1 __ __ ____ ____ ____ 2 / \\/ \/ _ \/ _ )/ _ \ 3 \ / __/ _ \ __/ 4 \__\__/\____/\_____/__/ ____ ___ 5 / _/ / \ \ / _ \/ _/ 6 / \_/ / / \ \ __/ \__ 7 \____/____/\_____/_____/____/v0.4.3 8 9 Description: 10 ============ 11 12 WebP codec: library to encode and decode images in WebP format. This package 13 contains the library that can be used in other programs to add WebP support, 14 as well as the command line tools 'cwebp' and 'dwebp'. 15 16 See http://developers.google.com/speed/webp 17 18 Latest sources are available from http://www.webmproject.org/code/ 19 20 It is released under the same license as the WebM project. 21 See http://www.webmproject.org/license/software/ or the 22 file "COPYING" file for details. An additional intellectual 23 property rights grant can be found in the file PATENTS. 24 25 Building: 26 ========= 27 28 Windows build: 29 -------------- 30 31 By running: 32 33 nmake /f Makefile.vc CFG=release-static RTLIBCFG=static OBJDIR=output 34 35 the directory output\release-static\(x64|x86)\bin will contain the tools 36 cwebp.exe and dwebp.exe. The directory output\release-static\(x64|x86)\lib will 37 contain the libwebp static library. 38 The target architecture (x86/x64) is detected by Makefile.vc from the Visual 39 Studio compiler (cl.exe) available in the system path. 40 41 Unix build using makefile.unix: 42 ------------------------------- 43 44 On platforms with GNU tools installed (gcc and make), running 45 46 make -f makefile.unix 47 48 will build the binaries examples/cwebp and examples/dwebp, along 49 with the static library src/libwebp.a. No system-wide installation 50 is supplied, as this is a simple alternative to the full installation 51 system based on the autoconf tools (see below). 52 Please refer to makefile.unix for additional details and customizations. 53 54 Using autoconf tools: 55 --------------------- 56 When building from git sources, you will need to run autogen.sh to generate the 57 configure script. 58 59 ./configure 60 make 61 make install 62 63 should be all you need to have the following files 64 65 /usr/local/include/webp/decode.h 66 /usr/local/include/webp/encode.h 67 /usr/local/include/webp/types.h 68 /usr/local/lib/libwebp.* 69 /usr/local/bin/cwebp 70 /usr/local/bin/dwebp 71 72 installed. 73 74 Note: A decode-only library, libwebpdecoder, is available using the 75 '--enable-libwebpdecoder' flag. The encode library is built separately and can 76 be installed independently using a minor modification in the corresponding 77 Makefile.am configure files (see comments there). See './configure --help' for 78 more options. 79 80 SWIG bindings: 81 -------------- 82 83 To generate language bindings from swig/libwebp.swig at least swig-1.3 84 (http://www.swig.org) is required. 85 86 Currently the following functions are mapped: 87 Decode: 88 WebPGetDecoderVersion 89 WebPGetInfo 90 WebPDecodeRGBA 91 WebPDecodeARGB 92 WebPDecodeBGRA 93 WebPDecodeBGR 94 WebPDecodeRGB 95 96 Encode: 97 WebPGetEncoderVersion 98 WebPEncodeRGBA 99 WebPEncodeBGRA 100 WebPEncodeRGB 101 WebPEncodeBGR 102 WebPEncodeLosslessRGBA 103 WebPEncodeLosslessBGRA 104 WebPEncodeLosslessRGB 105 WebPEncodeLosslessBGR 106 107 See swig/README for more detailed build instructions. 108 109 Java bindings: 110 111 To build the swig-generated JNI wrapper code at least JDK-1.5 (or equivalent) 112 is necessary for enum support. The output is intended to be a shared object / 113 DLL that can be loaded via System.loadLibrary("webp_jni"). 114 115 Python bindings: 116 117 To build the swig-generated Python extension code at least Python 2.6 is 118 required. Python < 2.6 may build with some minor changes to libwebp.swig or the 119 generated code, but is untested. 120 121 Encoding tool: 122 ============== 123 124 The examples/ directory contains tools for encoding (cwebp) and 125 decoding (dwebp) images. 126 127 The easiest use should look like: 128 cwebp input.png -q 80 -o output.webp 129 which will convert the input file to a WebP file using a quality factor of 80 130 on a 0->100 scale (0 being the lowest quality, 100 being the best. Default 131 value is 75). 