README
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C/C++
- The Independent JPEG Group's JPEG software
- ==========================================
- README for release 6b of 27-Mar-1998
- ====================================
- This distribution contains the sixth public release of the Independent JPEG
- Group's free JPEG software. You are welcome to redistribute this software and
- to use it for any purpose, subject to the conditions under LEGAL ISSUES, below.
- Serious users of this software (particularly those incorporating it into
- larger programs) should contact IJG at jpeg-info@uunet.uu.net to be added to
- our electronic mailing list. Mailing list members are notified of updates
- and have a chance to participate in technical discussions, etc.
- This software is the work of Tom Lane, Philip Gladstone, Jim Boucher,
- Lee Crocker, Julian Minguillon, Luis Ortiz, George Phillips, Davide Rossi,
- Guido Vollbeding, Ge' Weijers, and other members of the Independent JPEG
- Group.
- IJG is not affiliated with the official ISO JPEG standards committee.
- DOCUMENTATION ROADMAP
- =====================
- This file contains the following sections:
- OVERVIEW General description of JPEG and the IJG software.
- LEGAL ISSUES Copyright, lack of warranty, terms of distribution.
- REFERENCES Where to learn more about JPEG.
- ARCHIVE LOCATIONS Where to find newer versions of this software.
- RELATED SOFTWARE Other stuff you should get.
- FILE FORMAT WARS Software *not* to get.
- TO DO Plans for future IJG releases.
- Other documentation files in the distribution are:
- User documentation:
- install.doc How to configure and install the IJG software.
- usage.doc Usage instructions for cjpeg, djpeg, jpegtran,
- rdjpgcom, and wrjpgcom.
- *.1 Unix-style man pages for programs (same info as usage.doc).
- wizard.doc Advanced usage instructions for JPEG wizards only.
- change.log Version-to-version change highlights.
- Programmer and internal documentation:
- libjpeg.doc How to use the JPEG library in your own programs.
- example.c Sample code for calling the JPEG library.
- structure.doc Overview of the JPEG library's internal structure.
- filelist.doc Road map of IJG files.
- coderules.doc Coding style rules --- please read if you contribute code.
- Please read at least the files install.doc and usage.doc. Useful information
- can also be found in the JPEG FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions) article. See
- ARCHIVE LOCATIONS below to find out where to obtain the FAQ article.
- If you want to understand how the JPEG code works, we suggest reading one or
- more of the REFERENCES, then looking at the documentation files (in roughly
- the order listed) before diving into the code.
- OVERVIEW
- ========
- This package contains C software to implement JPEG image compression and
- decompression. JPEG (pronounced "jay-peg") is a standardized compression
- method for full-color and gray-scale images. JPEG is intended for compressing
- "real-world" scenes; line drawings, cartoons and other non-realistic images
- are not its strong suit. JPEG is lossy, meaning that the output image is not
- exactly identical to the input image. Hence you must not use JPEG if you
- have to have identical output bits. However, on typical photographic images,
- very good compression levels can be obtained with no visible change, and
- remarkably high compression levels are possible if you can tolerate a
- low-quality image. For more details, see the references, or just experiment
- with various compression settings.
- This software implements JPEG baseline, extended-sequential, and progressive
- compression processes. Provision is made for supporting all variants of these
- processes, although some uncommon parameter settings aren't implemented yet.
- For legal reasons, we are not distributing code for the arithmetic-coding
- variants of JPEG; see LEGAL ISSUES. We have made no provision for supporting
- the hierarchical or lossless processes defined in the standard.
- We provide a set of library routines for reading and writing JPEG image files,
- plus two sample applications "cjpeg" and "djpeg", which use the library to
- perform conversion between JPEG and some other popular image file formats.
- The library is intended to be reused in other applications.
- In order to support file conversion and viewing software, we have included
- considerable functionality beyond the bare JPEG coding/decoding capability;
- for example, the color quantization modules are not strictly part of JPEG
- decoding, but they are essential for output to colormapped file formats or
- colormapped displays. These extra functions can be compiled out of the
- library if not required for a particular application. We have also included
- "jpegtran", a utility for lossless transcoding between different JPEG
- processes, and "rdjpgcom" and "wrjpgcom", two simple applications for
- inserting and extracting textual comments in JFIF files.
- The emphasis in designing this software has been on achieving portability and
- flexibility, while also making it fast enough to be useful. In particular,
- the software is not intended to be read as a tutorial on JPEG. (See the
- REFERENCES section for introductory material.) Rather, it is intended to
- be reliable, portable, industrial-strength code. We do not claim to have
- achieved that goal in every aspect of the software, but we strive for it.
