2297
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1
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2 /* png.h - header file for PNG reference library
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3 *
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4 * libpng version 1.6.10 - March 6, 2014
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5 * Copyright (c) 1998-2014 Glenn Randers-Pehrson
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6 * (Version 0.96 Copyright (c) 1996, 1997 Andreas Dilger)
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7 * (Version 0.88 Copyright (c) 1995, 1996 Guy Eric Schalnat, Group 42, Inc.)
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8 *
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9 * This code is released under the libpng license (See LICENSE, below)
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10 *
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11 * Authors and maintainers:
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12 * libpng versions 0.71, May 1995, through 0.88, January 1996: Guy Schalnat
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13 * libpng versions 0.89c, June 1996, through 0.96, May 1997: Andreas Dilger
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14 * libpng versions 0.97, January 1998, through 1.6.10 - March 6, 2014: Glenn
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15 * See also "Contributing Authors", below.
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16 *
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17 * Note about libpng version numbers:
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18 *
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19 * Due to various miscommunications, unforeseen code incompatibilities
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20 * and occasional factors outside the authors' control, version numbering
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21 * on the library has not always been consistent and straightforward.
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22 * The following table summarizes matters since version 0.89c, which was
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23 * the first widely used release:
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24 *
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25 * source png.h png.h shared-lib
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26 * version string int version
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27 * ------- ------ ----- ----------
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28 * 0.89c "1.0 beta 3" 0.89 89 1.0.89
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29 * 0.90 "1.0 beta 4" 0.90 90 0.90 [should have been 2.0.90]
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30 * 0.95 "1.0 beta 5" 0.95 95 0.95 [should have been 2.0.95]
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31 * 0.96 "1.0 beta 6" 0.96 96 0.96 [should have been 2.0.96]
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32 * 0.97b "1.00.97 beta 7" 1.00.97 97 1.0.1 [should have been 2.0.97]
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33 * 0.97c 0.97 97 2.0.97
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34 * 0.98 0.98 98 2.0.98
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35 * 0.99 0.99 98 2.0.99
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36 * 0.99a-m 0.99 99 2.0.99
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37 * 1.00 1.00 100 2.1.0 [100 should be 10000]
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38 * 1.0.0 (from here on, the 100 2.1.0 [100 should be 10000]
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39 * 1.0.1 png.h string is 10001 2.1.0
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40 * 1.0.1a-e identical to the 10002 from here on, the shared library
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41 * 1.0.2 source version) 10002 is 2.V where V is the source code
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42 * 1.0.2a-b 10003 version, except as noted.
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43 * 1.0.3 10003
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44 * 1.0.3a-d 10004
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45 * 1.0.4 10004
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46 * 1.0.4a-f 10005
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47 * 1.0.5 (+ 2 patches) 10005
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48 * 1.0.5a-d 10006
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49 * 1.0.5e-r 10100 (not source compatible)
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50 * 1.0.5s-v 10006 (not binary compatible)
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51 * 1.0.6 (+ 3 patches) 10006 (still binary incompatible)
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52 * 1.0.6d-f 10007 (still binary incompatible)
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53 * 1.0.6g 10007
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54 * 1.0.6h 10007 10.6h (testing xy.z so-numbering)
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55 * 1.0.6i 10007 10.6i
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56 * 1.0.6j 10007 2.1.0.6j (incompatible with 1.0.0)
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57 * 1.0.7beta11-14 DLLNUM 10007 2.1.0.7beta11-14 (binary compatible)
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58 * 1.0.7beta15-18 1 10007 2.1.0.7beta15-18 (binary compatible)
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59 * 1.0.7rc1-2 1 10007 2.1.0.7rc1-2 (binary compatible)
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60 * 1.0.7 1 10007 (still compatible)
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61 * 1.0.8beta1-4 1 10008 2.1.0.8beta1-4
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62 * 1.0.8rc1 1 10008 2.1.0.8rc1
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63 * 1.0.8 1 10008 2.1.0.8
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64 * 1.0.9beta1-6 1 10009 2.1.0.9beta1-6
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65 * 1.0.9rc1 1 10009 2.1.0.9rc1
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66 * 1.0.9beta7-10 1 10009 2.1.0.9beta7-10
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67 * 1.0.9rc2 1 10009 2.1.0.9rc2
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68 * 1.0.9 1 10009 2.1.0.9
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69 * 1.0.10beta1 1 10010 2.1.0.10beta1
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70 * 1.0.10rc1 1 10010 2.1.0.10rc1
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71 * 1.0.10 1 10010 2.1.0.10
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72 * 1.0.11beta1-3 1 10011 2.1.0.11beta1-3
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73 * 1.0.11rc1 1 10011 2.1.0.11rc1
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74 * 1.0.11 1 10011 2.1.0.11
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75 * 1.0.12beta1-2 2 10012 2.1.0.12beta1-2
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76 * 1.0.12rc1 2 10012 2.1.0.12rc1
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77 * 1.0.12 2 10012 2.1.0.12
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78 * 1.1.0a-f - 10100 2.1.1.0a-f (branch abandoned)
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79 * 1.2.0beta1-2 2 10200 2.1.2.0beta1-2
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80 * 1.2.0beta3-5 3 10200 3.1.2.0beta3-5
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81 * 1.2.0rc1 3 10200 3.1.2.0rc1
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82 * 1.2.0 3 10200 3.1.2.0
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83 * 1.2.1beta1-4 3 10201 3.1.2.1beta1-4
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84 * 1.2.1rc1-2 3 10201 3.1.2.1rc1-2
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85 * 1.2.1 3 10201 3.1.2.1
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86 * 1.2.2beta1-6 12 10202 12.so.0.1.2.2beta1-6
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87 * 1.0.13beta1 10 10013 10.so.0.1.0.13beta1
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88 * 1.0.13rc1 10 10013 10.so.0.1.0.13rc1
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89 * 1.2.2rc1 12 10202 12.so.0.1.2.2rc1
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90 * 1.0.13 10 10013 10.so.0.1.0.13
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91 * 1.2.2 12 10202 12.so.0.1.2.2
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92 * 1.2.3rc1-6 12 10203 12.so.0.1.2.3rc1-6
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93 * 1.2.3 12 10203 12.so.0.1.2.3
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94 * 1.2.4beta1-3 13 10204 12.so.0.1.2.4beta1-3
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95 * 1.0.14rc1 13 10014 10.so.0.1.0.14rc1
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96 * 1.2.4rc1 13 10204 12.so.0.1.2.4rc1
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97 * 1.0.14 10 10014 10.so.0.1.0.14
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98 * 1.2.4 13 10204 12.so.0.1.2.4
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99 * 1.2.5beta1-2 13 10205 12.so.0.1.2.5beta1-2
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100 * 1.0.15rc1-3 10 10015 10.so.0.1.0.15rc1-3
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101 * 1.2.5rc1-3 13 10205 12.so.0.1.2.5rc1-3
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102 * 1.0.15 10 10015 10.so.0.1.0.15
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103 * 1.2.5 13 10205 12.so.0.1.2.5
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104 * 1.2.6beta1-4 13 10206 12.so.0.1.2.6beta1-4
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105 * 1.0.16 10 10016 10.so.0.1.0.16
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106 * 1.2.6 13 10206 12.so.0.1.2.6
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107 * 1.2.7beta1-2 13 10207 12.so.0.1.2.7beta1-2
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108 * 1.0.17rc1 10 10017 12.so.0.1.0.17rc1
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109 * 1.2.7rc1 13 10207 12.so.0.1.2.7rc1
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110 * 1.0.17 10 10017 12.so.0.1.0.17
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111 * 1.2.7 13 10207 12.so.0.1.2.7
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112 * 1.2.8beta1-5 13 10208 12.so.0.1.2.8beta1-5
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113 * 1.0.18rc1-5 10 10018 12.so.0.1.0.18rc1-5
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114 * 1.2.8rc1-5 13 10208 12.so.0.1.2.8rc1-5
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115 * 1.0.18 10 10018 12.so.0.1.0.18
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116 * 1.2.8 13 10208 12.so.0.1.2.8
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117 * 1.2.9beta1-3 13 10209 12.so.0.1.2.9beta1-3
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118 * 1.2.9beta4-11 13 10209 12.so.0.9[.0]
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119 * 1.2.9rc1 13 10209 12.so.0.9[.0]
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120 * 1.2.9 13 10209 12.so.0.9[.0]
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121 * 1.2.10beta1-7 13 10210 12.so.0.10[.0]
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122 * 1.2.10rc1-2 13 10210 12.so.0.10[.0]
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123 * 1.2.10 13 10210 12.so.0.10[.0]
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124 * 1.4.0beta1-5 14 10400 14.so.0.0[.0]
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125 * 1.2.11beta1-4 13 10211 12.so.0.11[.0]
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126 * 1.4.0beta7-8 14 10400 14.so.0.0[.0]
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127 * 1.2.11 13 10211 12.so.0.11[.0]
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128 * 1.2.12 13 10212 12.so.0.12[.0]
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129 * 1.4.0beta9-14 14 10400 14.so.0.0[.0]
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130 * 1.2.13 13 10213 12.so.0.13[.0]
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131 * 1.4.0beta15-36 14 10400 14.so.0.0[.0]
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132 * 1.4.0beta37-87 14 10400 14.so.14.0[.0]
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133 * 1.4.0rc01 14 10400 14.so.14.0[.0]
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134 * 1.4.0beta88-109 14 10400 14.so.14.0[.0]
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135 * 1.4.0rc02-08 14 10400 14.so.14.0[.0]
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136 * 1.4.0 14 10400 14.so.14.0[.0]
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137 * 1.4.1beta01-03 14 10401 14.so.14.1[.0]
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138 * 1.4.1rc01 14 10401 14.so.14.1[.0]
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139 * 1.4.1beta04-12 14 10401 14.so.14.1[.0]
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140 * 1.4.1 14 10401 14.so.14.1[.0]
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141 * 1.4.2 14 10402 14.so.14.2[.0]
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142 * 1.4.3 14 10403 14.so.14.3[.0]
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143 * 1.4.4 14 10404 14.so.14.4[.0]
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144 * 1.5.0beta01-58 15 10500 15.so.15.0[.0]
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145 * 1.5.0rc01-07 15 10500 15.so.15.0[.0]
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146 * 1.5.0 15 10500 15.so.15.0[.0]
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147 * 1.5.1beta01-11 15 10501 15.so.15.1[.0]
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148 * 1.5.1rc01-02 15 10501 15.so.15.1[.0]
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149 * 1.5.1 15 10501 15.so.15.1[.0]
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150 * 1.5.2beta01-03 15 10502 15.so.15.2[.0]
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151 * 1.5.2rc01-03 15 10502 15.so.15.2[.0]
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152 * 1.5.2 15 10502 15.so.15.2[.0]
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153 * 1.5.3beta01-10 15 10503 15.so.15.3[.0]
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154 * 1.5.3rc01-02 15 10503 15.so.15.3[.0]
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155 * 1.5.3beta11 15 10503 15.so.15.3[.0]
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156 * 1.5.3 [omitted]
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157 * 1.5.4beta01-08 15 10504 15.so.15.4[.0]
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158 * 1.5.4rc01 15 10504 15.so.15.4[.0]
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159 * 1.5.4 15 10504 15.so.15.4[.0]
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160 * 1.5.5beta01-08 15 10505 15.so.15.5[.0]
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161 * 1.5.5rc01 15 10505 15.so.15.5[.0]
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162 * 1.5.5 15 10505 15.so.15.5[.0]
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163 * 1.5.6beta01-07 15 10506 15.so.15.6[.0]
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164 * 1.5.6rc01-03 15 10506 15.so.15.6[.0]
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165 * 1.5.6 15 10506 15.so.15.6[.0]
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166 * 1.5.7beta01-05 15 10507 15.so.15.7[.0]
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167 * 1.5.7rc01-03 15 10507 15.so.15.7[.0]
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168 * 1.5.7 15 10507 15.so.15.7[.0]
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169 * 1.6.0beta01-40 16 10600 16.so.16.0[.0]
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170 * 1.6.0rc01-08 16 10600 16.so.16.0[.0]
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171 * 1.6.0 16 10600 16.so.16.0[.0]
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172 * 1.6.1beta01-09 16 10601 16.so.16.1[.0]
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173 * 1.6.1rc01 16 10601 16.so.16.1[.0]
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174 * 1.6.1 16 10601 16.so.16.1[.0]
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175 * 1.6.2beta01 16 10602 16.so.16.2[.0]
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176 * 1.6.2rc01-06 16 10602 16.so.16.2[.0]
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177 * 1.6.2 16 10602 16.so.16.2[.0]
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178 * 1.6.3beta01-11 16 10603 16.so.16.3[.0]
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179 * 1.6.3rc01 16 10603 16.so.16.3[.0]
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180 * 1.6.3 16 10603 16.so.16.3[.0]
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181 * 1.6.4beta01-02 16 10604 16.so.16.4[.0]
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182 * 1.6.4rc01 16 10604 16.so.16.4[.0]
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183 * 1.6.4 16 10604 16.so.16.4[.0]
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184 * 1.6.5 16 10605 16.so.16.5[.0]
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185 * 1.6.6 16 10606 16.so.16.6[.0]
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186 * 1.6.7beta01-04 16 10607 16.so.16.7[.0]
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187 * 1.6.7rc01-03 16 10607 16.so.16.7[.0]
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188 * 1.6.7 16 10607 16.so.16.7[.0]
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189 * 1.6.8beta01-02 16 10608 16.so.16.8[.0]
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190 * 1.6.8rc01-02 16 10608 16.so.16.8[.0]
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191 * 1.6.8 16 10608 16.so.16.8[.0]
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192 * 1.6.9beta01-04 16 10609 16.so.16.9[.0]
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193 * 1.6.9rc01-02 16 10609 16.so.16.9[.0]
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194 * 1.6.9 16 10609 16.so.16.9[.0]
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195 * 1.6.10beta01-03 16 10610 16.so.16.10[.0]
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196 * 1.6.10betarc01-04 16 10610 16.so.16.10[.0]
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197 * 1.6.10beta 16 10610 16.so.16.10[.0]
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198 *
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199 * Henceforth the source version will match the shared-library major
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200 * and minor numbers; the shared-library major version number will be
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201 * used for changes in backward compatibility, as it is intended. The
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202 * PNG_LIBPNG_VER macro, which is not used within libpng but is available
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203 * for applications, is an unsigned integer of the form xyyzz corresponding
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204 * to the source version x.y.z (leading zeros in y and z). Beta versions
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205 * were given the previous public release number plus a letter, until
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206 * version 1.0.6j; from then on they were given the upcoming public
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207 * release number plus "betaNN" or "rcNN".
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208 *
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209 * Binary incompatibility exists only when applications make direct access
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210 * to the info_ptr or png_ptr members through png.h, and the compiled
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211 * application is loaded with a different version of the library.
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212 *
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213 * DLLNUM will change each time there are forward or backward changes
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214 * in binary compatibility (e.g., when a new feature is added).
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215 *
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216 * See libpng-manual.txt or libpng.3 for more information. The PNG
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217 * specification is available as a W3C Recommendation and as an ISO
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218 * Specification, <http://www.w3.org/TR/2003/REC-PNG-20031110/
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219 */
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220
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221 /*
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222 * COPYRIGHT NOTICE, DISCLAIMER, and LICENSE:
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223 *
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224 * If you modify libpng you may insert additional notices immediately following
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225 * this sentence.
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226 *
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227 * This code is released under the libpng license.