132 You might want to try the -lossless flag too, which will compress the source 133 (in RGBA format) without any loss. The -q quality parameter will in this case 134 control the amount of processing time spent trying to make the output file as 135 small as possible. 136 137 A longer list of options is available using the -longhelp command line flag: 138 139 > cwebp -longhelp 140 Usage: 141 cwebp [-preset <...>] [options] in_file [-o out_file] 142 143 If input size (-s) for an image is not specified, it is 144 assumed to be a PNG, JPEG, TIFF or WebP file. 145 146 Options: 147 -h / -help ............ short help 148 -H / -longhelp ........ long help 149 -q <float> ............. quality factor (0:small..100:big) 150 -alpha_q <int> ......... transparency-compression quality (0..100) 151 -preset <string> ....... preset setting, one of: 152 default, photo, picture, 153 drawing, icon, text 154 -preset must come first, as it overwrites other parameters 155 156 -m <int> ............... compression method (0=fast, 6=slowest) 157 -segments <int> ........ number of segments to use (1..4) 158 -size <int> ............ target size (in bytes) 159 -psnr <float> .......... target PSNR (in dB. typically: 42) 160 161 -s <int> <int> ......... input size (width x height) for YUV 162 -sns <int> ............. spatial noise shaping (0:off, 100:max) 163 -f <int> ............... filter strength (0=off..100) 164 -sharpness <int> ....... filter sharpness (0:most .. 7:least sharp) 165 -strong ................ use strong filter instead of simple (default) 166 -nostrong .............. use simple filter instead of strong 167 -partition_limit <int> . limit quality to fit the 512k limit on 168 the first partition (0=no degradation ... 100=full) 169 -pass <int> ............ analysis pass number (1..10) 170 -crop <x> <y> <w> <h> .. crop picture with the given rectangle 171 -resize <w> <h> ........ resize picture (after any cropping) 172 -mt .................... use multi-threading if available 173 -low_memory ............ reduce memory usage (slower encoding) 174 -map <int> ............. print map of extra info 175 -print_psnr ............ prints averaged PSNR distortion 176 -print_ssim ............ prints averaged SSIM distortion 177 -print_lsim ............ prints local-similarity distortion 178 -d <file.pgm> .......... dump the compressed output (PGM file) 179 -alpha_method <int> .... transparency-compression method (0..1) 180 -alpha_filter <string> . predictive filtering for alpha plane, 181 one of: none, fast (default) or best 182 -alpha_cleanup ......... clean RGB values in transparent area 183 -blend_alpha <hex> ..... blend colors against background color 184 expressed as RGB values written in 185 hexadecimal, e.g. 0xc0e0d0 for red=0xc0 186 green=0xe0 and blue=0xd0 187 -noalpha ............... discard any transparency information 188 -lossless .............. encode image losslessly 189 -hint <string> ......... specify image characteristics hint, 190 one of: photo, picture or graph 191 192 -metadata <string> ..... comma separated list of metadata to 193 copy from the input to the output if present. 194 Valid values: all, none (default), exif, icc, xmp 195 196 -short ................. condense printed message 197 -quiet ................. don't print anything 198 -version ............... print version number and exit 199 -noasm ................. disable all assembly optimizations 200 -v ..................... verbose, e.g. print encoding/decoding times 201 -progress .............. report encoding progress 202 203 Experimental Options: 204 -jpeg_like ............. roughly match expected JPEG size 205 -af .................... auto-adjust filter strength 206 -pre <int> ............. pre-processing filter 207 208 The main options you might want to try in order to further tune the 209 visual quality are: 210 -preset 211 -sns 212 -f 213 -m 214 215 Namely: 216 * 'preset' will set up a default encoding configuration targeting a 217 particular type of input. It should appear first in the list of options, 218 so that subsequent options can take effect on top of this preset. 