- We welcome the use of this software as a component of commercial products.
- No royalty is required, but we do ask for an acknowledgement in product
- documentation, as described under LEGAL ISSUES.
- LEGAL ISSUES
- ============
- In plain English:
- 1. We don't promise that this software works. (But if you find any bugs,
- please let us know!)
- 2. You can use this software for whatever you want. You don't have to pay us.
- 3. You may not pretend that you wrote this software. If you use it in a
- program, you must acknowledge somewhere in your documentation that
- you've used the IJG code.
- In legalese:
- The authors make NO WARRANTY or representation, either express or implied,
- with respect to this software, its quality, accuracy, merchantability, or
- fitness for a particular purpose. This software is provided "AS IS", and you,
- its user, assume the entire risk as to its quality and accuracy.
- This software is copyright (C) 1991-1998, Thomas G. Lane.
- All Rights Reserved except as specified below.
- Permission is hereby granted to use, copy, modify, and distribute this
- software (or portions thereof) for any purpose, without fee, subject to these
- conditions:
- (1) If any part of the source code for this software is distributed, then this
- README file must be included, with this copyright and no-warranty notice
- unaltered; and any additions, deletions, or changes to the original files
- must be clearly indicated in accompanying documentation.
- (2) If only executable code is distributed, then the accompanying
- documentation must state that "this software is based in part on the work of
- the Independent JPEG Group".
- (3) Permission for use of this software is granted only if the user accepts
- full responsibility for any undesirable consequences; the authors accept
- NO LIABILITY for damages of any kind.
- These conditions apply to any software derived from or based on the IJG code,
- not just to the unmodified library. If you use our work, you ought to
- acknowledge us.
- Permission is NOT granted for the use of any IJG author's name or company name
- in advertising or publicity relating to this software or products derived from
- it. This software may be referred to only as "the Independent JPEG Group's
- software".
- We specifically permit and encourage the use of this software as the basis of
- commercial products, provided that all warranty or liability claims are
- assumed by the product vendor.
- ansi2knr.c is included in this distribution by permission of L. Peter Deutsch,
- sole proprietor of its copyright holder, Aladdin Enterprises of Menlo Park, CA.
- ansi2knr.c is NOT covered by the above copyright and conditions, but instead
- by the usual distribution terms of the Free Software Foundation; principally,
- that you must include source code if you redistribute it. (See the file
- ansi2knr.c for full details.) However, since ansi2knr.c is not needed as part
- of any program generated from the IJG code, this does not limit you more than
- the foregoing paragraphs do.
- The Unix configuration script "configure" was produced with GNU Autoconf.
- It is copyright by the Free Software Foundation but is freely distributable.
- The same holds for its supporting scripts (config.guess, config.sub,
- ltconfig, ltmain.sh). Another support script, install-sh, is copyright
- by M.I.T. but is also freely distributable.
- It appears that the arithmetic coding option of the JPEG spec is covered by
- patents owned by IBM, AT&T, and Mitsubishi. Hence arithmetic coding cannot
- legally be used without obtaining one or more licenses. For this reason,
- support for arithmetic coding has been removed from the free JPEG software.
- (Since arithmetic coding provides only a marginal gain over the unpatented
- Huffman mode, it is unlikely that very many implementations will support it.)
- So far as we are aware, there are no patent restrictions on the remaining
- code.
- The IJG distribution formerly included code to read and write GIF files.
- To avoid entanglement with the Unisys LZW patent, GIF reading support has
- been removed altogether, and the GIF writer has been simplified to produce
- "uncompressed GIFs". This technique does not use the LZW algorithm; the
- resulting GIF files are larger than usual, but are readable by all standard
- GIF decoders.
- We are required to state that
- "The Graphics Interchange Format(c) is the Copyright property of
- CompuServe Incorporated. GIF(sm) is a Service Mark property of
- CompuServe Incorporated."
- REFERENCES
- ==========
- We highly recommend reading one or more of these references before trying to
- understand the innards of the JPEG software.
- The best short technical introduction to the JPEG compression algorithm is
- Wallace, Gregory K. "The JPEG Still Picture Compression Standard",
- Communications of the ACM, April 1991 (vol. 34 no. 4), pp. 30-44.
- (Adjacent articles in that issue discuss MPEG motion picture compression,
- applications of JPEG, and related topics.) If you don't have the CACM issue
- handy, a PostScript file containing a revised version of Wallace's article is
- available at ftp://ftp.uu.net/graphics/jpeg/wallace.ps.gz. The file (actually
- a preprint for an article that appeared in IEEE Trans. Consumer Electronics)
- omits the sample images that appeared in CACM, but it includes corrections
- and some added material. Note: the Wallace article is copyright ACM and IEEE,
- and it may not be used for commercial purposes.