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228 *
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229 * libpng versions 1.2.6, August 15, 2004, through 1.6.10, March 6, 2014, are
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230 * Copyright (c) 2004, 2006-2013 Glenn Randers-Pehrson, and are
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231 * distributed according to the same disclaimer and license as libpng-1.2.5
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232 * with the following individual added to the list of Contributing Authors:
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233 *
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234 * Cosmin Truta
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235 *
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236 * libpng versions 1.0.7, July 1, 2000, through 1.2.5, October 3, 2002, are
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237 * Copyright (c) 2000-2002 Glenn Randers-Pehrson, and are
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238 * distributed according to the same disclaimer and license as libpng-1.0.6
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239 * with the following individuals added to the list of Contributing Authors:
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240 *
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241 * Simon-Pierre Cadieux
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242 * Eric S. Raymond
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243 * Gilles Vollant
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244 *
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245 * and with the following additions to the disclaimer:
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246 *
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247 * There is no warranty against interference with your enjoyment of the
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248 * library or against infringement. There is no warranty that our
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249 * efforts or the library will fulfill any of your particular purposes
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250 * or needs. This library is provided with all faults, and the entire
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251 * risk of satisfactory quality, performance, accuracy, and effort is with
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252 * the user.
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253 *
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254 * libpng versions 0.97, January 1998, through 1.0.6, March 20, 2000, are
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255 * Copyright (c) 1998, 1999, 2000 Glenn Randers-Pehrson, and are
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256 * distributed according to the same disclaimer and license as libpng-0.96,
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257 * with the following individuals added to the list of Contributing Authors:
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258 *
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259 * Tom Lane
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260 * Glenn Randers-Pehrson
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261 * Willem van Schaik
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262 *
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263 * libpng versions 0.89, June 1996, through 0.96, May 1997, are
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264 * Copyright (c) 1996, 1997 Andreas Dilger
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265 * Distributed according to the same disclaimer and license as libpng-0.88,
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266 * with the following individuals added to the list of Contributing Authors:
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267 *
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268 * John Bowler
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269 * Kevin Bracey
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270 * Sam Bushell
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271 * Magnus Holmgren
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272 * Greg Roelofs
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273 * Tom Tanner
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274 *
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275 * libpng versions 0.5, May 1995, through 0.88, January 1996, are
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276 * Copyright (c) 1995, 1996 Guy Eric Schalnat, Group 42, Inc.
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277 *
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278 * For the purposes of this copyright and license, "Contributing Authors"
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279 * is defined as the following set of individuals:
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280 *
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281 * Andreas Dilger
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282 * Dave Martindale
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283 * Guy Eric Schalnat
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284 * Paul Schmidt
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285 * Tim Wegner
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286 *
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287 * The PNG Reference Library is supplied "AS IS". The Contributing Authors
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288 * and Group 42, Inc. disclaim all warranties, expressed or implied,
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289 * including, without limitation, the warranties of merchantability and of
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290 * fitness for any purpose. The Contributing Authors and Group 42, Inc.
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291 * assume no liability for direct, indirect, incidental, special, exemplary,
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292 * or consequential damages, which may result from the use of the PNG
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293 * Reference Library, even if advised of the possibility of such damage.
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294 *
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295 * Permission is hereby granted to use, copy, modify, and distribute this
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296 * source code, or portions hereof, for any purpose, without fee, subject
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297 * to the following restrictions:
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298 *
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299 * 1. The origin of this source code must not be misrepresented.
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300 *
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301 * 2. Altered versions must be plainly marked as such and must not
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302 * be misrepresented as being the original source.
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303 *
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304 * 3. This Copyright notice may not be removed or altered from
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305 * any source or altered source distribution.
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306 *
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307 * The Contributing Authors and Group 42, Inc. specifically permit, without
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308 * fee, and encourage the use of this source code as a component to
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309 * supporting the PNG file format in commercial products. If you use this
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310 * source code in a product, acknowledgment is not required but would be
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311 * appreciated.
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312 */
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313
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314 /*
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315 * A "png_get_copyright" function is available, for convenient use in "about"
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316 * boxes and the like:
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317 *
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318 * printf("%s", png_get_copyright(NULL));
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319 *
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320 * Also, the PNG logo (in PNG format, of course) is supplied in the
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321 * files "pngbar.png" and "pngbar.jpg (88x31) and "pngnow.png" (98x31).
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322 */
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323
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324 /*
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325 * Libpng is OSI Certified Open Source Software. OSI Certified is a
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326 * certification mark of the Open Source Initiative.
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327 */
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328
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329 /*
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330 * The contributing authors would like to thank all those who helped
|
|
331 * with testing, bug fixes, and patience. This wouldn't have been
|
|
332 * possible without all of you.
|
|
333 *
|
|
334 * Thanks to Frank J. T. Wojcik for helping with the documentation.
|
|
335 */
|
|
336
|
|
337 /*
|
|
338 * Y2K compliance in libpng:
|
|
339 * =========================
|
|
340 *
|
|
341 * March 6, 2014
|
|
342 *
|
|
343 * Since the PNG Development group is an ad-hoc body, we can't make
|
|
344 * an official declaration.
|
|
345 *
|
|
346 * This is your unofficial assurance that libpng from version 0.71 and
|
|
347 * upward through 1.6.10 are Y2K compliant. It is my belief that
|
|
348 * earlier versions were also Y2K compliant.
|
|
349 *
|
|
350 * Libpng only has two year fields. One is a 2-byte unsigned integer
|
|
351 * that will hold years up to 65535. The other, which is deprecated,
|
|
352 * holds the date in text format, and will hold years up to 9999.
|
|
353 *
|
|
354 * The integer is
|
|
355 * "png_uint_16 year" in png_time_struct.
|
|
356 *
|
|
357 * The string is
|
|
358 * "char time_buffer[29]" in png_struct. This is no longer used
|
|
359 * in libpng-1.6.x and will be removed from libpng-1.7.0.
|
|
360 *
|
|
361 * There are seven time-related functions:
|
|
362 * png.c: png_convert_to_rfc_1123_buffer() in png.c
|
|
363 * (formerly png_convert_to_rfc_1123() prior to libpng-1.5.x and
|
|
364 * png_convert_to_rfc_1152() in error prior to libpng-0.98)
|
|
365 * png_convert_from_struct_tm() in pngwrite.c, called in pngwrite.c
|
|
366 * png_convert_from_time_t() in pngwrite.c
|
|
367 * png_get_tIME() in pngget.c
|
|
368 * png_handle_tIME() in pngrutil.c, called in pngread.c
|
|
369 * png_set_tIME() in pngset.c
|
|
370 * png_write_tIME() in pngwutil.c, called in pngwrite.c
|
|
371 *
|
|
372 * All handle dates properly in a Y2K environment. The
|
|
373 * png_convert_from_time_t() function calls gmtime() to convert from system
|
|
374 * clock time, which returns (year - 1900), which we properly convert to
|
|
375 * the full 4-digit year. There is a possibility that libpng applications
|
|
376 * are not passing 4-digit years into the png_convert_to_rfc_1123_buffer()
|
|
377 * function, or that they are incorrectly passing only a 2-digit year
|
|
378 * instead of "year - 1900" into the png_convert_from_struct_tm() function,
|
|
379 * but this is not under our control. The libpng documentation has always
|
|
380 * stated that it works with 4-digit years, and the APIs have been
|
|
381 * documented as such.
|
|
382 *
|
|
383 * The tIME chunk itself is also Y2K compliant. It uses a 2-byte unsigned
|
|
384 * integer to hold the year, and can hold years as large as 65535.
|
|
385 *
|
|
386 * zlib, upon which libpng depends, is also Y2K compliant. It contains
|
|
387 * no date-related code.
|
|
388 *
|
|
389 * Glenn Randers-Pehrson
|
|
390 * libpng maintainer
|
|
391 * PNG Development Group
|
|
392 */
|
|
393
|
|
394 #ifndef PNG_H
|
|
395 #define PNG_H
|
|
396
|
|
397 /* This is not the place to learn how to use libpng. The file libpng-manual.txt
|
|
398 * describes how to use libpng, and the file example.c summarizes it
|
|
399 * with some code on which to build. This file is useful for looking
|
|
400 * at the actual function definitions and structure components.
|
|
401 *
|
|
402 * If you just need to read a PNG file and don't want to read the documentation
|
|
403 * skip to the end of this file and read the section entitled 'simplified API'.
|
|
404 */
|
|
405
|
|
406 /* Version information for png.h - this should match the version in png.c */
|
|
407 #define PNG_LIBPNG_VER_STRING "1.6.10"
|
|
408 #define PNG_HEADER_VERSION_STRING \
|
|
409 " libpng version 1.6.10 - March 6, 2014\n"
|
|
410
|
|
411 #define PNG_LIBPNG_VER_SONUM 16
|
|
412 #define PNG_LIBPNG_VER_DLLNUM 16
|
|
413
|
|
414 /* These should match the first 3 components of PNG_LIBPNG_VER_STRING: */
|
|
415 #define PNG_LIBPNG_VER_MAJOR 1
|
|
416 #define PNG_LIBPNG_VER_MINOR 6
|
|
417 #define PNG_LIBPNG_VER_RELEASE 10
|
|
418
|
|
419 /* This should match the numeric part of the final component of
|
|
420 * PNG_LIBPNG_VER_STRING, omitting any leading zero:
|
|
421 */
|
|
422
|
|
423 #define PNG_LIBPNG_VER_BUILD 0
|
|
424
|
|
425 /* Release Status */
|
|
426 #define PNG_LIBPNG_BUILD_ALPHA 1
|
|
427 #define PNG_LIBPNG_BUILD_BETA 2
|
|
428 #define PNG_LIBPNG_BUILD_RC 3
|
|
429 #define PNG_LIBPNG_BUILD_STABLE 4
|
|
430 #define PNG_LIBPNG_BUILD_RELEASE_STATUS_MASK 7
|
|
431
|
|
432 /* Release-Specific Flags */
|
|
433 #define PNG_LIBPNG_BUILD_PATCH 8 /* Can be OR'ed with
|
|
434 PNG_LIBPNG_BUILD_STABLE only */
|
|
435 #define PNG_LIBPNG_BUILD_PRIVATE 16 /* Cannot be OR'ed with
|
|
436 PNG_LIBPNG_BUILD_SPECIAL */
|
|
437 #define PNG_LIBPNG_BUILD_SPECIAL 32 /* Cannot be OR'ed with
|
|
438 PNG_LIBPNG_BUILD_PRIVATE */
|
|
439
|
|
440 #define PNG_LIBPNG_BUILD_BASE_TYPE PNG_LIBPNG_BUILD_STABLE
|
|
441
|
|
442 /* Careful here. At one time, Guy wanted to use 082, but that would be octal.
|
|
443 * We must not include leading zeros.
|
|
444 * Versions 0.7 through 1.0.0 were in the range 0 to 100 here (only
|
|
445 * version 1.0.0 was mis-numbered 100 instead of 10000). From
|
|
446 * version 1.0.1 it's xxyyzz, where x=major, y=minor, z=release
|
|
447 */
|
|
448 #define PNG_LIBPNG_VER 10610 /* 1.6.10 */
|
|
449
|
|
450 /* Library configuration: these options cannot be changed after
|
|
451 * the library has been built.
|
|
452 */
|
|
453 #ifndef PNGLCONF_H
|
|
454 /* If pnglibconf.h is missing, you can
|
|
455 * copy scripts/pnglibconf.h.prebuilt to pnglibconf.h
|
|
456 */
|
|
457 # include "pnglibconf.h"
|
|
458 #endif
|
|
459
|
|
460 #ifndef PNG_VERSION_INFO_ONLY
|
|
461 /* Machine specific configuration. */
|
|
462 # include "pngconf.h"
|
|
463 #endif
|
|
464
|
|
465 /*
|
|
466 * Added at libpng-1.2.8
|
|
467 *
|
|
468 * Ref MSDN: Private as priority over Special
|
|
469 * VS_FF_PRIVATEBUILD File *was not* built using standard release
|
|
470 * procedures. If this value is given, the StringFileInfo block must
|
|
471 * contain a PrivateBuild string.
|
|
472 *
|
|
473 * VS_FF_SPECIALBUILD File *was* built by the original company using
|
|
474 * standard release procedures but is a variation of the standard
|
|
475 * file of the same version number. If this value is given, the
|
|
476 * StringFileInfo block must contain a SpecialBuild string.
|
|
477 */
|
|
478
|
|
479 #ifdef PNG_USER_PRIVATEBUILD /* From pnglibconf.h */
|
|
480 # define PNG_LIBPNG_BUILD_TYPE \
|
|
481 (PNG_LIBPNG_BUILD_BASE_TYPE | PNG_LIBPNG_BUILD_PRIVATE)
|
|
482 #else
|
|
483 # ifdef PNG_LIBPNG_SPECIALBUILD
|
|
484 # define PNG_LIBPNG_BUILD_TYPE \
|
|
485 (PNG_LIBPNG_BUILD_BASE_TYPE | PNG_LIBPNG_BUILD_SPECIAL)
|
|
486 # else
|
|
487 # define PNG_LIBPNG_BUILD_TYPE (PNG_LIBPNG_BUILD_BASE_TYPE)
|
|
488 # endif
|
|
489 #endif
|
|
490
|
|
491 #ifndef PNG_VERSION_INFO_ONLY
|
|
492
|
|
493 /* Inhibit C++ name-mangling for libpng functions but not for system calls. */
|
|
494 #ifdef __cplusplus
|
|
495 extern "C" {
|
|
496 #endif /* __cplusplus */
|
|
497
|
|
498 /* Version information for C files, stored in png.c. This had better match
|
|
499 * the version above.
|
|
500 */
|
|
501 #define png_libpng_ver png_get_header_ver(NULL)
|
|
502
|
|
503 /* This file is arranged in several sections:
|
|
504 *
|
|
505 * 1. Any configuration options that can be specified by for the application
|
|
506 * code when it is built. (Build time configuration is in pnglibconf.h)
|
|
507 * 2. Type definitions (base types are defined in pngconf.h), structure
|
|
508 * definitions.
|
|
509 * 3. Exported library functions.
|
|
510 * 4. Simplified API.
|
|
511 *
|
|
512 * The library source code has additional files (principally pngpriv.h) that
|
|
513 * allow configuration of the library.
|
|
514 */
|
|
515 /* Section 1: run time configuration
|
|
516 * See pnglibconf.h for build time configuration
|
|
517 *
|
|
518 * Run time configuration allows the application to choose between
|
|
519 * implementations of certain arithmetic APIs. The default is set
|
|
520 * at build time and recorded in pnglibconf.h, but it is safe to
|
|
521 * override these (and only these) settings. Note that this won't
|
|
522 * change what the library does, only application code, and the
|
|
523 * settings can (and probably should) be made on a per-file basis
|
|
524 * by setting the #defines before including png.h
|
|
525 *
|
|
526 * Use macros to read integers from PNG data or use the exported
|
|
527 * functions?
|
|
528 * PNG_USE_READ_MACROS: use the macros (see below) Note that
|
|
529 * the macros evaluate their argument multiple times.
|
|
530 * PNG_NO_USE_READ_MACROS: call the relevant library function.
|
|
531 *
|
|
532 * Use the alternative algorithm for compositing alpha samples that
|
|
533 * does not use division?
|
|
534 * PNG_READ_COMPOSITE_NODIV_SUPPORTED: use the 'no division'
|
|
535 * algorithm.
|
|
536 * PNG_NO_READ_COMPOSITE_NODIV: use the 'division' algorithm.
|
|
537 *
|
|
538 * How to handle benign errors if PNG_ALLOW_BENIGN_ERRORS is
|
|
539 * false?
|
|
540 * PNG_ALLOW_BENIGN_ERRORS: map calls to the benign error
|
|
541 * APIs to png_warning.
|
|
542 * Otherwise the calls are mapped to png_error.
|
|
543 */
|
|
544
|
|
545 /* Section 2: type definitions, including structures and compile time
|
|
546 * constants.
|
|
547 * See pngconf.h for base types that vary by machine/system
|
|
548 */
|
|
549
|
|
550 /* This triggers a compiler error in png.c, if png.c and png.h
|
|
551 * do not agree upon the version number.
|
|
552 */
|
|
553 typedef char* png_libpng_version_1_6_10;
|
|
554
|
|
555 /* Basic control structions. Read libpng-manual.txt or libpng.3 for more info.