219 Default value is 'default'. 220 * 'sns' will progressively turn on (when going from 0 to 100) some additional 221 visual optimizations (like: segmentation map re-enforcement). This option 222 will balance the bit allocation differently. It tries to take bits from the 223 "easy" parts of the picture and use them in the "difficult" ones instead. 224 Usually, raising the sns value (at fixed -q value) leads to larger files, 225 but with better quality. 226 Typical value is around '75'. 227 * 'f' option directly links to the filtering strength used by the codec's 228 in-loop processing. The higher the value, the smoother the 229 highly-compressed area will look. This is particularly useful when aiming 230 at very small files. Typical values are around 20-30. Note that using the 231 option -strong/-nostrong will change the type of filtering. Use "-f 0" to 232 turn filtering off. 233 * 'm' controls the trade-off between encoding speed and quality. Default is 4. 234 You can try -m 5 or -m 6 to explore more (time-consuming) encoding 235 possibilities. A lower value will result in faster encoding at the expense 236 of quality. 237 238 Decoding tool: 239 ============== 240 241 There is a decoding sample in examples/dwebp.c which will take 242 a .webp file and decode it to a PNG image file (amongst other formats). 243 This is simply to demonstrate the use of the API. You can verify the 244 file test.webp decodes to exactly the same as test_ref.ppm by using: 245 246 cd examples 247 ./dwebp test.webp -ppm -o test.ppm 248 diff test.ppm test_ref.ppm 249 250 The full list of options is available using -h: 251 252 > dwebp -h 253 Usage: dwebp in_file [options] [-o out_file] 254 255 Decodes the WebP image file to PNG format [Default] 256 Use following options to convert into alternate image formats: 257 -pam ......... save the raw RGBA samples as a color PAM 258 -ppm ......... save the raw RGB samples as a color PPM 259 -bmp ......... save as uncompressed BMP format 260 -tiff ........ save as uncompressed TIFF format 261 -pgm ......... save the raw YUV samples as a grayscale PGM 262 file with IMC4 layout 263 -yuv ......... save the raw YUV samples in flat layout 264 265 Other options are: 266 -version .... print version number and exit 267 -nofancy ..... don't use the fancy YUV420 upscaler 268 -nofilter .... disable in-loop filtering 269 -nodither .... disable dithering 270 -dither <d> .. dithering strength (in 0..100) 271 -mt .......... use multi-threading 272 -crop <x> <y> <w> <h> ... crop output with the given rectangle 273 -scale <w> <h> .......... scale the output (*after* any cropping) 274 -alpha ....... only save the alpha plane 275 -incremental . use incremental decoding (useful for tests) 276 -h ....... this help message 277 -v ....... verbose (e.g. print encoding/decoding times) 278 -noasm ....... disable all assembly optimizations 279 280 Visualization tool: 281 =================== 282 283 There's a little self-serve visualization tool called 'vwebp' under the 284 examples/ directory. It uses OpenGL to open a simple drawing window and show 285 a decoded WebP file. It's not yet integrated in the automake build system, but 286 you can try to manually compile it using the recommendations below. 287 288 Usage: vwebp in_file [options] 289 290 Decodes the WebP image file and visualize it using OpenGL 291 Options are: 292 -version .... print version number and exit 293 -noicc ....... don't use the icc profile if present 294 -nofancy ..... don't use the fancy YUV420 upscaler 295 -nofilter .... disable in-loop filtering 296 -dither <int> dithering strength (0..100), default=50 297 -mt .......... use multi-threading 298 -info ........ print info 299 -h ....... this help message 300 301 Keyboard shortcuts: 302 'c' ................ toggle use of color profile 303 'i' ................ overlay file information 304 'q' / 'Q' / ESC .... quit 305 306 Building: 307 --------- 308 309 Prerequisites: 310 1) OpenGL & OpenGL Utility Toolkit (GLUT) 311 Linux: 312 $ sudo apt-get install freeglut3-dev mesa-common-dev 313 Mac + XCode: 314 - These libraries should be available in the OpenGL / GLUT frameworks. 315 Windows: 316 http://freeglut.sourceforge.net/index.php#download 317 318 2) (Optional) qcms (Quick Color Management System) 319 i. Download qcms from Mozilla / Chromium: 320 http://hg.mozilla.org/mozilla-central/file/0e7639e3bdfb/gfx/qcms 321 http://src.chromium.org/viewvc/chrome/trunk/src/third_party/qcms 322 ii. Build and archive the source files as libqcms.a / qcms.lib 323 iii. Update makefile.unix / Makefile.vc 324 a) Define WEBP_HAVE_QCMS 325 b) Update include / library paths to reference the qcms directory. 326 327 Build using makefile.unix / Makefile.vc: 328 $ make -f makefile.unix examples/vwebp 329 > nmake /f Makefile.vc CFG=release-static \ 330 ../obj/x64/release-static/bin/vwebp.exe 331 332 Animated GIF conversion: 333 ======================== 334 Animated GIF files can be converted to WebP files with animation using the 335 gif2webp utility available under examples/. The files can then be viewed using 336 vwebp. 337 338 Usage: 339 gif2webp [options] gif_file -o webp_file 340 Options: 341 -h / -help ............ this help 342 -lossy ................. encode image using lossy compression 343 -mixed ................. for each frame in the image, pick lossy 344 or lossless compression heuristically 345 -q <float> ............. quality factor (0:small..100:big) 346 -m <int> ............... compression method (0=fast, 6=slowest) 347 -kmin <int> ............ min distance between key frames 348 -kmax <int> ............ max distance between key frames 349 -f <int> ............... filter strength (0=off..100) 350 -metadata <string> ..... comma separated list of metadata to 351 copy from the input to the output if present 352 Valid values: all, none, icc, xmp (default) 353 -mt .................... use multi-threading if available 354 355 -version ............... print version number and exit 356 -v ..................... verbose 357 -quiet ................. don't print anything 358 359 Building: 360 --------- 361 With the libgif development files installed, gif2webp can be built using 362 makefile.unix: 363 $ make -f makefile.unix examples/gif2webp 364 365 or using autoconf: 366 $ ./configure --enable-everything 367 $ make 368 369 Encoding API: 370 ============= 371 372 The main encoding functions are available in the header src/webp/encode.h 373 The ready-to-use ones are: 374 size_t WebPEncodeRGB(const uint8_t* rgb, int width, int height, int stride, 375 float quality_factor, uint8_t** output); 376 size_t WebPEncodeBGR(const uint8_t* bgr, int width, int height, int stride, 377 float quality_factor, uint8_t** output); 378 size_t WebPEncodeRGBA(const uint8_t* rgba, int width, int height, int stride, 379 float quality_factor, uint8_t** output); 380 size_t WebPEncodeBGRA(const uint8_t* bgra, int width, int height, int stride, 381 float quality_factor, uint8_t** output); 382 383 They will convert raw RGB samples to a WebP data. The only control supplied 384 is the quality factor. 385 386 There are some variants for using the lossless format: 387 388 size_t WebPEncodeLosslessRGB(const uint8_t* rgb, int width, int height, 389 int stride, uint8_t** output); 390 size_t WebPEncodeLosslessBGR(const uint8_t* bgr, int width, int height, 391 int stride, uint8_t** output); 392 size_t WebPEncodeLosslessRGBA(const uint8_t* rgba, int width, int height, 393 int stride, uint8_t** output); 394 size_t WebPEncodeLosslessBGRA(const uint8_t* bgra, int width, int height, 395 int stride, uint8_t** output); 396 397 Of course in this case, no quality factor is needed since the compression 398 occurs without loss of the input values, at the expense of larger output sizes. 399 400 Advanced encoding API: 401 ---------------------- 402 403 A more advanced API is based on the WebPConfig and WebPPicture structures. 