- A somewhat less technical, more leisurely introduction to JPEG can be found in
- "The Data Compression Book" by Mark Nelson and Jean-loup Gailly, published by
- M&T Books (New York), 2nd ed. 1996, ISBN 1-55851-434-1. This book provides
- good explanations and example C code for a multitude of compression methods
- including JPEG. It is an excellent source if you are comfortable reading C
- code but don't know much about data compression in general. The book's JPEG
- sample code is far from industrial-strength, but when you are ready to look
- at a full implementation, you've got one here...
- The best full description of JPEG is the textbook "JPEG Still Image Data
- Compression Standard" by William B. Pennebaker and Joan L. Mitchell, published
- by Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1993, ISBN 0-442-01272-1. Price US$59.95, 638 pp.
- The book includes the complete text of the ISO JPEG standards (DIS 10918-1
- and draft DIS 10918-2). This is by far the most complete exposition of JPEG
- in existence, and we highly recommend it.
- The JPEG standard itself is not available electronically; you must order a
- paper copy through ISO or ITU. (Unless you feel a need to own a certified
- official copy, we recommend buying the Pennebaker and Mitchell book instead;
- it's much cheaper and includes a great deal of useful explanatory material.)
- In the USA, copies of the standard may be ordered from ANSI Sales at (212)
- 642-4900, or from Global Engineering Documents at (800) 854-7179. (ANSI
- doesn't take credit card orders, but Global does.) It's not cheap: as of
- 1992, ANSI was charging $95 for Part 1 and $47 for Part 2, plus 7%
- shipping/handling. The standard is divided into two parts, Part 1 being the
- actual specification, while Part 2 covers compliance testing methods. Part 1
- is titled "Digital Compression and Coding of Continuous-tone Still Images,
- Part 1: Requirements and guidelines" and has document numbers ISO/IEC IS
- 10918-1, ITU-T T.81. Part 2 is titled "Digital Compression and Coding of
- Continuous-tone Still Images, Part 2: Compliance testing" and has document
- numbers ISO/IEC IS 10918-2, ITU-T T.83.
- Some extensions to the original JPEG standard are defined in JPEG Part 3,
- a newer ISO standard numbered ISO/IEC IS 10918-3 and ITU-T T.84. IJG
- currently does not support any Part 3 extensions.
- The JPEG standard does not specify all details of an interchangeable file
- format. For the omitted details we follow the "JFIF" conventions, revision
- 1.02. A copy of the JFIF spec is available from:
- Literature Department
- C-Cube Microsystems, Inc.
- 1778 McCarthy Blvd.
- Milpitas, CA 95035
- phone (408) 944-6300, fax (408) 944-6314
- A PostScript version of this document is available by FTP at
- ftp://ftp.uu.net/graphics/jpeg/jfif.ps.gz. There is also a plain text
- version at ftp://ftp.uu.net/graphics/jpeg/jfif.txt.gz, but it is missing
- the figures.
- The TIFF 6.0 file format specification can be obtained by FTP from
- ftp://ftp.sgi.com/graphics/tiff/TIFF6.ps.gz. The JPEG incorporation scheme
- found in the TIFF 6.0 spec of 3-June-92 has a number of serious problems.
- IJG does not recommend use of the TIFF 6.0 design (TIFF Compression tag 6).
- Instead, we recommend the JPEG design proposed by TIFF Technical Note #2
- (Compression tag 7). Copies of this Note can be obtained from ftp.sgi.com or
- from ftp://ftp.uu.net/graphics/jpeg/. It is expected that the next revision
- of the TIFF spec will replace the 6.0 JPEG design with the Note's design.
- Although IJG's own code does not support TIFF/JPEG, the free libtiff library
- uses our library to implement TIFF/JPEG per the Note. libtiff is available
- from ftp://ftp.sgi.com/graphics/tiff/.
- ARCHIVE LOCATIONS
- =================
- The "official" archive site for this software is ftp.uu.net (Internet
- address 192.48.96.9). The most recent released version can always be found
- there in directory graphics/jpeg. This particular version will be archived
- as ftp://ftp.uu.net/graphics/jpeg/jpegsrc.v6b.tar.gz. If you don't have
- direct Internet access, UUNET's archives are also available via UUCP; contact
- help@uunet.uu.net for information on retrieving files that way.
- Numerous Internet sites maintain copies of the UUNET files. However, only
- ftp.uu.net is guaranteed to have the latest official version.