|
|
556 *
|
|
557 * png_struct is the cache of information used while reading or writing a single
|
|
558 * PNG file. One of these is always required, although the simplified API
|
|
559 * (below) hides the creation and destruction of it.
|
|
560 */
|
|
561 typedef struct png_struct_def png_struct;
|
|
562 typedef const png_struct * png_const_structp;
|
|
563 typedef png_struct * png_structp;
|
|
564 typedef png_struct * * png_structpp;
|
|
565
|
|
566 /* png_info contains information read from or to be written to a PNG file. One
|
|
567 * or more of these must exist while reading or creating a PNG file. The
|
|
568 * information is not used by libpng during read but is used to control what
|
|
569 * gets written when a PNG file is created. "png_get_" function calls read
|
|
570 * information during read and "png_set_" functions calls write information
|
|
571 * when creating a PNG.
|
|
572 * been moved into a separate header file that is not accessible to
|
|
573 * applications. Read libpng-manual.txt or libpng.3 for more info.
|
|
574 */
|
|
575 typedef struct png_info_def png_info;
|
|
576 typedef png_info * png_infop;
|
|
577 typedef const png_info * png_const_infop;
|
|
578 typedef png_info * * png_infopp;
|
|
579
|
|
580 /* Types with names ending 'p' are pointer types. The corresponding types with
|
|
581 * names ending 'rp' are identical pointer types except that the pointer is
|
|
582 * marked 'restrict', which means that it is the only pointer to the object
|
|
583 * passed to the function. Applications should not use the 'restrict' types;
|
|
584 * it is always valid to pass 'p' to a pointer with a function argument of the
|
|
585 * corresponding 'rp' type. Different compilers have different rules with
|
|
586 * regard to type matching in the presence of 'restrict'. For backward
|
|
587 * compatibility libpng callbacks never have 'restrict' in their parameters and,
|
|
588 * consequentially, writing portable application code is extremely difficult if
|
|
589 * an attempt is made to use 'restrict'.
|
|
590 */
|
|
591 typedef png_struct * PNG_RESTRICT png_structrp;
|
|
592 typedef const png_struct * PNG_RESTRICT png_const_structrp;
|
|
593 typedef png_info * PNG_RESTRICT png_inforp;
|
|
594 typedef const png_info * PNG_RESTRICT png_const_inforp;
|
|
595
|
|
596 /* Three color definitions. The order of the red, green, and blue, (and the
|
|
597 * exact size) is not important, although the size of the fields need to
|
|
598 * be png_byte or png_uint_16 (as defined below).
|
|
599 */
|
|
600 typedef struct png_color_struct
|
|
601 {
|
|
602 png_byte red;
|
|
603 png_byte green;
|
|
604 png_byte blue;
|
|
605 } png_color;
|
|
606 typedef png_color * png_colorp;
|
|
607 typedef const png_color * png_const_colorp;
|
|
608 typedef png_color * * png_colorpp;
|
|
609
|
|
610 typedef struct png_color_16_struct
|
|
611 {
|
|
612 png_byte index; /* used for palette files */
|
|
613 png_uint_16 red; /* for use in red green blue files */
|
|
614 png_uint_16 green;
|
|
615 png_uint_16 blue;
|
|
616 png_uint_16 gray; /* for use in grayscale files */
|
|
617 } png_color_16;
|
|
618 typedef png_color_16 * png_color_16p;
|
|
619 typedef const png_color_16 * png_const_color_16p;
|
|
620 typedef png_color_16 * * png_color_16pp;
|
|
621
|
|
622 typedef struct png_color_8_struct
|
|
623 {
|
|
624 png_byte red; /* for use in red green blue files */
|
|
625 png_byte green;
|
|
626 png_byte blue;
|
|
627 png_byte gray; /* for use in grayscale files */
|
|
628 png_byte alpha; /* for alpha channel files */
|
|
629 } png_color_8;
|
|
630 typedef png_color_8 * png_color_8p;
|
|
631 typedef const png_color_8 * png_const_color_8p;
|
|
632 typedef png_color_8 * * png_color_8pp;
|
|
633
|
|
634 /*
|
|
635 * The following two structures are used for the in-core representation
|
|
636 * of sPLT chunks.
|
|
637 */
|
|
638 typedef struct png_sPLT_entry_struct
|
|
639 {
|
|
640 png_uint_16 red;
|
|
641 png_uint_16 green;
|
|
642 png_uint_16 blue;
|
|
643 png_uint_16 alpha;
|
|
644 png_uint_16 frequency;
|
|
645 } png_sPLT_entry;
|
|
646 typedef png_sPLT_entry * png_sPLT_entryp;
|
|
647 typedef const png_sPLT_entry * png_const_sPLT_entryp;
|
|
648 typedef png_sPLT_entry * * png_sPLT_entrypp;
|
|
649
|
|
650 /* When the depth of the sPLT palette is 8 bits, the color and alpha samples
|
|
651 * occupy the LSB of their respective members, and the MSB of each member
|
|
652 * is zero-filled. The frequency member always occupies the full 16 bits.
|
|
653 */
|
|
654
|
|
655 typedef struct png_sPLT_struct
|
|
656 {
|
|
657 png_charp name; /* palette name */
|
|
658 png_byte depth; /* depth of palette samples */
|
|
659 png_sPLT_entryp entries; /* palette entries */
|
|
660 png_int_32 nentries; /* number of palette entries */
|
|
661 } png_sPLT_t;
|
|
662 typedef png_sPLT_t * png_sPLT_tp;
|
|
663 typedef const png_sPLT_t * png_const_sPLT_tp;
|
|
664 typedef png_sPLT_t * * png_sPLT_tpp;
|
|
665
|
|
666 #ifdef PNG_TEXT_SUPPORTED
|
|
667 /* png_text holds the contents of a text/ztxt/itxt chunk in a PNG file,
|
|
668 * and whether that contents is compressed or not. The "key" field
|
|
669 * points to a regular zero-terminated C string. The "text" fields can be a
|
|
670 * regular C string, an empty string, or a NULL pointer.
|
|
671 * However, the structure returned by png_get_text() will always contain
|
|
672 * the "text" field as a regular zero-terminated C string (possibly
|
|
673 * empty), never a NULL pointer, so it can be safely used in printf() and
|
|
674 * other string-handling functions. Note that the "itxt_length", "lang", and
|
|
675 * "lang_key" members of the structure only exist when the library is built
|
|
676 * with iTXt chunk support. Prior to libpng-1.4.0 the library was built by
|
|
677 * default without iTXt support. Also note that when iTXt *is* supported,
|
|
678 * the "lang" and "lang_key" fields contain NULL pointers when the
|
|
679 * "compression" field contains * PNG_TEXT_COMPRESSION_NONE or
|
|
680 * PNG_TEXT_COMPRESSION_zTXt. Note that the "compression value" is not the
|
|
681 * same as what appears in the PNG tEXt/zTXt/iTXt chunk's "compression flag"
|
|
682 * which is always 0 or 1, or its "compression method" which is always 0.
|
|
683 */
|
|
684 typedef struct png_text_struct
|
|
685 {
|
|
686 int compression; /* compression value:
|
|
687 -1: tEXt, none
|
|
688 0: zTXt, deflate
|
|
689 1: iTXt, none
|
|
690 2: iTXt, deflate */
|
|
691 png_charp key; /* keyword, 1-79 character description of "text" */
|
|
692 png_charp text; /* comment, may be an empty string (ie "")
|
|
693 or a NULL pointer */
|
|
694 png_size_t text_length; /* length of the text string */
|
|
695 png_size_t itxt_length; /* length of the itxt string */
|
|
696 png_charp lang; /* language code, 0-79 characters
|
|
697 or a NULL pointer */
|
|
698 png_charp lang_key; /* keyword translated UTF-8 string, 0 or more
|
|
699 chars or a NULL pointer */
|
|
700 } png_text;
|
|
701 typedef png_text * png_textp;
|
|
702 typedef const png_text * png_const_textp;
|
|
703 typedef png_text * * png_textpp;
|
|
704 #endif
|
|
705
|
|
706 /* Supported compression types for text in PNG files (tEXt, and zTXt).
|
|
707 * The values of the PNG_TEXT_COMPRESSION_ defines should NOT be changed. */
|
|
708 #define PNG_TEXT_COMPRESSION_NONE_WR -3
|
|
709 #define PNG_TEXT_COMPRESSION_zTXt_WR -2
|
|
710 #define PNG_TEXT_COMPRESSION_NONE -1
|
|
711 #define PNG_TEXT_COMPRESSION_zTXt 0
|
|
712 #define PNG_ITXT_COMPRESSION_NONE 1
|
|
713 #define PNG_ITXT_COMPRESSION_zTXt 2
|
|
714 #define PNG_TEXT_COMPRESSION_LAST 3 /* Not a valid value */
|
|
715
|
|
716 /* png_time is a way to hold the time in an machine independent way.
|
|
717 * Two conversions are provided, both from time_t and struct tm. There
|
|
718 * is no portable way to convert to either of these structures, as far
|
|
719 * as I know. If you know of a portable way, send it to me. As a side
|
|
720 * note - PNG has always been Year 2000 compliant!
|
|
721 */
|
|
722 typedef struct png_time_struct
|
|
723 {
|
|
724 png_uint_16 year; /* full year, as in, 1995 */
|
|
725 png_byte month; /* month of year, 1 - 12 */
|
|
726 png_byte day; /* day of month, 1 - 31 */
|
|
727 png_byte hour; /* hour of day, 0 - 23 */
|
|
728 png_byte minute; /* minute of hour, 0 - 59 */
|
|
729 png_byte second; /* second of minute, 0 - 60 (for leap seconds) */
|
|
730 } png_time;
|
|
731 typedef png_time * png_timep;
|
|
732 typedef const png_time * png_const_timep;
|
|
733 typedef png_time * * png_timepp;
|
|
734
|
|
735 #if defined(PNG_STORE_UNKNOWN_CHUNKS_SUPPORTED) ||\
|
|
736 defined(PNG_USER_CHUNKS_SUPPORTED)
|
|
737 /* png_unknown_chunk is a structure to hold queued chunks for which there is
|
|
738 * no specific support. The idea is that we can use this to queue
|
|
739 * up private chunks for output even though the library doesn't actually
|
|
740 * know about their semantics.
|
|
741 *
|
|
742 * The data in the structure is set by libpng on read and used on write.
|
|
743 */
|
|
744 typedef struct png_unknown_chunk_t
|
|
745 {
|
|
746 png_byte name[5]; /* Textual chunk name with '\0' terminator */
|
|
747 png_byte *data; /* Data, should not be modified on read! */
|
|
748 png_size_t size;
|
|
749
|
|
750 /* On write 'location' must be set using the flag values listed below.
|
|
751 * Notice that on read it is set by libpng however the values stored have
|
|
752 * more bits set than are listed below. Always treat the value as a
|
|
753 * bitmask. On write set only one bit - setting multiple bits may cause the
|
|
754 * chunk to be written in multiple places.
|
|
755 */
|
|
756 png_byte location; /* mode of operation at read time */
|
|
757 }
|
|
758 png_unknown_chunk;
|
|
759
|
|
760 typedef png_unknown_chunk * png_unknown_chunkp;
|
|
761 typedef const png_unknown_chunk * png_const_unknown_chunkp;
|
|
762 typedef png_unknown_chunk * * png_unknown_chunkpp;
|
|
763 #endif
|
|
764
|
|
765 /* Flag values for the unknown chunk location byte. */
|
|
766 #define PNG_HAVE_IHDR 0x01
|
|
767 #define PNG_HAVE_PLTE 0x02
|
|
768 #define PNG_AFTER_IDAT 0x08
|
|
769
|
|
770 /* Maximum positive integer used in PNG is (2^31)-1 */
|
|
771 #define PNG_UINT_31_MAX ((png_uint_32)0x7fffffffL)
|
|
772 #define PNG_UINT_32_MAX ((png_uint_32)(-1))
|
|
773 #define PNG_SIZE_MAX ((png_size_t)(-1))
|
|
774
|
|
775 /* These are constants for fixed point values encoded in the
|
|
776 * PNG specification manner (x100000)
|
|
777 */
|
|
778 #define PNG_FP_1 100000
|
|
779 #define PNG_FP_HALF 50000
|
|
780 #define PNG_FP_MAX ((png_fixed_point)0x7fffffffL)
|
|
781 #define PNG_FP_MIN (-PNG_FP_MAX)
|
|
782
|
|
783 /* These describe the color_type field in png_info. */
|
|
784 /* color type masks */
|
|
785 #define PNG_COLOR_MASK_PALETTE 1
|
|
786 #define PNG_COLOR_MASK_COLOR 2
|
|
787 #define PNG_COLOR_MASK_ALPHA 4
|
|
788
|
|
789 /* color types. Note that not all combinations are legal */
|
|
790 #define PNG_COLOR_TYPE_GRAY 0
|
|
791 #define PNG_COLOR_TYPE_PALETTE (PNG_COLOR_MASK_COLOR | PNG_COLOR_MASK_PALETTE)
|
|
792 #define PNG_COLOR_TYPE_RGB (PNG_COLOR_MASK_COLOR)
|
|
793 #define PNG_COLOR_TYPE_RGB_ALPHA (PNG_COLOR_MASK_COLOR | PNG_COLOR_MASK_ALPHA)
|
|
794 #define PNG_COLOR_TYPE_GRAY_ALPHA (PNG_COLOR_MASK_ALPHA)
|
|
795 /* aliases */
|
|
796 #define PNG_COLOR_TYPE_RGBA PNG_COLOR_TYPE_RGB_ALPHA
|
|
797 #define PNG_COLOR_TYPE_GA PNG_COLOR_TYPE_GRAY_ALPHA
|
|
798
|
|
799 /* This is for compression type. PNG 1.0-1.2 only define the single type. */
|
|
800 #define PNG_COMPRESSION_TYPE_BASE 0 /* Deflate method 8, 32K window */
|
|
801 #define PNG_COMPRESSION_TYPE_DEFAULT PNG_COMPRESSION_TYPE_BASE
|
|
802
|
|
803 /* This is for filter type. PNG 1.0-1.2 only define the single type. */
|
|
804 #define PNG_FILTER_TYPE_BASE 0 /* Single row per-byte filtering */
|
|
805 #define PNG_INTRAPIXEL_DIFFERENCING 64 /* Used only in MNG datastreams */
|
|
806 #define PNG_FILTER_TYPE_DEFAULT PNG_FILTER_TYPE_BASE
|
|
807
|
|
808 /* These are for the interlacing type. These values should NOT be changed. */
|
|
809 #define PNG_INTERLACE_NONE 0 /* Non-interlaced image */
|
|
810 #define PNG_INTERLACE_ADAM7 1 /* Adam7 interlacing */
|
|
811 #define PNG_INTERLACE_LAST 2 /* Not a valid value */
|
|
812
|
|
813 /* These are for the oFFs chunk. These values should NOT be changed. */
|
|
814 #define PNG_OFFSET_PIXEL 0 /* Offset in pixels */
|
|
815 #define PNG_OFFSET_MICROMETER 1 /* Offset in micrometers (1/10^6 meter) */
|
|
816 #define PNG_OFFSET_LAST 2 /* Not a valid value */
|
|
817
|
|
818 /* These are for the pCAL chunk. These values should NOT be changed. */
|
|
819 #define PNG_EQUATION_LINEAR 0 /* Linear transformation */
|
|
820 #define PNG_EQUATION_BASE_E 1 /* Exponential base e transform */
|
|
821 #define PNG_EQUATION_ARBITRARY 2 /* Arbitrary base exponential transform */
|
|
822 #define PNG_EQUATION_HYPERBOLIC 3 /* Hyperbolic sine transformation */
|
|
823 #define PNG_EQUATION_LAST 4 /* Not a valid value */
|
|
824
|
|
825 /* These are for the sCAL chunk. These values should NOT be changed. */
|
|
826 #define PNG_SCALE_UNKNOWN 0 /* unknown unit (image scale) */
|
|
827 #define PNG_SCALE_METER 1 /* meters per pixel */
|
|
828 #define PNG_SCALE_RADIAN 2 /* radians per pixel */
|
|
829 #define PNG_SCALE_LAST 3 /* Not a valid value */
|
|
830
|
|
831 /* These are for the pHYs chunk. These values should NOT be changed. */
|
|
832 #define PNG_RESOLUTION_UNKNOWN 0 /* pixels/unknown unit (aspect ratio) */
|
|
833 #define PNG_RESOLUTION_METER 1 /* pixels/meter */
|
|
834 #define PNG_RESOLUTION_LAST 2 /* Not a valid value */
|
|
835
|
|
836 /* These are for the sRGB chunk. These values should NOT be changed. */
|
|
837 #define PNG_sRGB_INTENT_PERCEPTUAL 0
|
|
838 #define PNG_sRGB_INTENT_RELATIVE 1
|
|
839 #define PNG_sRGB_INTENT_SATURATION 2
|
|
840 #define PNG_sRGB_INTENT_ABSOLUTE 3
|
|
841 #define PNG_sRGB_INTENT_LAST 4 /* Not a valid value */
|
|
842
|
|
843 /* This is for text chunks */
|
|
844 #define PNG_KEYWORD_MAX_LENGTH 79
|
|
845
|
|
846 /* Maximum number of entries in PLTE/sPLT/tRNS arrays */
|
|
847 #define PNG_MAX_PALETTE_LENGTH 256
|
|
848
|
|
849 /* These determine if an ancillary chunk's data has been successfully read
|
|
850 * from the PNG header, or if the application has filled in the corresponding
|
|
851 * data in the info_struct to be written into the output file. The values
|
|
852 * of the PNG_INFO_<chunk> defines should NOT be changed.