404 405 WebPConfig contains the encoding settings and is not tied to a particular 406 picture. 407 WebPPicture contains input data, on which some WebPConfig will be used for 408 compression. 409 The encoding flow looks like: 410 411 -------------------------------------- BEGIN PSEUDO EXAMPLE 412 413 #include <webp/encode.h> 414 415 // Setup a config, starting form a preset and tuning some additional 416 // parameters 417 WebPConfig config; 418 if (!WebPConfigPreset(&config, WEBP_PRESET_PHOTO, quality_factor)) 419 return 0; // version error 420 } 421 // ... additional tuning 422 config.sns_strength = 90; 423 config.filter_sharpness = 6; 424 config_error = WebPValidateConfig(&config); // not mandatory, but useful 425 426 // Setup the input data 427 WebPPicture pic; 428 if (!WebPPictureInit(&pic)) { 429 return 0; // version error 430 } 431 pic.width = width; 432 pic.height = height; 433 // allocated picture of dimension width x height 434 if (!WebPPictureAllocate(&pic)) { 435 return 0; // memory error 436 } 437 // at this point, 'pic' has been initialized as a container, 438 // and can receive the Y/U/V samples. 439 // Alternatively, one could use ready-made import functions like 440 // WebPPictureImportRGB(), which will take care of memory allocation. 441 // In any case, past this point, one will have to call 442 // WebPPictureFree(&pic) to reclaim memory. 443 444 // Set up a byte-output write method. WebPMemoryWriter, for instance. 445 WebPMemoryWriter wrt; 446 WebPMemoryWriterInit(&wrt); // initialize 'wrt' 447 448 pic.writer = MyFileWriter; 449 pic.custom_ptr = my_opaque_structure_to_make_MyFileWriter_work; 450 451 // Compress! 452 int ok = WebPEncode(&config, &pic); // ok = 0 => error occurred! 453 WebPPictureFree(&pic); // must be called independently of the 'ok' result. 454 455 // output data should have been handled by the writer at that point. 456 // -> compressed data is the memory buffer described by wrt.mem / wrt.size 457 458 // deallocate the memory used by compressed data 459 WebPMemoryWriterClear(&wrt); 460 461 -------------------------------------- END PSEUDO EXAMPLE 462 463 Decoding API: 464 ============= 465 466 This is mainly just one function to call: 467 468 #include "webp/decode.h" 469 uint8_t* WebPDecodeRGB(const uint8_t* data, size_t data_size, 470 int* width, int* height); 471 472 Please have a look at the file src/webp/decode.h for the details. 473 There are variants for decoding in BGR/RGBA/ARGB/BGRA order, along with 474 decoding to raw Y'CbCr samples. One can also decode the image directly into a 475 pre-allocated buffer. 476 477 To detect a WebP file and gather the picture's dimensions, the function: 478 int WebPGetInfo(const uint8_t* data, size_t data_size, 479 int* width, int* height); 480 is supplied. No decoding is involved when using it. 481 482 Incremental decoding API: 483 ========================= 484 485 In the case when data is being progressively transmitted, pictures can still 486 be incrementally decoded using a slightly more complicated API. Decoder state 487 is stored into an instance of the WebPIDecoder object. This object can be 488 created with the purpose of decoding either RGB or Y'CbCr samples. 489 For instance: 490 491 WebPDecBuffer buffer; 492 WebPInitDecBuffer(&buffer); 493 buffer.colorspace = MODE_BGR; 494 ... 495 WebPIDecoder* idec = WebPINewDecoder(&buffer); 496 497 As data is made progressively available, this incremental-decoder object 498 can be used to decode the picture further. There are two (mutually exclusive) 499 ways to pass freshly arrived data: 500 501 either by appending the fresh bytes: 502 503 WebPIAppend(idec, fresh_data, size_of_fresh_data); 504 505 or by just mentioning the new size of the transmitted data: 506 507 WebPIUpdate(idec, buffer, size_of_transmitted_buffer); 508 509 Note that 'buffer' can be modified between each call to WebPIUpdate, in 510 particular when the buffer is resized to accommodate larger data. 511 512 These functions will return the decoding status: either VP8_STATUS_SUSPENDED if 513 decoding is not finished yet or VP8_STATUS_OK when decoding is done. Any other 514 status is an error condition. 