Commit Graph

23 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
DRC
293263c352 Format preprocessor macros more consistently
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.
2018-03-17 15:19:41 -05:00
DRC
19c791cdac Improve code formatting consistency
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.
2018-03-16 02:14:34 -05:00
DRC
bd49803f92 Use consistent/modern code formatting for pointers
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.
2016-02-19 09:10:07 -06:00
DRC
1e32fe3113 Replace INT32 with a new internal datatype (JLONG)
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.
2015-10-14 20:34:32 -05:00
DRC
7e3acc0e0a Rename README, LICENSE, BUILDING text files
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.
2015-10-10 10:31:33 -05:00
DRC
5de454b291 libjpeg-turbo has never supported non-ANSI compilers, so get rid of the crufty SIZEOF() macro. It was not being used consistently anyhow, so it would not have been possible to build prior releases of libjpeg-turbo using the broken compilers for which that macro was designed.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://svn.code.sf.net/p/libjpeg-turbo/code/trunk@1313 632fc199-4ca6-4c93-a231-07263d6284db
2014-05-18 19:04:03 +00:00
DRC
5033f3e19a Remove MS-DOS code and information, and adjust copyright headers to reflect the removal of features in r1307 and r1308. libjpeg-turbo has never supported MS-DOS, nor is it even possible for us to do so.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://svn.code.sf.net/p/libjpeg-turbo/code/trunk@1312 632fc199-4ca6-4c93-a231-07263d6284db
2014-05-18 18:33:44 +00:00
DRC
e5eaf37440 Convert tabs to spaces in the libjpeg code and the SIMD code (TurboJPEG retains the use of tabs for historical reasons. They were annoying in the libjpeg code primarily because they were not consistently used and because they were used to format as well as indent the code. In the case of TurboJPEG, tabs are used just to indent the code, so even if the editor assumes a different tab width, the code will still be readable.)
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://svn.code.sf.net/p/libjpeg-turbo/code/trunk@1278 632fc199-4ca6-4c93-a231-07263d6284db
2014-05-09 18:00:32 +00:00
DRC
ac9a92ebbd Work around an issue in Visual C++ 2010 and 2013 that was causing the 256-bit bitmap test in the regression tests to fail. More specifically, when optimization is enabled in these versions of Visual C++, the optimizer seems to get confused by the following code block:
delta = cur0 * 2;
       cur0 += delta;          /* form error * 3 */
       errorptr[0] = (FSERROR) (bpreverr0 + cur0);
       cur0 += delta;          /* form error * 5 */
       bpreverr0 = belowerr0 + cur0;
       cur0 += delta;          /* form error * 7 */

Each time cur0 is incremented by delta, the compiled code doubles the value of delta (WTF?!)  Thus, by the time the end of the block is reached, cur0 is equal to 15 times its former self, not 7 times its former self as it should be.  At any rate, it was a lot simpler to just refactor the code so that it uses multiplication.


git-svn-id: svn+ssh://svn.code.sf.net/p/libjpeg-turbo/code/branches/1.3.x@1253 632fc199-4ca6-4c93-a231-07263d6284db
2014-04-20 07:22:21 +00:00
DRC
beb0b33764 Work around an issue in Visual C++ 2010 and 2013 that was causing the 256-bit bitmap test in the regression tests to fail. More specifically, when optimization is enabled in these versions of Visual C++, the optimizer seems to get confused by the following code block:
delta = cur0 * 2;
       cur0 += delta;          /* form error * 3 */
       errorptr[0] = (FSERROR) (bpreverr0 + cur0);
       cur0 += delta;          /* form error * 5 */
       bpreverr0 = belowerr0 + cur0;
       cur0 += delta;          /* form error * 7 */

Each time cur0 is incremented by delta, the compiled code doubles the value of delta (WTF?!)  Thus, by the time the end of the block is reached, cur0 is equal to 15 times its former self, not 7 times its former self as it should be.  At any rate, it was a lot simpler to just refactor the code so that it uses multiplication.


git-svn-id: svn+ssh://svn.code.sf.net/p/libjpeg-turbo/code/branches/1.2.x@1255 632fc199-4ca6-4c93-a231-07263d6284db
2014-04-20 07:36:33 +00:00
DRC
2885cf5830 Further examination of the code reveals that this change is unnecessary. The histogram stores a count of each color in the image, so it will always contain at least one non-zero element, and thus the total can never be zero. Since the histogram is generated from the image data and not read from the header, there is no chance that header corruption would affect it.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://svn.code.sf.net/p/libjpeg-turbo/code/branches/1.3.x@1116 632fc199-4ca6-4c93-a231-07263d6284db
2014-02-07 19:06:03 +00:00
DRC
d4ab63d191 Fix several potential overflow issues identified by the community.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://svn.code.sf.net/p/libjpeg-turbo/code/branches/1.3.x@1114 632fc199-4ca6-4c93-a231-07263d6284db
2014-02-06 19:31:50 +00:00
DRC
a6ef282a49 Some of the IJG headers say "Modified by", so clarify that our "Modifications" are not referring to these.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://svn.code.sf.net/p/libjpeg-turbo/code/branches/1.3.x@1053 632fc199-4ca6-4c93-a231-07263d6284db
2013-09-28 03:23:49 +00:00
DRC
a73e870ad0 Change the copyright notices to make it clear that our modified files are not part of the IJG's software.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://svn.code.sf.net/p/libjpeg-turbo/code/branches/1.2.x@873 632fc199-4ca6-4c93-a231-07263d6284db
2012-12-31 02:52:30 +00:00
DRC
8ece7fef15 Update copyrights to indicate files modified with colorspace extensions
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://svn.code.sf.net/p/libjpeg-turbo/code/trunk@57 632fc199-4ca6-4c93-a231-07263d6284db
2009-08-06 08:32:00 +00:00
DRC
f25c071eb7 Implement new colorspaces to allow directly compressing from/decompressing to RGB/RGBX/BGR/BGRX/XBGR/XRGB without conversion
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://svn.code.sf.net/p/libjpeg-turbo/code/trunk@35 632fc199-4ca6-4c93-a231-07263d6284db
2009-04-03 12:00:51 +00:00
Thomas G. Lane
489583f516 The Independent JPEG Group's JPEG software v6a 2015-07-29 15:32:35 -05:00
Thomas G. Lane
bc79e0680a The Independent JPEG Group's JPEG software v6 2015-07-29 15:31:30 -05:00
Thomas G. Lane
36a4ccccd3 The Independent JPEG Group's JPEG software v5 2015-07-29 15:28:00 -05:00
Thomas G. Lane
cc7150e281 The Independent JPEG Group's JPEG software v4a 2015-07-29 15:25:01 -05:00
Thomas G. Lane
88aeed428f The Independent JPEG Group's JPEG software v4 2015-07-29 15:23:45 -05:00
Thomas G. Lane
4a6b730364 The Independent JPEG Group's JPEG software v3 2015-07-29 15:21:19 -05:00
Thomas G. Lane
2cbeb8abd9 The Independent JPEG Group's JPEG software v1 2015-07-29 15:18:11 -05:00