|
|
853 */
|
|
854 #define PNG_INFO_gAMA 0x0001
|
|
855 #define PNG_INFO_sBIT 0x0002
|
|
856 #define PNG_INFO_cHRM 0x0004
|
|
857 #define PNG_INFO_PLTE 0x0008
|
|
858 #define PNG_INFO_tRNS 0x0010
|
|
859 #define PNG_INFO_bKGD 0x0020
|
|
860 #define PNG_INFO_hIST 0x0040
|
|
861 #define PNG_INFO_pHYs 0x0080
|
|
862 #define PNG_INFO_oFFs 0x0100
|
|
863 #define PNG_INFO_tIME 0x0200
|
|
864 #define PNG_INFO_pCAL 0x0400
|
|
865 #define PNG_INFO_sRGB 0x0800 /* GR-P, 0.96a */
|
|
866 #define PNG_INFO_iCCP 0x1000 /* ESR, 1.0.6 */
|
|
867 #define PNG_INFO_sPLT 0x2000 /* ESR, 1.0.6 */
|
|
868 #define PNG_INFO_sCAL 0x4000 /* ESR, 1.0.6 */
|
|
869 #define PNG_INFO_IDAT 0x8000 /* ESR, 1.0.6 */
|
|
870
|
|
871 /* This is used for the transformation routines, as some of them
|
|
872 * change these values for the row. It also should enable using
|
|
873 * the routines for other purposes.
|
|
874 */
|
|
875 typedef struct png_row_info_struct
|
|
876 {
|
|
877 png_uint_32 width; /* width of row */
|
|
878 png_size_t rowbytes; /* number of bytes in row */
|
|
879 png_byte color_type; /* color type of row */
|
|
880 png_byte bit_depth; /* bit depth of row */
|
|
881 png_byte channels; /* number of channels (1, 2, 3, or 4) */
|
|
882 png_byte pixel_depth; /* bits per pixel (depth * channels) */
|
|
883 } png_row_info;
|
|
884
|
|
885 typedef png_row_info * png_row_infop;
|
|
886 typedef png_row_info * * png_row_infopp;
|
|
887
|
|
888 /* These are the function types for the I/O functions and for the functions
|
|
889 * that allow the user to override the default I/O functions with his or her
|
|
890 * own. The png_error_ptr type should match that of user-supplied warning
|
|
891 * and error functions, while the png_rw_ptr type should match that of the
|
|
892 * user read/write data functions. Note that the 'write' function must not
|
|
893 * modify the buffer it is passed. The 'read' function, on the other hand, is
|
|
894 * expected to return the read data in the buffer.
|
|
895 */
|
|
896 typedef PNG_CALLBACK(void, *png_error_ptr, (png_structp, png_const_charp));
|
|
897 typedef PNG_CALLBACK(void, *png_rw_ptr, (png_structp, png_bytep, png_size_t));
|
|
898 typedef PNG_CALLBACK(void, *png_flush_ptr, (png_structp));
|
|
899 typedef PNG_CALLBACK(void, *png_read_status_ptr, (png_structp, png_uint_32,
|
|
900 int));
|
|
901 typedef PNG_CALLBACK(void, *png_write_status_ptr, (png_structp, png_uint_32,
|
|
902 int));
|
|
903
|
|
904 #ifdef PNG_PROGRESSIVE_READ_SUPPORTED
|
|
905 typedef PNG_CALLBACK(void, *png_progressive_info_ptr, (png_structp, png_infop));
|
|
906 typedef PNG_CALLBACK(void, *png_progressive_end_ptr, (png_structp, png_infop));
|
|
907
|
|
908 /* The following callback receives png_uint_32 row_number, int pass for the
|
|
909 * png_bytep data of the row. When transforming an interlaced image the
|
|
910 * row number is the row number within the sub-image of the interlace pass, so
|
|
911 * the value will increase to the height of the sub-image (not the full image)
|
|
912 * then reset to 0 for the next pass.
|
|
913 *
|
|
914 * Use PNG_ROW_FROM_PASS_ROW(row, pass) and PNG_COL_FROM_PASS_COL(col, pass) to
|
|
915 * find the output pixel (x,y) given an interlaced sub-image pixel
|
|
916 * (row,col,pass). (See below for these macros.)
|
|
917 */
|
|
918 typedef PNG_CALLBACK(void, *png_progressive_row_ptr, (png_structp, png_bytep,
|
|
919 png_uint_32, int));
|
|
920 #endif
|
|
921
|
|
922 #if defined(PNG_READ_USER_TRANSFORM_SUPPORTED) || \
|
|
923 defined(PNG_WRITE_USER_TRANSFORM_SUPPORTED)
|
|
924 typedef PNG_CALLBACK(void, *png_user_transform_ptr, (png_structp, png_row_infop,
|
|
925 png_bytep));
|
|
926 #endif
|
|
927
|
|
928 #ifdef PNG_USER_CHUNKS_SUPPORTED
|
|
929 typedef PNG_CALLBACK(int, *png_user_chunk_ptr, (png_structp,
|
|
930 png_unknown_chunkp));
|
|
931 #endif
|
|
932 #ifdef PNG_UNKNOWN_CHUNKS_SUPPORTED
|
|
933 /* not used anywhere */
|
|
934 /* typedef PNG_CALLBACK(void, *png_unknown_chunk_ptr, (png_structp)); */
|
|
935 #endif
|
|
936
|
|
937 #ifdef PNG_SETJMP_SUPPORTED
|
|
938 /* This must match the function definition in <setjmp.h>, and the application
|
|
939 * must include this before png.h to obtain the definition of jmp_buf. The
|
|
940 * function is required to be PNG_NORETURN, but this is not checked. If the
|
|
941 * function does return the application will crash via an abort() or similar
|
|
942 * system level call.
|
|
943 *
|
|
944 * If you get a warning here while building the library you may need to make
|
|
945 * changes to ensure that pnglibconf.h records the calling convention used by
|
|
946 * your compiler. This may be very difficult - try using a different compiler
|
|
947 * to build the library!
|
|
948 */
|
|
949 PNG_FUNCTION(void, (PNGCAPI *png_longjmp_ptr), PNGARG((jmp_buf, int)), typedef);
|
|
950 #endif
|
|
951
|
|
952 /* Transform masks for the high-level interface */
|
|
953 #define PNG_TRANSFORM_IDENTITY 0x0000 /* read and write */
|
|
954 #define PNG_TRANSFORM_STRIP_16 0x0001 /* read only */
|
|
955 #define PNG_TRANSFORM_STRIP_ALPHA 0x0002 /* read only */
|
|
956 #define PNG_TRANSFORM_PACKING 0x0004 /* read and write */
|
|
957 #define PNG_TRANSFORM_PACKSWAP 0x0008 /* read and write */
|
|
958 #define PNG_TRANSFORM_EXPAND 0x0010 /* read only */
|
|
959 #define PNG_TRANSFORM_INVERT_MONO 0x0020 /* read and write */
|
|
960 #define PNG_TRANSFORM_SHIFT 0x0040 /* read and write */
|
|
961 #define PNG_TRANSFORM_BGR 0x0080 /* read and write */
|
|
962 #define PNG_TRANSFORM_SWAP_ALPHA 0x0100 /* read and write */
|
|
963 #define PNG_TRANSFORM_SWAP_ENDIAN 0x0200 /* read and write */
|
|
964 #define PNG_TRANSFORM_INVERT_ALPHA 0x0400 /* read and write */
|
|
965 #define PNG_TRANSFORM_STRIP_FILLER 0x0800 /* write only */
|
|
966 /* Added to libpng-1.2.34 */
|
|
967 #define PNG_TRANSFORM_STRIP_FILLER_BEFORE PNG_TRANSFORM_STRIP_FILLER
|
|
968 #define PNG_TRANSFORM_STRIP_FILLER_AFTER 0x1000 /* write only */
|
|
969 /* Added to libpng-1.4.0 */
|
|
970 #define PNG_TRANSFORM_GRAY_TO_RGB 0x2000 /* read only */
|
|
971 /* Added to libpng-1.5.4 */
|
|
972 #define PNG_TRANSFORM_EXPAND_16 0x4000 /* read only */
|
|
973 #define PNG_TRANSFORM_SCALE_16 0x8000 /* read only */
|
|
974
|
|
975 /* Flags for MNG supported features */
|
|
976 #define PNG_FLAG_MNG_EMPTY_PLTE 0x01
|
|
977 #define PNG_FLAG_MNG_FILTER_64 0x04
|
|
978 #define PNG_ALL_MNG_FEATURES 0x05
|
|
979
|
|
980 /* NOTE: prior to 1.5 these functions had no 'API' style declaration,
|
|
981 * this allowed the zlib default functions to be used on Windows
|
|
982 * platforms. In 1.5 the zlib default malloc (which just calls malloc and
|
|
983 * ignores the first argument) should be completely compatible with the
|
|
984 * following.
|
|
985 */
|
|
986 typedef PNG_CALLBACK(png_voidp, *png_malloc_ptr, (png_structp,
|
|
987 png_alloc_size_t));
|
|
988 typedef PNG_CALLBACK(void, *png_free_ptr, (png_structp, png_voidp));
|
|
989
|
|
990 /* Section 3: exported functions
|
|
991 * Here are the function definitions most commonly used. This is not
|
|
992 * the place to find out how to use libpng. See libpng-manual.txt for the
|
|
993 * full explanation, see example.c for the summary. This just provides
|
|
994 * a simple one line description of the use of each function.
|
|
995 *
|
|
996 * The PNG_EXPORT() and PNG_EXPORTA() macros used below are defined in
|
|
997 * pngconf.h and in the *.dfn files in the scripts directory.
|
|
998 *
|
|
999 * PNG_EXPORT(ordinal, type, name, (args));
|
|
1000 *
|
|
1001 * ordinal: ordinal that is used while building
|
|
1002 * *.def files. The ordinal value is only
|
|
1003 * relevant when preprocessing png.h with
|
|
1004 * the *.dfn files for building symbol table
|
|
1005 * entries, and are removed by pngconf.h.
|
|
1006 * type: return type of the function
|
|
1007 * name: function name
|
|
1008 * args: function arguments, with types
|
|
1009 *
|
|
1010 * When we wish to append attributes to a function prototype we use
|
|
1011 * the PNG_EXPORTA() macro instead.
|
|
1012 *
|
|
1013 * PNG_EXPORTA(ordinal, type, name, (args), attributes);
|
|
1014 *
|
|
1015 * ordinal, type, name, and args: same as in PNG_EXPORT().
|
|
1016 * attributes: function attributes
|
|
1017 */
|
|
1018
|
|
1019 /* Returns the version number of the library */
|
|
1020 PNG_EXPORT(1, png_uint_32, png_access_version_number, (void));
|
|
1021
|
|
1022 /* Tell lib we have already handled the first <num_bytes> magic bytes.
|
|
1023 * Handling more than 8 bytes from the beginning of the file is an error.
|
|
1024 */
|
|
1025 PNG_EXPORT(2, void, png_set_sig_bytes, (png_structrp png_ptr, int num_bytes));
|
|
1026
|
|
1027 /* Check sig[start] through sig[start + num_to_check - 1] to see if it's a
|
|
1028 * PNG file. Returns zero if the supplied bytes match the 8-byte PNG
|
|
1029 * signature, and non-zero otherwise. Having num_to_check == 0 or
|
|
1030 * start > 7 will always fail (ie return non-zero).
|
|
1031 */
|
|
1032 PNG_EXPORT(3, int, png_sig_cmp, (png_const_bytep sig, png_size_t start,
|
|
1033 png_size_t num_to_check));
|
|
1034
|
|
1035 /* Simple signature checking function. This is the same as calling
|
|
1036 * png_check_sig(sig, n) := !png_sig_cmp(sig, 0, n).
|
|
1037 */
|
|
1038 #define png_check_sig(sig, n) !png_sig_cmp((sig), 0, (n))
|
|
1039
|
|
1040 /* Allocate and initialize png_ptr struct for reading, and any other memory. */
|
|
1041 PNG_EXPORTA(4, png_structp, png_create_read_struct,
|
|
1042 (png_const_charp user_png_ver, png_voidp error_ptr,
|
|
1043 png_error_ptr error_fn, png_error_ptr warn_fn),
|
|
1044 PNG_ALLOCATED);
|
|
1045
|
|
1046 /* Allocate and initialize png_ptr struct for writing, and any other memory */
|
|
1047 PNG_EXPORTA(5, png_structp, png_create_write_struct,
|
|
1048 (png_const_charp user_png_ver, png_voidp error_ptr, png_error_ptr error_fn,
|
|
1049 png_error_ptr warn_fn),
|
|
1050 PNG_ALLOCATED);
|
|
1051
|
|
1052 PNG_EXPORT(6, png_size_t, png_get_compression_buffer_size,
|
|
1053 (png_const_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
1054
|
|
1055 PNG_EXPORT(7, void, png_set_compression_buffer_size, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1056 png_size_t size));
|
|
1057
|
|
1058 /* Moved from pngconf.h in 1.4.0 and modified to ensure setjmp/longjmp
|
|
1059 * match up.
|
|
1060 */
|
|
1061 #ifdef PNG_SETJMP_SUPPORTED
|
|
1062 /* This function returns the jmp_buf built in to *png_ptr. It must be
|
|
1063 * supplied with an appropriate 'longjmp' function to use on that jmp_buf
|
|
1064 * unless the default error function is overridden in which case NULL is
|
|
1065 * acceptable. The size of the jmp_buf is checked against the actual size
|
|
1066 * allocated by the library - the call will return NULL on a mismatch
|
|
1067 * indicating an ABI mismatch.
|
|
1068 */
|
|
1069 PNG_EXPORT(8, jmp_buf*, png_set_longjmp_fn, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1070 png_longjmp_ptr longjmp_fn, size_t jmp_buf_size));
|
|
1071 # define png_jmpbuf(png_ptr) \
|
|
1072 (*png_set_longjmp_fn((png_ptr), longjmp, (sizeof (jmp_buf))))
|
|
1073 #else
|
|
1074 # define png_jmpbuf(png_ptr) \
|
|
1075 (LIBPNG_WAS_COMPILED_WITH__PNG_NO_SETJMP)
|
|
1076 #endif
|
|
1077 /* This function should be used by libpng applications in place of
|
|
1078 * longjmp(png_ptr->jmpbuf, val). If longjmp_fn() has been set, it
|
|
1079 * will use it; otherwise it will call PNG_ABORT(). This function was
|
|
1080 * added in libpng-1.5.0.