515 516 The 'idec' object must always be released (even upon an error condition) by 517 calling: WebPDelete(idec). 518 519 To retrieve partially decoded picture samples, one must use the corresponding 520 method: WebPIDecGetRGB or WebPIDecGetYUVA. 521 It will return the last displayable pixel row. 522 523 Lastly, note that decoding can also be performed into a pre-allocated pixel 524 buffer. This buffer must be passed when creating a WebPIDecoder, calling 525 WebPINewRGB() or WebPINewYUVA(). 526 527 Please have a look at the src/webp/decode.h header for further details. 528 529 Advanced Decoding API: 530 ====================== 531 532 WebP decoding supports an advanced API which provides on-the-fly cropping and 533 rescaling, something of great usefulness on memory-constrained environments like 534 mobile phones. Basically, the memory usage will scale with the output's size, 535 not the input's, when one only needs a quick preview or a zoomed in portion of 536 an otherwise too-large picture. Some CPU can be saved too, incidentally. 537 538 -------------------------------------- BEGIN PSEUDO EXAMPLE 539 // A) Init a configuration object 540 WebPDecoderConfig config; 541 CHECK(WebPInitDecoderConfig(&config)); 542 543 // B) optional: retrieve the bitstream's features. 544 CHECK(WebPGetFeatures(data, data_size, &config.input) == VP8_STATUS_OK); 545 546 // C) Adjust 'config' options, if needed 547 config.options.no_fancy_upsampling = 1; 548 config.options.use_scaling = 1; 549 config.options.scaled_width = scaledWidth(); 550 config.options.scaled_height = scaledHeight(); 551 // etc. 552 553 // D) Specify 'config' output options for specifying output colorspace. 554 // Optionally the external image decode buffer can also be specified. 555 config.output.colorspace = MODE_BGRA; 556 // Optionally, the config.output can be pointed to an external buffer as 557 // well for decoding the image. This externally supplied memory buffer 558 // should be big enough to store the decoded picture. 559 config.output.u.RGBA.rgba = (uint8_t*) memory_buffer; 560 config.output.u.RGBA.stride = scanline_stride; 561 config.output.u.RGBA.size = total_size_of_the_memory_buffer; 562 config.output.is_external_memory = 1; 563 564 // E) Decode the WebP image. There are two variants w.r.t decoding image. 565 // The first one (E.1) decodes the full image and the second one (E.2) is 566 // used to incrementally decode the image using small input buffers. 567 // Any one of these steps can be used to decode the WebP image. 568 569 // E.1) Decode full image. 570 CHECK(WebPDecode(data, data_size, &config) == VP8_STATUS_OK); 571 572 // E.2) Decode image incrementally. 573 WebPIDecoder* const idec = WebPIDecode(NULL, NULL, &config); 574 CHECK(idec != NULL); 575 while (bytes_remaining > 0) { 576 VP8StatusCode status = WebPIAppend(idec, input, bytes_read); 577 if (status == VP8_STATUS_OK || status == VP8_STATUS_SUSPENDED) { 578 bytes_remaining -= bytes_read; 579 } else { 580 break; 581 } 582 } 583 WebPIDelete(idec); 584 585 // F) Decoded image is now in config.output (and config.output.u.RGBA). 586 // It can be saved, displayed or otherwise processed. 587 588 // G) Reclaim memory allocated in config's object. It's safe to call 589 // this function even if the memory is external and wasn't allocated 590 // by WebPDecode(). 591 WebPFreeDecBuffer(&config.output); 592 593 -------------------------------------- END PSEUDO EXAMPLE 594 595 Bugs: 596 ===== 597 598 Please report all bugs to our issue tracker: 599 http://code.google.com/p/webp/issues 600 Patches welcome! See this page to get started: 601 http://www.webmproject.org/code/contribute/submitting-patches/ 602 603 Discuss: 604 ======== 605 606 Email: webp-discuss (a] webmproject.org 607 Web: http://groups.google.com/a/webmproject.org/group/webp-discuss 608