- Wordsmithing, formatting, and grammar tweaks
- Various clarifications and corrections, including specifying whether
a particular buffer or image is used as a source or destination
- Accommodate/mention features that were introduced since the API
documentation was created.
- For clarity, use "packed-pixel" to describe uncompressed
source/destination images that are not planar YUV.
- Use "row" rather than "line" to refer to a single horizontal group of
pixels or component values, for consistency with the libjpeg API
documentation. (libjpeg also uses "scanline", which is a more archaic
term.)
- Use "alignment" rather than "padding" to refer to the number of bytes
by which a row's width is evenly divisible. This consistifies the
documention of the YUV functions and tjLoadImage(). ("Padding"
typically refers to the number of bytes added to each row, which is
not the same thing.)
- Remove all references to "the underlying codec." Although the
TurboJPEG API originated as a cross-platform wrapper for the Intel
Integrated Performance Primitives, Sun mediaLib, QuickTime, and
libjpeg, none of those TurboJPEG implementations has been maintained
since 2009. Nothing would prevent someone from implementing the
TurboJPEG API without libjpeg-turbo, but such an implementation would
not necessarily have an "underlying codec." (It could be fully
self-contained.)
- Use "destination image" rather than "output image", for consistency,
or describe the type of image that will be output.
- Avoid the term "image buffer" and instead use "byte buffer" to
refer to buffers that will hold JPEG images, or describe the type of
image that will be contained in the buffer. (The Java documentation
doesn't use "byte buffer", because the buffer arrays literally have
"byte" in front of them, and since Java doesn't have pointers, it is
not possible for mere mortals to store any other type of data in those
arrays.)
- C: Use "unified" to describe YUV images stored in a single buffer, for
consistency with the Java documentation.
- Use "planar YUV" rather than "YUV planar". Is is our convention to
describe images using {component layout} {colorspace/pixel format}
{image function}, e.g. "packed-pixel RGB source image" or "planar YUV
destination image."
- C: Document the TurboJPEG API version in which a particular function
or macro was introduced, and reorder the backward compatibility
function stubs in turbojpeg.h alphabetically by API version.
- C: Use Markdown rather than HTML tags, where possible, in the Doxygen
comments.
Add a new TurboJPEG C API function (tjDecompressHeader4()) and Java API
method (TJDecompressor.getFlags()) that return the bitwise OR of any
flags that are relevant to the JPEG image being decompressed (currently
TJFLAG_PROGRESSIVE, TJFLAG_ARITHMETIC, TJFLAG_LOSSLESS, and their Java
equivalents.) This allows a calling program to determine whether the
image being decompressed is a lossless JPEG image, which means that the
decompression scaling feature will not be available and that a
full-sized destination buffer should be allocated.
More specifically, this fixes a buffer overrun in TJBench, TJExample,
and the decompress* fuzz targets that occurred when attempting (in vain)
to decompress a lossless JPEG image with decompression scaling enabled.
Prevent several integer overflow issues and subsequent segfaults that
occurred when attempting to compress or decompress gigapixel images with
the TurboJPEG API:
- Modify tjBufSize(), tjBufSizeYUV2(), and tjPlaneSizeYUV() to avoid
integer overflow when computing the return values and to return an
error if such an overflow is unavoidable.
- Modify tjunittest to validate the above.
- Modify tjCompress2(), tjEncodeYUVPlanes(), tjDecompress2(), and
tjDecodeYUVPlanes() to avoid integer overflow when computing the row
pointers in the 64-bit TurboJPEG C API.
- Modify TJBench (both C and Java versions) to avoid overflowing the
size argument to malloc()/new and to fail gracefully if such an
overflow is unavoidable.
In general, this allows gigapixel images to be accommodated by the
64-bit TurboJPEG C API when using automatic JPEG buffer (re)allocation.
Such images cannot currently be accommodated without automatic JPEG
buffer (re)allocation, due to the fact that tjAlloc() accepts a 32-bit
integer argument (oops.) Such images cannot be accommodated in the
TurboJPEG Java API due to the fact that Java always uses a signed 32-bit
integer as an array index.
Fixes#361
... and modify tjbench.c to match the variable name changes made to
TJBench.java
("checkstyle" = http://checkstyle.sourceforge.net, not our regex-based
checkstyle script)
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.
Previously, -stoponwarning only had an effect on the underlying
TurboJPEG C functions, but TJBench still aborted if a non-fatal error
occurred. This commit modifies the C version of TJBench such that it
always recovers from a non-fatal error unless -stoponwarning is
specified. Furthermore, the benchmark stores the details of the last
non-fatal error and does not print any subsequent non-fatal error
messages unless they differ from the last one.
Due to limitations in the Java API (specifically, the fact that it
cannot communicate errors, fatal or otherwise, to the calling program
without throwing a TJException), it was only possible to make
decompression operations fully recoverable within TJBench. With other
operations, -stoponwarning still has an effect on the underlying C
library but has no effect at the Java level.
The Java API documentation has been amended to reflect that only certain
methods are truly recoverable, regardless of the state of
TJ.FLAG_STOPONWARNING.
Allow progressive entropy coding to be enabled on a
transform-by-transform basis, and implement a new transform option for
disabling the copying of markers.
Closes#153
Given that libjpeg-turbo can often process hundreds of megapixels/second
on modern hardware, the default of one warmup iteration was essentially
meaningless. Furthermore, the -warmup option was a bit clunky, since
it required some foreknowledge of how fast the benchmarks were going to
execute.
This commit introduces a 1-second warmup interval for each benchmark by
default, and the -warmup option has been retasked to control the length
of that interval.
- Provide a new C API function and TJException method that allows
calling programs to query the severity of a compression/decompression/
transform error.
- Provide a new flag that instructs the library to immediately stop
compressing/decompressing/transforming if a warning is encountered.
Fixes#151
Embedded ICC profiles can cause the size of a JPEG file to exceed the
size returned by tjBufSize() (which is really meant to be used for
compression anyhow, not for decompression), and this was causing a
segfault (C) or an ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException (Java) when
decompressing such files with TJBench. This commit modifies the
benchmark such that, when tiled decompression is disabled, it re-uses
the source buffer as the primary JPEG buffer.