|
|
1081 */
|
|
1082 PNG_EXPORTA(9, void, png_longjmp, (png_const_structrp png_ptr, int val),
|
|
1083 PNG_NORETURN);
|
|
1084
|
|
1085 #ifdef PNG_READ_SUPPORTED
|
|
1086 /* Reset the compression stream */
|
|
1087 PNG_EXPORTA(10, int, png_reset_zstream, (png_structrp png_ptr), PNG_DEPRECATED);
|
|
1088 #endif
|
|
1089
|
|
1090 /* New functions added in libpng-1.0.2 (not enabled by default until 1.2.0) */
|
|
1091 #ifdef PNG_USER_MEM_SUPPORTED
|
|
1092 PNG_EXPORTA(11, png_structp, png_create_read_struct_2,
|
|
1093 (png_const_charp user_png_ver, png_voidp error_ptr, png_error_ptr error_fn,
|
|
1094 png_error_ptr warn_fn,
|
|
1095 png_voidp mem_ptr, png_malloc_ptr malloc_fn, png_free_ptr free_fn),
|
|
1096 PNG_ALLOCATED);
|
|
1097 PNG_EXPORTA(12, png_structp, png_create_write_struct_2,
|
|
1098 (png_const_charp user_png_ver, png_voidp error_ptr, png_error_ptr error_fn,
|
|
1099 png_error_ptr warn_fn,
|
|
1100 png_voidp mem_ptr, png_malloc_ptr malloc_fn, png_free_ptr free_fn),
|
|
1101 PNG_ALLOCATED);
|
|
1102 #endif
|
|
1103
|
|
1104 /* Write the PNG file signature. */
|
|
1105 PNG_EXPORT(13, void, png_write_sig, (png_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
1106
|
|
1107 /* Write a PNG chunk - size, type, (optional) data, CRC. */
|
|
1108 PNG_EXPORT(14, void, png_write_chunk, (png_structrp png_ptr, png_const_bytep
|
|
1109 chunk_name, png_const_bytep data, png_size_t length));
|
|
1110
|
|
1111 /* Write the start of a PNG chunk - length and chunk name. */
|
|
1112 PNG_EXPORT(15, void, png_write_chunk_start, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1113 png_const_bytep chunk_name, png_uint_32 length));
|
|
1114
|
|
1115 /* Write the data of a PNG chunk started with png_write_chunk_start(). */
|
|
1116 PNG_EXPORT(16, void, png_write_chunk_data, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1117 png_const_bytep data, png_size_t length));
|
|
1118
|
|
1119 /* Finish a chunk started with png_write_chunk_start() (includes CRC). */
|
|
1120 PNG_EXPORT(17, void, png_write_chunk_end, (png_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
1121
|
|
1122 /* Allocate and initialize the info structure */
|
|
1123 PNG_EXPORTA(18, png_infop, png_create_info_struct, (png_const_structrp png_ptr),
|
|
1124 PNG_ALLOCATED);
|
|
1125
|
|
1126 /* DEPRECATED: this function allowed init structures to be created using the
|
|
1127 * default allocation method (typically malloc). Use is deprecated in 1.6.0 and
|
|
1128 * the API will be removed in the future.
|
|
1129 */
|
|
1130 PNG_EXPORTA(19, void, png_info_init_3, (png_infopp info_ptr,
|
|
1131 png_size_t png_info_struct_size), PNG_DEPRECATED);
|
|
1132
|
|
1133 /* Writes all the PNG information before the image. */
|
|
1134 PNG_EXPORT(20, void, png_write_info_before_PLTE,
|
|
1135 (png_structrp png_ptr, png_const_inforp info_ptr));
|
|
1136 PNG_EXPORT(21, void, png_write_info,
|
|
1137 (png_structrp png_ptr, png_const_inforp info_ptr));
|
|
1138
|
|
1139 #ifdef PNG_SEQUENTIAL_READ_SUPPORTED
|
|
1140 /* Read the information before the actual image data. */
|
|
1141 PNG_EXPORT(22, void, png_read_info,
|
|
1142 (png_structrp png_ptr, png_inforp info_ptr));
|
|
1143 #endif
|
|
1144
|
|
1145 #ifdef PNG_TIME_RFC1123_SUPPORTED
|
|
1146 /* Convert to a US string format: there is no localization support in this
|
|
1147 * routine. The original implementation used a 29 character buffer in
|
|
1148 * png_struct, this will be removed in future versions.
|
|
1149 */
|
|
1150 #if PNG_LIBPNG_VER < 10700
|
|
1151 /* To do: remove this from libpng17 (and from libpng17/png.c and pngstruct.h) */
|
|
1152 PNG_EXPORTA(23, png_const_charp, png_convert_to_rfc1123, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1153 png_const_timep ptime),PNG_DEPRECATED);
|
|
1154 #endif
|
|
1155 PNG_EXPORT(241, int, png_convert_to_rfc1123_buffer, (char out[29],
|
|
1156 png_const_timep ptime));
|
|
1157 #endif
|
|
1158
|
|
1159 #ifdef PNG_CONVERT_tIME_SUPPORTED
|
|
1160 /* Convert from a struct tm to png_time */
|
|
1161 PNG_EXPORT(24, void, png_convert_from_struct_tm, (png_timep ptime,
|
|
1162 const struct tm * ttime));
|
|
1163
|
|
1164 /* Convert from time_t to png_time. Uses gmtime() */
|
|
1165 PNG_EXPORT(25, void, png_convert_from_time_t, (png_timep ptime, time_t ttime));
|
|
1166 #endif /* PNG_CONVERT_tIME_SUPPORTED */
|
|
1167
|
|
1168 #ifdef PNG_READ_EXPAND_SUPPORTED
|
|
1169 /* Expand data to 24-bit RGB, or 8-bit grayscale, with alpha if available. */
|
|
1170 PNG_EXPORT(26, void, png_set_expand, (png_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
1171 PNG_EXPORT(27, void, png_set_expand_gray_1_2_4_to_8, (png_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
1172 PNG_EXPORT(28, void, png_set_palette_to_rgb, (png_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
1173 PNG_EXPORT(29, void, png_set_tRNS_to_alpha, (png_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
1174 #endif
|
|
1175
|
|
1176 #ifdef PNG_READ_EXPAND_16_SUPPORTED
|
|
1177 /* Expand to 16-bit channels, forces conversion of palette to RGB and expansion
|
|
1178 * of a tRNS chunk if present.
|
|
1179 */
|
|
1180 PNG_EXPORT(221, void, png_set_expand_16, (png_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
1181 #endif
|
|
1182
|
|
1183 #if defined(PNG_READ_BGR_SUPPORTED) || defined(PNG_WRITE_BGR_SUPPORTED)
|
|
1184 /* Use blue, green, red order for pixels. */
|
|
1185 PNG_EXPORT(30, void, png_set_bgr, (png_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
1186 #endif
|
|
1187
|
|
1188 #ifdef PNG_READ_GRAY_TO_RGB_SUPPORTED
|
|
1189 /* Expand the grayscale to 24-bit RGB if necessary. */
|
|
1190 PNG_EXPORT(31, void, png_set_gray_to_rgb, (png_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
1191 #endif
|
|
1192
|
|
1193 #ifdef PNG_READ_RGB_TO_GRAY_SUPPORTED
|
|
1194 /* Reduce RGB to grayscale. */
|
|
1195 #define PNG_ERROR_ACTION_NONE 1
|
|
1196 #define PNG_ERROR_ACTION_WARN 2
|
|
1197 #define PNG_ERROR_ACTION_ERROR 3
|
|
1198 #define PNG_RGB_TO_GRAY_DEFAULT (-1)/*for red/green coefficients*/
|
|
1199
|
|
1200 PNG_FP_EXPORT(32, void, png_set_rgb_to_gray, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1201 int error_action, double red, double green))
|
|
1202 PNG_FIXED_EXPORT(33, void, png_set_rgb_to_gray_fixed, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1203 int error_action, png_fixed_point red, png_fixed_point green))
|
|
1204
|
|
1205 PNG_EXPORT(34, png_byte, png_get_rgb_to_gray_status, (png_const_structrp
|
|
1206 png_ptr));
|
|
1207 #endif
|
|
1208
|
|
1209 #ifdef PNG_BUILD_GRAYSCALE_PALETTE_SUPPORTED
|
|
1210 PNG_EXPORT(35, void, png_build_grayscale_palette, (int bit_depth,
|
|
1211 png_colorp palette));
|
|
1212 #endif
|
|
1213
|
|
1214 #ifdef PNG_READ_ALPHA_MODE_SUPPORTED
|
|
1215 /* How the alpha channel is interpreted - this affects how the color channels
|
|
1216 * of a PNG file are returned to the calling application when an alpha channel,
|
|
1217 * or a tRNS chunk in a palette file, is present.
|
|
1218 *
|
|
1219 * This has no effect on the way pixels are written into a PNG output
|
|
1220 * datastream. The color samples in a PNG datastream are never premultiplied
|
|
1221 * with the alpha samples.
|
|
1222 *
|
|
1223 * The default is to return data according to the PNG specification: the alpha
|
|
1224 * channel is a linear measure of the contribution of the pixel to the
|
|
1225 * corresponding composited pixel, and the color channels are unassociated
|
|
1226 * (not premultiplied). The gamma encoded color channels must be scaled
|
|
1227 * according to the contribution and to do this it is necessary to undo
|
|
1228 * the encoding, scale the color values, perform the composition and reencode
|
|
1229 * the values. This is the 'PNG' mode.
|
|
1230 *
|
|
1231 * The alternative is to 'associate' the alpha with the color information by
|
|
1232 * storing color channel values that have been scaled by the alpha.
|
|
1233 * image. These are the 'STANDARD', 'ASSOCIATED' or 'PREMULTIPLIED' modes
|
|
1234 * (the latter being the two common names for associated alpha color channels).
|
|
1235 *
|
|
1236 * For the 'OPTIMIZED' mode, a pixel is treated as opaque only if the alpha
|
|
1237 * value is equal to the maximum value.
|
|
1238 *
|
|
1239 * The final choice is to gamma encode the alpha channel as well. This is
|
|
1240 * broken because, in practice, no implementation that uses this choice
|
|
1241 * correctly undoes the encoding before handling alpha composition. Use this
|
|
1242 * choice only if other serious errors in the software or hardware you use
|
|
1243 * mandate it; the typical serious error is for dark halos to appear around
|
|
1244 * opaque areas of the composited PNG image because of arithmetic overflow.
|
|
1245 *
|
|
1246 * The API function png_set_alpha_mode specifies which of these choices to use
|
|
1247 * with an enumerated 'mode' value and the gamma of the required output:
|
|
1248 */
|
|
1249 #define PNG_ALPHA_PNG 0 /* according to the PNG standard */
|
|
1250 #define PNG_ALPHA_STANDARD 1 /* according to Porter/Duff */
|
|
1251 #define PNG_ALPHA_ASSOCIATED 1 /* as above; this is the normal practice */
|
|
1252 #define PNG_ALPHA_PREMULTIPLIED 1 /* as above */
|
|
1253 #define PNG_ALPHA_OPTIMIZED 2 /* 'PNG' for opaque pixels, else 'STANDARD' */
|
|
1254 #define PNG_ALPHA_BROKEN 3 /* the alpha channel is gamma encoded */
|
|
1255
|
|
1256 PNG_FP_EXPORT(227, void, png_set_alpha_mode, (png_structrp png_ptr, int mode,
|
|
1257 double output_gamma))
|
|
1258 PNG_FIXED_EXPORT(228, void, png_set_alpha_mode_fixed, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1259 int mode, png_fixed_point output_gamma))
|
|
1260 #endif
|
|
1261
|
|
1262 #if defined(PNG_GAMMA_SUPPORTED) || defined(PNG_READ_ALPHA_MODE_SUPPORTED)
|
|
1263 /* The output_gamma value is a screen gamma in libpng terminology: it expresses
|
|
1264 * how to decode the output values, not how they are encoded.
|
|
1265 */
|
|
1266 #define PNG_DEFAULT_sRGB -1 /* sRGB gamma and color space */
|
|
1267 #define PNG_GAMMA_MAC_18 -2 /* Old Mac '1.8' gamma and color space */
|
|
1268 #define PNG_GAMMA_sRGB 220000 /* Television standards--matches sRGB gamma */
|
|
1269 #define PNG_GAMMA_LINEAR PNG_FP_1 /* Linear */
|
|
1270 #endif
|
|
1271
|
|
1272 /* The following are examples of calls to png_set_alpha_mode to achieve the
|
|
1273 * required overall gamma correction and, where necessary, alpha
|
|
1274 * premultiplication.
|
|
1275 *
|
|
1276 * png_set_alpha_mode(pp, PNG_ALPHA_PNG, PNG_DEFAULT_sRGB);
|
|
1277 * This is the default libpng handling of the alpha channel - it is not
|
|
1278 * pre-multiplied into the color components. In addition the call states
|
|
1279 * that the output is for a sRGB system and causes all PNG files without gAMA
|
|
1280 * chunks to be assumed to be encoded using sRGB.
|
|
1281 *
|
|
1282 * png_set_alpha_mode(pp, PNG_ALPHA_PNG, PNG_GAMMA_MAC);
|
|
1283 * In this case the output is assumed to be something like an sRGB conformant
|
|
1284 * display preceeded by a power-law lookup table of power 1.45. This is how
|
|
1285 * early Mac systems behaved.
|
|
1286 *
|
|
1287 * png_set_alpha_mode(pp, PNG_ALPHA_STANDARD, PNG_GAMMA_LINEAR);
|
|
1288 * This is the classic Jim Blinn approach and will work in academic
|
|
1289 * environments where everything is done by the book. It has the shortcoming
|
|
1290 * of assuming that input PNG data with no gamma information is linear - this
|
|
1291 * is unlikely to be correct unless the PNG files where generated locally.
|
|
1292 * Most of the time the output precision will be so low as to show
|
|
1293 * significant banding in dark areas of the image.
|
|
1294 *
|
|
1295 * png_set_expand_16(pp);
|
|
1296 * png_set_alpha_mode(pp, PNG_ALPHA_STANDARD, PNG_DEFAULT_sRGB);
|
|
1297 * This is a somewhat more realistic Jim Blinn inspired approach. PNG files
|
|
1298 * are assumed to have the sRGB encoding if not marked with a gamma value and
|
|
1299 * the output is always 16 bits per component. This permits accurate scaling
|
|
1300 * and processing of the data. If you know that your input PNG files were
|
|
1301 * generated locally you might need to replace PNG_DEFAULT_sRGB with the
|
|
1302 * correct value for your system.
|
|
1303 *
|
|
1304 * png_set_alpha_mode(pp, PNG_ALPHA_OPTIMIZED, PNG_DEFAULT_sRGB);
|
|
1305 * If you just need to composite the PNG image onto an existing background
|
|
1306 * and if you control the code that does this you can use the optimization
|
|
1307 * setting. In this case you just copy completely opaque pixels to the
|
|
1308 * output. For pixels that are not completely transparent (you just skip
|
|
1309 * those) you do the composition math using png_composite or png_composite_16
|
|
1310 * below then encode the resultant 8-bit or 16-bit values to match the output
|
|
1311 * encoding.
