortunately, if we remove "--tag NASM" from the command line, the build breaks under older versions of automake (it aborts with "unable to infer tagged configuration.")
Set the RPM and deb architecture properly on non-x86 platforms.
Come on, Cohaagen, you got what you want. Give these people air!
Oops. Need to set the alpha channel when using TYPE_4BYTE_ABGR*. This has no bearing on the actual tests, but it prevents the PNG pre-encode reference images for those tests from being blank.
Oops. The MIPS SIMD implementations of h2v1 and h2v2 upsampling were not checking for DSPr2 support, so running 'djpeg -nosmooth' on a non-DSPr2-enabled platform caused an "illegal instruction" error.
Introduce fast paths to speed up NULL color conversion somewhat, particularly when using 64-bit code; on the decompression side, the "slow path" also now use an approach similar to that of the compression side (with the component loop outside of the column loop rather than inside.) This is faster when using 32-bit code.
...
The convention used by libjpeg:
type * variable;
is not very common anymore, because it looks too much like
multiplication. Some (particularly C++ programmers) prefer to tuck the
pointer symbol against the type:
type* variable;
to emphasize that a pointer to a type is effectively a new type.
However, this can also be confusing, since defining multiple variables
on the same line would not work properly:
type* variable1, variable2; /* Only variable1 is actually a
pointer. */
This commit reformats the entirety of the libjpeg-turbo code base so
that it uses the same code formatting convention for pointers that the
TurboJPEG API code uses:
type *variable1, *variable2;
This seems to be the most common convention among C programmers, and
it is the convention used by other codec libraries, such as libpng and
libtiff.
Most of these involved overrunning the signed 32-bit JLONG type whenever
building libjpeg-turbo with a 32-bit compiler. These issues are not
believed to represent actual security threats, but eliminating them
makes it easier to detect such threats should they arise in the future.
These days, INT32 is a commonly-defined datatype in system headers. We
cannot eliminate the definition of that datatype from jmorecfg.h, since
the INT32 typedef has technically been part of the libjpeg API since
version 5 (1994.) However, using INT32 internally is risky, because the
inclusion of a particular header (Xmd.h, for instance) could change the
definition of INT32 from long to int on 64-bit platforms and thus change
the internal behavior of libjpeg-turbo in unexpected ways (for instance,
failing to correctly set __INT32_IS_ACTUALLY_LONG to match the INT32
typedef-- perhaps as a result of including the wrong version of
jpeglib.h-- could cause libjpeg-turbo to produce incorrect results.)
The library has always been built in environments in which INT32 is
effectively long (on Windows, long is always 32-bit, so effectively it's
the same as int), so it makes sense to turn INT32 into an explicitly
long datatype. This ensures that libjpeg-turbo will always behave
consistently, regardless of the headers included at compile time.
Addresses a concern expressed in #26.
The IJG README file has been renamed to README.ijg, in order to avoid
confusion (many people were assuming that that was our project's README
file and weren't reading README-turbo.txt) and to lay the groundwork for
markdown versions of the libjpeg-turbo README and build instructions.
With certain images, compressing using quality=100 and the fast integer
forward DCT will cause the divisor passed to compute_reciprocal() to be
1. In those cases, the library already disables the SIMD quantization
algorithm to avoid 16-bit overflow. However, compute_reciprocal()
doesn't properly handle the divisor==1 case, so we need to use special
values in that case so that the C quantization algorithm will behave
like an identity function.
Initial implementation of trellis quantization for arithmetic coding.
The rate computation does not yet implement all rules of the entropy
coder and may thus be suboptimal.
Add extension parameter JFLOAT_TRELLIS_DELTA_DC_WEIGHT that controls
how distortion is calculated in DC trellis quantization. The parameter
defines weighting between actual distortion of DC and distortion of
vertical gradient of DC.
By default the parameter is 0.0 and has no effect.