- You can also obtain this software in DOS-compatible "zip" archive format from
- the SimTel archives (ftp://ftp.simtel.net/pub/simtelnet/msdos/graphics/), or
- on CompuServe in the Graphics Support forum (GO CIS:GRAPHSUP), library 12
- "JPEG Tools". Again, these versions may sometimes lag behind the ftp.uu.net
- release.
- The JPEG FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions) article is a useful source of
- general information about JPEG. It is updated constantly and therefore is
- not included in this distribution. The FAQ is posted every two weeks to
- Usenet newsgroups comp.graphics.misc, news.answers, and other groups.
- It is available on the World Wide Web at http://www.faqs.org/faqs/jpeg-faq/
- and other news.answers archive sites, including the official news.answers
- archive at rtfm.mit.edu: ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/jpeg-faq/.
- If you don't have Web or FTP access, send e-mail to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu
- with body
- send usenet/news.answers/jpeg-faq/part1
- send usenet/news.answers/jpeg-faq/part2
- RELATED SOFTWARE
- ================
- Numerous viewing and image manipulation programs now support JPEG. (Quite a
- few of them use this library to do so.) The JPEG FAQ described above lists
- some of the more popular free and shareware viewers, and tells where to
- obtain them on Internet.
- If you are on a Unix machine, we highly recommend Jef Poskanzer's free
- PBMPLUS software, which provides many useful operations on PPM-format image
- files. In particular, it can convert PPM images to and from a wide range of
- other formats, thus making cjpeg/djpeg considerably more useful. The latest
- version is distributed by the NetPBM group, and is available from numerous
- sites, notably ftp://wuarchive.wustl.edu/graphics/graphics/packages/NetPBM/.
- Unfortunately PBMPLUS/NETPBM is not nearly as portable as the IJG software is;
- you are likely to have difficulty making it work on any non-Unix machine.
- A different free JPEG implementation, written by the PVRG group at Stanford,
- is available from ftp://havefun.stanford.edu/pub/jpeg/. This program
- is designed for research and experimentation rather than production use;
- it is slower, harder to use, and less portable than the IJG code, but it
- is easier to read and modify. Also, the PVRG code supports lossless JPEG,
- which we do not. (On the other hand, it doesn't do progressive JPEG.)
- FILE FORMAT WARS
- ================
- Some JPEG programs produce files that are not compatible with our library.
- The root of the problem is that the ISO JPEG committee failed to specify a
- concrete file format. Some vendors "filled in the blanks" on their own,
- creating proprietary formats that no one else could read. (For example, none
- of the early commercial JPEG implementations for the Macintosh were able to
- exchange compressed files.)
- The file format we have adopted is called JFIF (see REFERENCES). This format
- has been agreed to by a number of major commercial JPEG vendors, and it has
- become the de facto standard. JFIF is a minimal or "low end" representation.
- We recommend the use of TIFF/JPEG (TIFF revision 6.0 as modified by TIFF
- Technical Note #2) for "high end" applications that need to record a lot of
- additional data about an image. TIFF/JPEG is fairly new and not yet widely
- supported, unfortunately.
- The upcoming JPEG Part 3 standard defines a file format called SPIFF.
- SPIFF is interoperable with JFIF, in the sense that most JFIF decoders should
- be able to read the most common variant of SPIFF. SPIFF has some technical
- advantages over JFIF, but its major claim to fame is simply that it is an
- official standard rather than an informal one. At this point it is unclear
- whether SPIFF will supersede JFIF or whether JFIF will remain the de-facto
- standard. IJG intends to support SPIFF once the standard is frozen, but we
- have not decided whether it should become our default output format or not.
- (In any case, our decoder will remain capable of reading JFIF indefinitely.)
- Various proprietary file formats incorporating JPEG compression also exist.
- We have little or no sympathy for the existence of these formats. Indeed,
- one of the original reasons for developing this free software was to help
- force convergence on common, open format standards for JPEG files. Don't
- use a proprietary file format!
- TO DO
- =====
- The major thrust for v7 will probably be improvement of visual quality.
- The current method for scaling the quantization tables is known not to be
- very good at low Q values. We also intend to investigate block boundary
- smoothing, "poor man's variable quantization", and other means of improving
- quality-vs-file-size performance without sacrificing compatibility.
- In future versions, we are considering supporting some of the upcoming JPEG
- Part 3 extensions --- principally, variable quantization and the SPIFF file
- format.
- As always, speeding things up is of great interest.
- Please send bug reports, offers of help, etc. to jpeg-info@uunet.uu.net.