|
|
1312 *
|
|
1313 * Other cases
|
|
1314 * If neither the PNG nor the standard linear encoding work for you because
|
|
1315 * of the software or hardware you use then you have a big problem. The PNG
|
|
1316 * case will probably result in halos around the image. The linear encoding
|
|
1317 * will probably result in a washed out, too bright, image (it's actually too
|
|
1318 * contrasty.) Try the ALPHA_OPTIMIZED mode above - this will probably
|
|
1319 * substantially reduce the halos. Alternatively try:
|
|
1320 *
|
|
1321 * png_set_alpha_mode(pp, PNG_ALPHA_BROKEN, PNG_DEFAULT_sRGB);
|
|
1322 * This option will also reduce the halos, but there will be slight dark
|
|
1323 * halos round the opaque parts of the image where the background is light.
|
|
1324 * In the OPTIMIZED mode the halos will be light halos where the background
|
|
1325 * is dark. Take your pick - the halos are unavoidable unless you can get
|
|
1326 * your hardware/software fixed! (The OPTIMIZED approach is slightly
|
|
1327 * faster.)
|
|
1328 *
|
|
1329 * When the default gamma of PNG files doesn't match the output gamma.
|
|
1330 * If you have PNG files with no gamma information png_set_alpha_mode allows
|
|
1331 * you to provide a default gamma, but it also sets the ouput gamma to the
|
|
1332 * matching value. If you know your PNG files have a gamma that doesn't
|
|
1333 * match the output you can take advantage of the fact that
|
|
1334 * png_set_alpha_mode always sets the output gamma but only sets the PNG
|
|
1335 * default if it is not already set:
|
|
1336 *
|
|
1337 * png_set_alpha_mode(pp, PNG_ALPHA_PNG, PNG_DEFAULT_sRGB);
|
|
1338 * png_set_alpha_mode(pp, PNG_ALPHA_PNG, PNG_GAMMA_MAC);
|
|
1339 * The first call sets both the default and the output gamma values, the
|
|
1340 * second call overrides the output gamma without changing the default. This
|
|
1341 * is easier than achieving the same effect with png_set_gamma. You must use
|
|
1342 * PNG_ALPHA_PNG for the first call - internal checking in png_set_alpha will
|
|
1343 * fire if more than one call to png_set_alpha_mode and png_set_background is
|
|
1344 * made in the same read operation, however multiple calls with PNG_ALPHA_PNG
|
|
1345 * are ignored.
|
|
1346 */
|
|
1347
|
|
1348 #ifdef PNG_READ_STRIP_ALPHA_SUPPORTED
|
|
1349 PNG_EXPORT(36, void, png_set_strip_alpha, (png_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
1350 #endif
|
|
1351
|
|
1352 #if defined(PNG_READ_SWAP_ALPHA_SUPPORTED) || \
|
|
1353 defined(PNG_WRITE_SWAP_ALPHA_SUPPORTED)
|
|
1354 PNG_EXPORT(37, void, png_set_swap_alpha, (png_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
1355 #endif
|
|
1356
|
|
1357 #if defined(PNG_READ_INVERT_ALPHA_SUPPORTED) || \
|
|
1358 defined(PNG_WRITE_INVERT_ALPHA_SUPPORTED)
|
|
1359 PNG_EXPORT(38, void, png_set_invert_alpha, (png_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
1360 #endif
|
|
1361
|
|
1362 #if defined(PNG_READ_FILLER_SUPPORTED) || defined(PNG_WRITE_FILLER_SUPPORTED)
|
|
1363 /* Add a filler byte to 8-bit Gray or 24-bit RGB images. */
|
|
1364 PNG_EXPORT(39, void, png_set_filler, (png_structrp png_ptr, png_uint_32 filler,
|
|
1365 int flags));
|
|
1366 /* The values of the PNG_FILLER_ defines should NOT be changed */
|
|
1367 # define PNG_FILLER_BEFORE 0
|
|
1368 # define PNG_FILLER_AFTER 1
|
|
1369 /* Add an alpha byte to 8-bit Gray or 24-bit RGB images. */
|
|
1370 PNG_EXPORT(40, void, png_set_add_alpha, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1371 png_uint_32 filler, int flags));
|
|
1372 #endif /* PNG_READ_FILLER_SUPPORTED || PNG_WRITE_FILLER_SUPPORTED */
|
|
1373
|
|
1374 #if defined(PNG_READ_SWAP_SUPPORTED) || defined(PNG_WRITE_SWAP_SUPPORTED)
|
|
1375 /* Swap bytes in 16-bit depth files. */
|
|
1376 PNG_EXPORT(41, void, png_set_swap, (png_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
1377 #endif
|
|
1378
|
|
1379 #if defined(PNG_READ_PACK_SUPPORTED) || defined(PNG_WRITE_PACK_SUPPORTED)
|
|
1380 /* Use 1 byte per pixel in 1, 2, or 4-bit depth files. */
|
|
1381 PNG_EXPORT(42, void, png_set_packing, (png_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
1382 #endif
|
|
1383
|
|
1384 #if defined(PNG_READ_PACKSWAP_SUPPORTED) || \
|
|
1385 defined(PNG_WRITE_PACKSWAP_SUPPORTED)
|
|
1386 /* Swap packing order of pixels in bytes. */
|
|
1387 PNG_EXPORT(43, void, png_set_packswap, (png_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
1388 #endif
|
|
1389
|
|
1390 #if defined(PNG_READ_SHIFT_SUPPORTED) || defined(PNG_WRITE_SHIFT_SUPPORTED)
|
|
1391 /* Converts files to legal bit depths. */
|
|
1392 PNG_EXPORT(44, void, png_set_shift, (png_structrp png_ptr, png_const_color_8p
|
|
1393 true_bits));
|
|
1394 #endif
|
|
1395
|
|
1396 #if defined(PNG_READ_INTERLACING_SUPPORTED) || \
|
|
1397 defined(PNG_WRITE_INTERLACING_SUPPORTED)
|
|
1398 /* Have the code handle the interlacing. Returns the number of passes.
|
|
1399 * MUST be called before png_read_update_info or png_start_read_image,
|
|
1400 * otherwise it will not have the desired effect. Note that it is still
|
|
1401 * necessary to call png_read_row or png_read_rows png_get_image_height
|
|
1402 * times for each pass.
|
|
1403 */
|
|
1404 PNG_EXPORT(45, int, png_set_interlace_handling, (png_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
1405 #endif
|
|
1406
|
|
1407 #if defined(PNG_READ_INVERT_SUPPORTED) || defined(PNG_WRITE_INVERT_SUPPORTED)
|
|
1408 /* Invert monochrome files */
|
|
1409 PNG_EXPORT(46, void, png_set_invert_mono, (png_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
1410 #endif
|
|
1411
|
|
1412 #ifdef PNG_READ_BACKGROUND_SUPPORTED
|
|
1413 /* Handle alpha and tRNS by replacing with a background color. Prior to
|
|
1414 * libpng-1.5.4 this API must not be called before the PNG file header has been
|
|
1415 * read. Doing so will result in unexpected behavior and possible warnings or
|
|
1416 * errors if the PNG file contains a bKGD chunk.
|
|
1417 */
|
|
1418 PNG_FP_EXPORT(47, void, png_set_background, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1419 png_const_color_16p background_color, int background_gamma_code,
|
|
1420 int need_expand, double background_gamma))
|
|
1421 PNG_FIXED_EXPORT(215, void, png_set_background_fixed, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1422 png_const_color_16p background_color, int background_gamma_code,
|
|
1423 int need_expand, png_fixed_point background_gamma))
|
|
1424 #endif
|
|
1425 #ifdef PNG_READ_BACKGROUND_SUPPORTED
|
|
1426 # define PNG_BACKGROUND_GAMMA_UNKNOWN 0
|
|
1427 # define PNG_BACKGROUND_GAMMA_SCREEN 1
|
|
1428 # define PNG_BACKGROUND_GAMMA_FILE 2
|
|
1429 # define PNG_BACKGROUND_GAMMA_UNIQUE 3
|
|
1430 #endif
|
|
1431
|
|
1432 #ifdef PNG_READ_SCALE_16_TO_8_SUPPORTED
|
|
1433 /* Scale a 16-bit depth file down to 8-bit, accurately. */
|
|
1434 PNG_EXPORT(229, void, png_set_scale_16, (png_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
1435 #endif
|
|
1436
|
|
1437 #ifdef PNG_READ_STRIP_16_TO_8_SUPPORTED
|
|
1438 #define PNG_READ_16_TO_8 SUPPORTED /* Name prior to 1.5.4 */
|
|
1439 /* Strip the second byte of information from a 16-bit depth file. */
|
|
1440 PNG_EXPORT(48, void, png_set_strip_16, (png_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
1441 #endif
|
|
1442
|
|
1443 #ifdef PNG_READ_QUANTIZE_SUPPORTED
|
|
1444 /* Turn on quantizing, and reduce the palette to the number of colors
|
|
1445 * available.
|
|
1446 */
|
|
1447 PNG_EXPORT(49, void, png_set_quantize, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1448 png_colorp palette, int num_palette, int maximum_colors,
|
|
1449 png_const_uint_16p histogram, int full_quantize));
|
|
1450 #endif
|
|
1451
|
|
1452 #ifdef PNG_READ_GAMMA_SUPPORTED
|
|
1453 /* The threshold on gamma processing is configurable but hard-wired into the
|
|
1454 * library. The following is the floating point variant.
|
|
1455 */
|
|
1456 #define PNG_GAMMA_THRESHOLD (PNG_GAMMA_THRESHOLD_FIXED*.00001)
|
|
1457
|
|
1458 /* Handle gamma correction. Screen_gamma=(display_exponent).
|
|
1459 * NOTE: this API simply sets the screen and file gamma values. It will
|
|
1460 * therefore override the value for gamma in a PNG file if it is called after
|
|
1461 * the file header has been read - use with care - call before reading the PNG
|
|
1462 * file for best results!
|
|
1463 *
|
|
1464 * These routines accept the same gamma values as png_set_alpha_mode (described
|
|
1465 * above). The PNG_GAMMA_ defines and PNG_DEFAULT_sRGB can be passed to either
|
|
1466 * API (floating point or fixed.) Notice, however, that the 'file_gamma' value
|
|
1467 * is the inverse of a 'screen gamma' value.
|
|
1468 */
|
|
1469 PNG_FP_EXPORT(50, void, png_set_gamma, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1470 double screen_gamma, double override_file_gamma))
|
|
1471 PNG_FIXED_EXPORT(208, void, png_set_gamma_fixed, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1472 png_fixed_point screen_gamma, png_fixed_point override_file_gamma))
|
|
1473 #endif
|
|
1474
|
|
1475 #ifdef PNG_WRITE_FLUSH_SUPPORTED
|
|
1476 /* Set how many lines between output flushes - 0 for no flushing */
|
|
1477 PNG_EXPORT(51, void, png_set_flush, (png_structrp png_ptr, int nrows));
|
|
1478 /* Flush the current PNG output buffer */
|
|
1479 PNG_EXPORT(52, void, png_write_flush, (png_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
1480 #endif
|
|
1481
|
|
1482 /* Optional update palette with requested transformations */
|
|
1483 PNG_EXPORT(53, void, png_start_read_image, (png_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
1484
|
|
1485 /* Optional call to update the users info structure */
|
|
1486 PNG_EXPORT(54, void, png_read_update_info, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1487 png_inforp info_ptr));
|
|
1488
|
|
1489 #ifdef PNG_SEQUENTIAL_READ_SUPPORTED
|
|
1490 /* Read one or more rows of image data. */
|
|
1491 PNG_EXPORT(55, void, png_read_rows, (png_structrp png_ptr, png_bytepp row,
|
|
1492 png_bytepp display_row, png_uint_32 num_rows));
|
|
1493 #endif
|
|
1494
|
|
1495 #ifdef PNG_SEQUENTIAL_READ_SUPPORTED
|
|
1496 /* Read a row of data. */
|
|
1497 PNG_EXPORT(56, void, png_read_row, (png_structrp png_ptr, png_bytep row,
|
|
1498 png_bytep display_row));
|
|
1499 #endif
|
|
1500
|
|
1501 #ifdef PNG_SEQUENTIAL_READ_SUPPORTED
|
|
1502 /* Read the whole image into memory at once. */
|
|
1503 PNG_EXPORT(57, void, png_read_image, (png_structrp png_ptr, png_bytepp image));
|
|
1504 #endif
|
|
1505
|
|
1506 /* Write a row of image data */
|
|
1507 PNG_EXPORT(58, void, png_write_row, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1508 png_const_bytep row));
|
|
1509
|
|
1510 /* Write a few rows of image data: (*row) is not written; however, the type
|
|
1511 * is declared as writeable to maintain compatibility with previous versions
|
|
1512 * of libpng and to allow the 'display_row' array from read_rows to be passed
|
|
1513 * unchanged to write_rows.
|
|
1514 */
|
|
1515 PNG_EXPORT(59, void, png_write_rows, (png_structrp png_ptr, png_bytepp row,
|
|
1516 png_uint_32 num_rows));
|
|
1517
|
|
1518 /* Write the image data */
|
|
1519 PNG_EXPORT(60, void, png_write_image, (png_structrp png_ptr, png_bytepp image));
|
|
1520
|
|
1521 /* Write the end of the PNG file. */
|
|
1522 PNG_EXPORT(61, void, png_write_end, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1523 png_inforp info_ptr));
|
|
1524
|
|
1525 #ifdef PNG_SEQUENTIAL_READ_SUPPORTED
|
|
1526 /* Read the end of the PNG file. */
|
|
1527 PNG_EXPORT(62, void, png_read_end, (png_structrp png_ptr, png_inforp info_ptr));
|
|
1528 #endif
|
|
1529
|
|
1530 /* Free any memory associated with the png_info_struct */
|
|
1531 PNG_EXPORT(63, void, png_destroy_info_struct, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1532 png_infopp info_ptr_ptr));
|
|
1533
|
|
1534 /* Free any memory associated with the png_struct and the png_info_structs */
|
|
1535 PNG_EXPORT(64, void, png_destroy_read_struct, (png_structpp png_ptr_ptr,
|
|
1536 png_infopp info_ptr_ptr, png_infopp end_info_ptr_ptr));
|
|
1537
|
|
1538 /* Free any memory associated with the png_struct and the png_info_structs */
|
|
1539 PNG_EXPORT(65, void, png_destroy_write_struct, (png_structpp png_ptr_ptr,
|
|
1540 png_infopp info_ptr_ptr));
|
|
1541
|
|
1542 /* Set the libpng method of handling chunk CRC errors */
|
|
1543 PNG_EXPORT(66, void, png_set_crc_action, (png_structrp png_ptr, int crit_action,
|
|
1544 int ancil_action));
|
|
1545
|
|
1546 /* Values for png_set_crc_action() say how to handle CRC errors in
|
|
1547 * ancillary and critical chunks, and whether to use the data contained
|
|
1548 * therein. Note that it is impossible to "discard" data in a critical
|
|
1549 * chunk. For versions prior to 0.90, the action was always error/quit,
|
|
1550 * whereas in version 0.90 and later, the action for CRC errors in ancillary
|
|
1551 * chunks is warn/discard. These values should NOT be changed.
|
|
1552 *
|
|
1553 * value action:critical action:ancillary
|
|
1554 */
|
|
1555 #define PNG_CRC_DEFAULT 0 /* error/quit warn/discard data */
|
|
1556 #define PNG_CRC_ERROR_QUIT 1 /* error/quit error/quit */
|
|
1557 #define PNG_CRC_WARN_DISCARD 2 /* (INVALID) warn/discard data */
|
|
1558 #define PNG_CRC_WARN_USE 3 /* warn/use data warn/use data */
|
|
1559 #define PNG_CRC_QUIET_USE 4 /* quiet/use data quiet/use data */
|
|
1560 #define PNG_CRC_NO_CHANGE 5 /* use current value use current value */
|
|
1561
|
|
1562 /* These functions give the user control over the scan-line filtering in
|
|
1563 * libpng and the compression methods used by zlib. These functions are
|
|
1564 * mainly useful for testing, as the defaults should work with most users.
|
|
1565 * Those users who are tight on memory or want faster performance at the
|
|
1566 * expense of compression can modify them. See the compression library
|
|
1567 * header file (zlib.h) for an explination of the compression functions.