Addresses #117
For whatever reason, some of these files didn't get fully merged from
libjpeg-turbo 1.4. They still contained tab characters and other formatting
conventions from libjpeg-turbo 1.3. This patch also fixes some obvious
indentation errors in the mozjpeg-specific code. There is more formatting work
that needs to be done to the mozjpeg-specific code, to fix line overruns,
incorrect operator whitespace, and other issues that make it not consistent
with the libjpeg/libjpeg-turbo code.
* commit '73edb3d734a628fd88994bc974dc6737a58bd956': (45 commits)
Rename the ARM64 assembly file to match the C file
Fix several mathematical issues discovered in the ARM64 NEON code while running the extended regression tests introduced in r1267. Specific comments can be found in the original patches: https://sourceforge.net/p/libjpeg-turbo/patches/64/
Reformat code per Siarhei's original patch (to clearly indicate that the offset instructions are completely independent) and add Siarhei as an individual author (he no longer works for Nokia.)
Clarify forward compatibility of iOS/ARM builds
ARM64 NEON SIMD support for YCC-to-RGB565 conversion
ARM NEON SIMD support for YCC-to-RGB565 conversion, and optimizations to the existing YCC-to-RGB conversion code:
Ensure that tjFree() is used for any JPEG buffers that might have been dynamically allocated by the compress/transform functions. To keep things simple, we use tjAlloc() for the statically-allocated buffer as well, so that tjFree() can always be used to free the buffer, regardless of whether it was allocated by tjbench or by the TurboJPEG library. This fixes crashes that occurred on Windows when running tjunittest or tjbench with the -alloc flag.
Revert r1335 and r1336. It was a valiant effort, but on Windows, xmm8-xmm15 are non-volatile, and the overhead of pushing them onto the stack at the beginning of each function and popping them at the end was causing worse performance (in the neighborhood of 3-5%) than just using the work areas and limiting the register usage to xmm0-xmm7. Best to leave the SSE2 code alone. We can optimize the register usage for AVX2, once that port takes place.
Windows doesn't have setenv(). Go, go Gadget Macros.
1.4 beta1
Fix 'make dist'
Don't use sudo when building a Debian package unless the user is non-root
Add a set of undocumented environment variables and Java system properties that allow compression features of libjpeg that are not normally exposed in the TurboJPEG API to be enabled. These features are not normally exposed because, for the most part, they aren't "turbo" features, but it is still useful to be able to benchmark them without modifying the code.
.func/.endfunc are only necessary when generating STABS debug info, which basically went out of style with parachute pants and Rick Astley. At any rate, none of the platforms for which we're building the ARM code use it (DWARF is the common format these days), and the .func/.endfunc directives cause the clang integrated assembler to fail (http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=20424).
Extend tjbenchtest so that it tests the dynamic JPEG buffer allocation feature in TurboJPEG. Disable the tiling feature in TJBench whenever dynamic buffer allocation is enabled (because the tiling feature requires a separate buffer for each tile, using it successfully with dynamic buffer allocation would require a separate TurboJPEG compressor instance for each tile, and it's not worth going to that trouble right now.)
Run the TurboJPEG conformance tests out of a directory in /tmp (for improved performance, if the source directory is on a remote file share.) Fix an issue in TJBench.java that prevented it from working properly if the source image resided in a directory with a dot in the name.
Oops
Subtle point, but dest->outbuffer is a pointer to the address of the JPEG buffer, which is stored in the calling program. Thus, *(dest->outbuffer) will always equal *outbuffer. We need to compare *outbuffer with dest->buffer instead to determine if the pointer is being reused.
If the output buffer in the TurboJPEG destination manager was allocated by the destination manager and is being reused from a previous compression operation, then we need to get the buffer size from the previous operation, since the calling program doesn't know the actual buffer size.
Actually, we need to increase the size of BUFSIZE, not just the size of _buffer. The previous patch might have cause problems if, for instance, state->free_in_buffer was 127 but 129 bytes were compressed. In that case, only 127 of the 129 bytes would have been written to the file. Also document the fix.
...
Conflicts:
CMakeLists.txt
Makefile.am
configure.ac
jcdctmgr.c
release/deb-control.tmpl
sharedlib/CMakeLists.txt
simd/CMakeLists.txt
turbojpeg.c