|
|
1568 */
|
|
1569
|
|
1570 /* Set the filtering method(s) used by libpng. Currently, the only valid
|
|
1571 * value for "method" is 0.
|
|
1572 */
|
|
1573 PNG_EXPORT(67, void, png_set_filter, (png_structrp png_ptr, int method,
|
|
1574 int filters));
|
|
1575
|
|
1576 /* Flags for png_set_filter() to say which filters to use. The flags
|
|
1577 * are chosen so that they don't conflict with real filter types
|
|
1578 * below, in case they are supplied instead of the #defined constants.
|
|
1579 * These values should NOT be changed.
|
|
1580 */
|
|
1581 #define PNG_NO_FILTERS 0x00
|
|
1582 #define PNG_FILTER_NONE 0x08
|
|
1583 #define PNG_FILTER_SUB 0x10
|
|
1584 #define PNG_FILTER_UP 0x20
|
|
1585 #define PNG_FILTER_AVG 0x40
|
|
1586 #define PNG_FILTER_PAETH 0x80
|
|
1587 #define PNG_ALL_FILTERS (PNG_FILTER_NONE | PNG_FILTER_SUB | PNG_FILTER_UP | \
|
|
1588 PNG_FILTER_AVG | PNG_FILTER_PAETH)
|
|
1589
|
|
1590 /* Filter values (not flags) - used in pngwrite.c, pngwutil.c for now.
|
|
1591 * These defines should NOT be changed.
|
|
1592 */
|
|
1593 #define PNG_FILTER_VALUE_NONE 0
|
|
1594 #define PNG_FILTER_VALUE_SUB 1
|
|
1595 #define PNG_FILTER_VALUE_UP 2
|
|
1596 #define PNG_FILTER_VALUE_AVG 3
|
|
1597 #define PNG_FILTER_VALUE_PAETH 4
|
|
1598 #define PNG_FILTER_VALUE_LAST 5
|
|
1599
|
|
1600 #ifdef PNG_WRITE_WEIGHTED_FILTER_SUPPORTED /* EXPERIMENTAL */
|
|
1601 /* The "heuristic_method" is given by one of the PNG_FILTER_HEURISTIC_
|
|
1602 * defines, either the default (minimum-sum-of-absolute-differences), or
|
|
1603 * the experimental method (weighted-minimum-sum-of-absolute-differences).
|
|
1604 *
|
|
1605 * Weights are factors >= 1.0, indicating how important it is to keep the
|
|
1606 * filter type consistent between rows. Larger numbers mean the current
|
|
1607 * filter is that many times as likely to be the same as the "num_weights"
|
|
1608 * previous filters. This is cumulative for each previous row with a weight.
|
|
1609 * There needs to be "num_weights" values in "filter_weights", or it can be
|
|
1610 * NULL if the weights aren't being specified. Weights have no influence on
|
|
1611 * the selection of the first row filter. Well chosen weights can (in theory)
|
|
1612 * improve the compression for a given image.
|
|
1613 *
|
|
1614 * Costs are factors >= 1.0 indicating the relative decoding costs of a
|
|
1615 * filter type. Higher costs indicate more decoding expense, and are
|
|
1616 * therefore less likely to be selected over a filter with lower computational
|
|
1617 * costs. There needs to be a value in "filter_costs" for each valid filter
|
|
1618 * type (given by PNG_FILTER_VALUE_LAST), or it can be NULL if you aren't
|
|
1619 * setting the costs. Costs try to improve the speed of decompression without
|
|
1620 * unduly increasing the compressed image size.
|
|
1621 *
|
|
1622 * A negative weight or cost indicates the default value is to be used, and
|
|
1623 * values in the range [0.0, 1.0) indicate the value is to remain unchanged.
|
|
1624 * The default values for both weights and costs are currently 1.0, but may
|
|
1625 * change if good general weighting/cost heuristics can be found. If both
|
|
1626 * the weights and costs are set to 1.0, this degenerates the WEIGHTED method
|
|
1627 * to the UNWEIGHTED method, but with added encoding time/computation.
|
|
1628 */
|
|
1629 PNG_FP_EXPORT(68, void, png_set_filter_heuristics, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1630 int heuristic_method, int num_weights, png_const_doublep filter_weights,
|
|
1631 png_const_doublep filter_costs))
|
|
1632 PNG_FIXED_EXPORT(209, void, png_set_filter_heuristics_fixed,
|
|
1633 (png_structrp png_ptr, int heuristic_method, int num_weights,
|
|
1634 png_const_fixed_point_p filter_weights,
|
|
1635 png_const_fixed_point_p filter_costs))
|
|
1636 #endif /* PNG_WRITE_WEIGHTED_FILTER_SUPPORTED */
|
|
1637
|
|
1638 /* Heuristic used for row filter selection. These defines should NOT be
|
|
1639 * changed.
|
|
1640 */
|
|
1641 #define PNG_FILTER_HEURISTIC_DEFAULT 0 /* Currently "UNWEIGHTED" */
|
|
1642 #define PNG_FILTER_HEURISTIC_UNWEIGHTED 1 /* Used by libpng < 0.95 */
|
|
1643 #define PNG_FILTER_HEURISTIC_WEIGHTED 2 /* Experimental feature */
|
|
1644 #define PNG_FILTER_HEURISTIC_LAST 3 /* Not a valid value */
|
|
1645
|
|
1646 #ifdef PNG_WRITE_SUPPORTED
|
|
1647 /* Set the library compression level. Currently, valid values range from
|
|
1648 * 0 - 9, corresponding directly to the zlib compression levels 0 - 9
|
|
1649 * (0 - no compression, 9 - "maximal" compression). Note that tests have
|
|
1650 * shown that zlib compression levels 3-6 usually perform as well as level 9
|
|
1651 * for PNG images, and do considerably fewer caclulations. In the future,
|
|
1652 * these values may not correspond directly to the zlib compression levels.
|
|
1653 */
|
|
1654 PNG_EXPORT(69, void, png_set_compression_level, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1655 int level));
|
|
1656
|
|
1657 PNG_EXPORT(70, void, png_set_compression_mem_level, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1658 int mem_level));
|
|
1659
|
|
1660 PNG_EXPORT(71, void, png_set_compression_strategy, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1661 int strategy));
|
|
1662
|
|
1663 /* If PNG_WRITE_OPTIMIZE_CMF_SUPPORTED is defined, libpng will use a
|
|
1664 * smaller value of window_bits if it can do so safely.
|
|
1665 */
|
|
1666 PNG_EXPORT(72, void, png_set_compression_window_bits, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1667 int window_bits));
|
|
1668
|
|
1669 PNG_EXPORT(73, void, png_set_compression_method, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1670 int method));
|
|
1671 #endif
|
|
1672
|
|
1673 #ifdef PNG_WRITE_CUSTOMIZE_ZTXT_COMPRESSION_SUPPORTED
|
|
1674 /* Also set zlib parameters for compressing non-IDAT chunks */
|
|
1675 PNG_EXPORT(222, void, png_set_text_compression_level, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1676 int level));
|
|
1677
|
|
1678 PNG_EXPORT(223, void, png_set_text_compression_mem_level, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1679 int mem_level));
|
|
1680
|
|
1681 PNG_EXPORT(224, void, png_set_text_compression_strategy, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1682 int strategy));
|
|
1683
|
|
1684 /* If PNG_WRITE_OPTIMIZE_CMF_SUPPORTED is defined, libpng will use a
|
|
1685 * smaller value of window_bits if it can do so safely.
|
|
1686 */
|
|
1687 PNG_EXPORT(225, void, png_set_text_compression_window_bits,
|
|
1688 (png_structrp png_ptr, int window_bits));
|
|
1689
|
|
1690 PNG_EXPORT(226, void, png_set_text_compression_method, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1691 int method));
|
|
1692 #endif /* PNG_WRITE_CUSTOMIZE_ZTXT_COMPRESSION_SUPPORTED */
|
|
1693
|
|
1694 /* These next functions are called for input/output, memory, and error
|
|
1695 * handling. They are in the file pngrio.c, pngwio.c, and pngerror.c,
|
|
1696 * and call standard C I/O routines such as fread(), fwrite(), and
|
|
1697 * fprintf(). These functions can be made to use other I/O routines
|
|
1698 * at run time for those applications that need to handle I/O in a
|
|
1699 * different manner by calling png_set_???_fn(). See libpng-manual.txt for
|
|
1700 * more information.
|
|
1701 */
|
|
1702
|
|
1703 #ifdef PNG_STDIO_SUPPORTED
|
|
1704 /* Initialize the input/output for the PNG file to the default functions. */
|
|
1705 PNG_EXPORT(74, void, png_init_io, (png_structrp png_ptr, png_FILE_p fp));
|
|
1706 #endif
|
|
1707
|
|
1708 /* Replace the (error and abort), and warning functions with user
|
|
1709 * supplied functions. If no messages are to be printed you must still
|
|
1710 * write and use replacement functions. The replacement error_fn should
|
|
1711 * still do a longjmp to the last setjmp location if you are using this
|
|
1712 * method of error handling. If error_fn or warning_fn is NULL, the
|
|
1713 * default function will be used.
|
|
1714 */
|
|
1715
|
|
1716 PNG_EXPORT(75, void, png_set_error_fn, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1717 png_voidp error_ptr, png_error_ptr error_fn, png_error_ptr warning_fn));
|
|
1718
|
|
1719 /* Return the user pointer associated with the error functions */
|
|
1720 PNG_EXPORT(76, png_voidp, png_get_error_ptr, (png_const_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
1721
|
|
1722 /* Replace the default data output functions with a user supplied one(s).
|
|
1723 * If buffered output is not used, then output_flush_fn can be set to NULL.
|
|
1724 * If PNG_WRITE_FLUSH_SUPPORTED is not defined at libpng compile time
|
|
1725 * output_flush_fn will be ignored (and thus can be NULL).
|
|
1726 * It is probably a mistake to use NULL for output_flush_fn if
|
|
1727 * write_data_fn is not also NULL unless you have built libpng with
|
|
1728 * PNG_WRITE_FLUSH_SUPPORTED undefined, because in this case libpng's
|
|
1729 * default flush function, which uses the standard *FILE structure, will
|
|
1730 * be used.
|
|
1731 */
|
|
1732 PNG_EXPORT(77, void, png_set_write_fn, (png_structrp png_ptr, png_voidp io_ptr,
|
|
1733 png_rw_ptr write_data_fn, png_flush_ptr output_flush_fn));
|
|
1734
|
|
1735 /* Replace the default data input function with a user supplied one. */
|
|
1736 PNG_EXPORT(78, void, png_set_read_fn, (png_structrp png_ptr, png_voidp io_ptr,
|
|
1737 png_rw_ptr read_data_fn));
|
|
1738
|
|
1739 /* Return the user pointer associated with the I/O functions */
|
|
1740 PNG_EXPORT(79, png_voidp, png_get_io_ptr, (png_const_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
1741
|
|
1742 PNG_EXPORT(80, void, png_set_read_status_fn, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1743 png_read_status_ptr read_row_fn));
|
|
1744
|
|
1745 PNG_EXPORT(81, void, png_set_write_status_fn, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1746 png_write_status_ptr write_row_fn));
|
|
1747
|
|
1748 #ifdef PNG_USER_MEM_SUPPORTED
|
|
1749 /* Replace the default memory allocation functions with user supplied one(s). */
|
|
1750 PNG_EXPORT(82, void, png_set_mem_fn, (png_structrp png_ptr, png_voidp mem_ptr,
|
|
1751 png_malloc_ptr malloc_fn, png_free_ptr free_fn));
|
|
1752 /* Return the user pointer associated with the memory functions */
|
|
1753 PNG_EXPORT(83, png_voidp, png_get_mem_ptr, (png_const_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
1754 #endif
|
|
1755
|
|
1756 #ifdef PNG_READ_USER_TRANSFORM_SUPPORTED
|
|
1757 PNG_EXPORT(84, void, png_set_read_user_transform_fn, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1758 png_user_transform_ptr read_user_transform_fn));
|
|
1759 #endif
|
|
1760
|
|
1761 #ifdef PNG_WRITE_USER_TRANSFORM_SUPPORTED
|
|
1762 PNG_EXPORT(85, void, png_set_write_user_transform_fn, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1763 png_user_transform_ptr write_user_transform_fn));
|
|
1764 #endif
|
|
1765
|
|
1766 #ifdef PNG_USER_TRANSFORM_PTR_SUPPORTED
|
|
1767 PNG_EXPORT(86, void, png_set_user_transform_info, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1768 png_voidp user_transform_ptr, int user_transform_depth,
|
|
1769 int user_transform_channels));
|
|
1770 /* Return the user pointer associated with the user transform functions */
|
|
1771 PNG_EXPORT(87, png_voidp, png_get_user_transform_ptr,
|
|
1772 (png_const_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
1773 #endif
|
|
1774
|
|
1775 #ifdef PNG_USER_TRANSFORM_INFO_SUPPORTED
|
|
1776 /* Return information about the row currently being processed. Note that these
|
|
1777 * APIs do not fail but will return unexpected results if called outside a user
|
|
1778 * transform callback. Also note that when transforming an interlaced image the
|
|
1779 * row number is the row number within the sub-image of the interlace pass, so
|
|
1780 * the value will increase to the height of the sub-image (not the full image)
|
|
1781 * then reset to 0 for the next pass.
|
|
1782 *
|
|
1783 * Use PNG_ROW_FROM_PASS_ROW(row, pass) and PNG_COL_FROM_PASS_COL(col, pass) to
|
|
1784 * find the output pixel (x,y) given an interlaced sub-image pixel
|
|
1785 * (row,col,pass). (See below for these macros.)
|
|
1786 */
|
|
1787 PNG_EXPORT(217, png_uint_32, png_get_current_row_number, (png_const_structrp));
|
|
1788 PNG_EXPORT(218, png_byte, png_get_current_pass_number, (png_const_structrp));
|
|
1789 #endif
|
|
1790
|
|
1791 #ifdef PNG_READ_USER_CHUNKS_SUPPORTED
|
|
1792 /* This callback is called only for *unknown* chunks. If
|
|
1793 * PNG_HANDLE_AS_UNKNOWN_SUPPORTED is set then it is possible to set known
|
|
1794 * chunks to be treated as unknown, however in this case the callback must do
|
|
1795 * any processing required by the chunk (e.g. by calling the appropriate
|
|
1796 * png_set_ APIs.)
|
|
1797 *
|
|
1798 * There is no write support - on write, by default, all the chunks in the
|
|
1799 * 'unknown' list are written in the specified position.
|
|
1800 *
|
|
1801 * The integer return from the callback function is interpreted thus:
|
|
1802 *
|
|
1803 * negative: An error occured, png_chunk_error will be called.
|
|
1804 * zero: The chunk was not handled, the chunk will be saved. A critical
|
|
1805 * chunk will cause an error at this point unless it is to be saved.
|
|
1806 * positive: The chunk was handled, libpng will ignore/discard it.
|
|
1807 *
|
|
1808 * See "INTERACTION WTIH USER CHUNK CALLBACKS" below for important notes about
|
|
1809 * how this behavior will change in libpng 1.7
|
|
1810 */
|
|
1811 PNG_EXPORT(88, void, png_set_read_user_chunk_fn, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1812 png_voidp user_chunk_ptr, png_user_chunk_ptr read_user_chunk_fn));
|
|
1813 #endif
|
|
1814
|
|
1815 #ifdef PNG_USER_CHUNKS_SUPPORTED
|
|
1816 PNG_EXPORT(89, png_voidp, png_get_user_chunk_ptr, (png_const_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
1817 #endif
|
|
1818
|
|
1819 #ifdef PNG_PROGRESSIVE_READ_SUPPORTED
|
|
1820 /* Sets the function callbacks for the push reader, and a pointer to a
|
|
1821 * user-defined structure available to the callback functions.
|
|
1822 */
|
|
1823 PNG_EXPORT(90, void, png_set_progressive_read_fn, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1824 png_voidp progressive_ptr, png_progressive_info_ptr info_fn,
|
|
1825 png_progressive_row_ptr row_fn, png_progressive_end_ptr end_fn));
|
|
1826
|
|
1827 /* Returns the user pointer associated with the push read functions */
|
|
1828 PNG_EXPORT(91, png_voidp, png_get_progressive_ptr,
|
|
1829 (png_const_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
1830
|
|
1831 /* Function to be called when data becomes available */
|
|
1832 PNG_EXPORT(92, void, png_process_data, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1833 png_inforp info_ptr, png_bytep buffer, png_size_t buffer_size));
|
|
1834
|
|
1835 /* A function which may be called *only* within png_process_data to stop the
|
|
1836 * processing of any more data. The function returns the number of bytes
|
|
1837 * remaining, excluding any that libpng has cached internally. A subsequent
|
|
1838 * call to png_process_data must supply these bytes again. If the argument
|
|
1839 * 'save' is set to true the routine will first save all the pending data and
|
|
1840 * will always return 0.
|
|
1841 */
|
|
1842 PNG_EXPORT(219, png_size_t, png_process_data_pause, (png_structrp, int save));
|
|
1843
|
|
1844 /* A function which may be called *only* outside (after) a call to
|
|
1845 * png_process_data. It returns the number of bytes of data to skip in the
|
|
1846 * input. Normally it will return 0, but if it returns a non-zero value the
|
|
1847 * application must skip than number of bytes of input data and pass the
|
|
1848 * following data to the next call to png_process_data.
|
|
1849 */
|
|
1850 PNG_EXPORT(220, png_uint_32, png_process_data_skip, (png_structrp));
|
|
1851
|
|
1852 #ifdef PNG_READ_INTERLACING_SUPPORTED
|
|
1853 /* Function that combines rows. 'new_row' is a flag that should come from
|
|
1854 * the callback and be non-NULL if anything needs to be done; the library
|
|
1855 * stores its own version of the new data internally and ignores the passed
|
|
1856 * in value.
|
|
1857 */
|
|
1858 PNG_EXPORT(93, void, png_progressive_combine_row, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1859 png_bytep old_row, png_const_bytep new_row));
|
|
1860 #endif /* PNG_READ_INTERLACING_SUPPORTED */
|
|
1861 #endif /* PNG_PROGRESSIVE_READ_SUPPORTED */
|
|
1862
|
|
1863 PNG_EXPORTA(94, png_voidp, png_malloc, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1864 png_alloc_size_t size), PNG_ALLOCATED);
|
|
1865 /* Added at libpng version 1.4.0 */
|
|
1866 PNG_EXPORTA(95, png_voidp, png_calloc, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1867 png_alloc_size_t size), PNG_ALLOCATED);
|
|
1868
|
|
1869 /* Added at libpng version 1.2.4 */
|
|
1870 PNG_EXPORTA(96, png_voidp, png_malloc_warn, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1871 png_alloc_size_t size), PNG_ALLOCATED);
|
|
1872
|
|
1873 /* Frees a pointer allocated by png_malloc() */
|
|
1874 PNG_EXPORT(97, void, png_free, (png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_voidp ptr));
|
|
1875
|
|
1876 /* Free data that was allocated internally */
|
|
1877 PNG_EXPORT(98, void, png_free_data, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1878 png_inforp info_ptr, png_uint_32 free_me, int num));
|
|
1879
|
|
1880 /* Reassign responsibility for freeing existing data, whether allocated
|
|
1881 * by libpng or by the application; this works on the png_info structure passed
|
|
1882 * in, it does not change the state for other png_info structures.
|
|
1883 *
|
|
1884 * It is unlikely that this function works correctly as of 1.6.0 and using it
|
|
1885 * may result either in memory leaks or double free of allocated data.
|
|
1886 */
|
|
1887 PNG_EXPORT(99, void, png_data_freer, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1888 png_inforp info_ptr, int freer, png_uint_32 mask));
|
|
1889
|
|
1890 /* Assignments for png_data_freer */
|
|
1891 #define PNG_DESTROY_WILL_FREE_DATA 1
|
|
1892 #define PNG_SET_WILL_FREE_DATA 1
|
|
1893 #define PNG_USER_WILL_FREE_DATA 2
|
|
1894 /* Flags for png_ptr->free_me and info_ptr->free_me */
|
|
1895 #define PNG_FREE_HIST 0x0008
|
|
1896 #define PNG_FREE_ICCP 0x0010
|
|
1897 #define PNG_FREE_SPLT 0x0020
|
|
1898 #define PNG_FREE_ROWS 0x0040
|
|
1899 #define PNG_FREE_PCAL 0x0080
|
|
1900 #define PNG_FREE_SCAL 0x0100
|
|
1901 #ifdef PNG_STORE_UNKNOWN_CHUNKS_SUPPORTED
|
|
1902 # define PNG_FREE_UNKN 0x0200
|
|
1903 #endif
|
|
1904 /* PNG_FREE_LIST 0x0400 removed in 1.6.0 because it is ignored */
|
|
1905 #define PNG_FREE_PLTE 0x1000
|
|
1906 #define PNG_FREE_TRNS 0x2000
|
|
1907 #define PNG_FREE_TEXT 0x4000
|
|
1908 #define PNG_FREE_ALL 0x7fff
|
|
1909 #define PNG_FREE_MUL 0x4220 /* PNG_FREE_SPLT|PNG_FREE_TEXT|PNG_FREE_UNKN */
|
|
1910
|
|
1911 #ifdef PNG_USER_MEM_SUPPORTED
|
|
1912 PNG_EXPORTA(100, png_voidp, png_malloc_default, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1913 png_alloc_size_t size), PNG_ALLOCATED PNG_DEPRECATED);
|
|
1914 PNG_EXPORTA(101, void, png_free_default, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1915 png_voidp ptr), PNG_DEPRECATED);
|
|
1916 #endif
|
|
1917
|
|
1918 #ifdef PNG_ERROR_TEXT_SUPPORTED
|
|
1919 /* Fatal error in PNG image of libpng - can't continue */
|
|
1920 PNG_EXPORTA(102, void, png_error, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1921 png_const_charp error_message), PNG_NORETURN);
|
|
1922
|
|
1923 /* The same, but the chunk name is prepended to the error string. */
|
|
1924 PNG_EXPORTA(103, void, png_chunk_error, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1925 png_const_charp error_message), PNG_NORETURN);
|
|
1926
|
|
1927 #else
|
|
1928 /* Fatal error in PNG image of libpng - can't continue */
|
|
1929 PNG_EXPORTA(104, void, png_err, (png_const_structrp png_ptr), PNG_NORETURN);
|
|
1930 # define png_error(s1,s2) png_err(s1)
|
|
1931 # define png_chunk_error(s1,s2) png_err(s1)
|
|
1932 #endif
|
|
1933
|
|
1934 #ifdef PNG_WARNINGS_SUPPORTED
|
|
1935 /* Non-fatal error in libpng. Can continue, but may have a problem. */
|
|
1936 PNG_EXPORT(105, void, png_warning, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1937 png_const_charp warning_message));
|
|
1938
|
|
1939 /* Non-fatal error in libpng, chunk name is prepended to message. */
|
|
1940 PNG_EXPORT(106, void, png_chunk_warning, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1941 png_const_charp warning_message));
|
|
1942 #else
|
|
1943 # define png_warning(s1,s2) ((void)(s1))
|
|
1944 # define png_chunk_warning(s1,s2) ((void)(s1))
|
|
1945 #endif
|
|
1946
|
|
1947 #ifdef PNG_BENIGN_ERRORS_SUPPORTED
|
|
1948 /* Benign error in libpng. Can continue, but may have a problem.
|
|
1949 * User can choose whether to handle as a fatal error or as a warning. */
|
|
1950 PNG_EXPORT(107, void, png_benign_error, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1951 png_const_charp warning_message));
|
|
1952
|
|
1953 #ifdef PNG_READ_SUPPORTED
|
|
1954 /* Same, chunk name is prepended to message (only during read) */
|
|
1955 PNG_EXPORT(108, void, png_chunk_benign_error, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1956 png_const_charp warning_message));
|
|
1957 #endif
|
|
1958
|
|
1959 PNG_EXPORT(109, void, png_set_benign_errors,
|
|
1960 (png_structrp png_ptr, int allowed));
|
|
1961 #else
|
|
1962 # ifdef PNG_ALLOW_BENIGN_ERRORS
|
|
1963 # define png_benign_error png_warning
|
|
1964 # define png_chunk_benign_error png_chunk_warning
|
|
1965 # else
|
|
1966 # define png_benign_error png_error
|
|
1967 # define png_chunk_benign_error png_chunk_error
|
|
1968 # endif
|
|
1969 #endif
|
|
1970
|
|
1971 /* The png_set_<chunk> functions are for storing values in the png_info_struct.
|
|
1972 * Similarly, the png_get_<chunk> calls are used to read values from the
|
|
1973 * png_info_struct, either storing the parameters in the passed variables, or
|
|
1974 * setting pointers into the png_info_struct where the data is stored. The
|
|
1975 * png_get_<chunk> functions return a non-zero value if the data was available
|
|
1976 * in info_ptr, or return zero and do not change any of the parameters if the
|
|
1977 * data was not available.
|
|
1978 *
|
|
1979 * These functions should be used instead of directly accessing png_info
|
|
1980 * to avoid problems with future changes in the size and internal layout of
|
|
1981 * png_info_struct.
|
|
1982 */
|
|
1983 /* Returns "flag" if chunk data is valid in info_ptr. */
|
|
1984 PNG_EXPORT(110, png_uint_32, png_get_valid, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1985 png_const_inforp info_ptr, png_uint_32 flag));
|
|
1986
|
|
1987 /* Returns number of bytes needed to hold a transformed row. */
|
|
1988 PNG_EXPORT(111, png_size_t, png_get_rowbytes, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1989 png_const_inforp info_ptr));
|
|
1990
|
|
1991 #ifdef PNG_INFO_IMAGE_SUPPORTED
|
|
1992 /* Returns row_pointers, which is an array of pointers to scanlines that was
|
|
1993 * returned from png_read_png().
|
|
1994 */
|
|
1995 PNG_EXPORT(112, png_bytepp, png_get_rows, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
1996 png_const_inforp info_ptr));
|
|
1997
|
|
1998 /* Set row_pointers, which is an array of pointers to scanlines for use
|
|
1999 * by png_write_png().
|
|
2000 */
|
|
2001 PNG_EXPORT(113, void, png_set_rows, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2002 png_inforp info_ptr, png_bytepp row_pointers));
|
|
2003 #endif
|
|
2004
|
|
2005 /* Returns number of color channels in image. */
|
|
2006 PNG_EXPORT(114, png_byte, png_get_channels, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2007 png_const_inforp info_ptr));
|
|
2008
|
|
2009 #ifdef PNG_EASY_ACCESS_SUPPORTED
|
|
2010 /* Returns image width in pixels. */
|
|
2011 PNG_EXPORT(115, png_uint_32, png_get_image_width, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2012 png_const_inforp info_ptr));
|
|
2013
|
|
2014 /* Returns image height in pixels. */
|
|
2015 PNG_EXPORT(116, png_uint_32, png_get_image_height, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2016 png_const_inforp info_ptr));
|
|
2017
|
|
2018 /* Returns image bit_depth. */
|
|
2019 PNG_EXPORT(117, png_byte, png_get_bit_depth, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2020 png_const_inforp info_ptr));
|
|
2021
|
|
2022 /* Returns image color_type. */
|
|
2023 PNG_EXPORT(118, png_byte, png_get_color_type, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2024 png_const_inforp info_ptr));
|
|
2025
|
|
2026 /* Returns image filter_type. */
|
|
2027 PNG_EXPORT(119, png_byte, png_get_filter_type, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2028 png_const_inforp info_ptr));
|
|
2029
|
|
2030 /* Returns image interlace_type. */
|
|
2031 PNG_EXPORT(120, png_byte, png_get_interlace_type, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2032 png_const_inforp info_ptr));
|
|
2033
|
|
2034 /* Returns image compression_type. */
|
|
2035 PNG_EXPORT(121, png_byte, png_get_compression_type, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2036 png_const_inforp info_ptr));
|
|
2037
|
|
2038 /* Returns image resolution in pixels per meter, from pHYs chunk data. */
|
|
2039 PNG_EXPORT(122, png_uint_32, png_get_pixels_per_meter,
|
|
2040 (png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_const_inforp info_ptr));
|
|
2041 PNG_EXPORT(123, png_uint_32, png_get_x_pixels_per_meter,
|
|
2042 (png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_const_inforp info_ptr));
|
|
2043 PNG_EXPORT(124, png_uint_32, png_get_y_pixels_per_meter,
|
|
2044 (png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_const_inforp info_ptr));
|
|
2045
|
|
2046 /* Returns pixel aspect ratio, computed from pHYs chunk data. */
|
|
2047 PNG_FP_EXPORT(125, float, png_get_pixel_aspect_ratio,
|
|
2048 (png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_const_inforp info_ptr))
|
|
2049 PNG_FIXED_EXPORT(210, png_fixed_point, png_get_pixel_aspect_ratio_fixed,
|
|
2050 (png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_const_inforp info_ptr))
|
|
2051
|
|
2052 /* Returns image x, y offset in pixels or microns, from oFFs chunk data. */
|
|
2053 PNG_EXPORT(126, png_int_32, png_get_x_offset_pixels,
|
|
2054 (png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_const_inforp info_ptr));
|
|
2055 PNG_EXPORT(127, png_int_32, png_get_y_offset_pixels,
|
|
2056 (png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_const_inforp info_ptr));
|
|
2057 PNG_EXPORT(128, png_int_32, png_get_x_offset_microns,
|
|
2058 (png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_const_inforp info_ptr));
|
|
2059 PNG_EXPORT(129, png_int_32, png_get_y_offset_microns,
|
|
2060 (png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_const_inforp info_ptr));
|
|
2061
|
|
2062 #endif /* PNG_EASY_ACCESS_SUPPORTED */
|
|
2063
|
|
2064 #ifdef PNG_READ_SUPPORTED
|
|
2065 /* Returns pointer to signature string read from PNG header */
|
|
2066 PNG_EXPORT(130, png_const_bytep, png_get_signature, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2067 png_const_inforp info_ptr));
|
|
2068 #endif
|
|
2069
|
|
2070 #ifdef PNG_bKGD_SUPPORTED
|
|
2071 PNG_EXPORT(131, png_uint_32, png_get_bKGD, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2072 png_inforp info_ptr, png_color_16p *background));
|
|
2073 #endif
|
|
2074
|
|
2075 #ifdef PNG_bKGD_SUPPORTED
|
|
2076 PNG_EXPORT(132, void, png_set_bKGD, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2077 png_inforp info_ptr, png_const_color_16p background));
|
|
2078 #endif
|
|
2079
|
|
2080 #ifdef PNG_cHRM_SUPPORTED
|
|
2081 PNG_FP_EXPORT(133, png_uint_32, png_get_cHRM, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2082 png_const_inforp info_ptr, double *white_x, double *white_y, double *red_x,
|
|
2083 double *red_y, double *green_x, double *green_y, double *blue_x,
|
|
2084 double *blue_y))
|
|
2085 PNG_FP_EXPORT(230, png_uint_32, png_get_cHRM_XYZ, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2086 png_const_inforp info_ptr, double *red_X, double *red_Y, double *red_Z,
|
|
2087 double *green_X, double *green_Y, double *green_Z, double *blue_X,
|
|
2088 double *blue_Y, double *blue_Z))
|
|
2089 PNG_FIXED_EXPORT(134, png_uint_32, png_get_cHRM_fixed,
|
|
2090 (png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_const_inforp info_ptr,
|
|
2091 png_fixed_point *int_white_x, png_fixed_point *int_white_y,
|
|
2092 png_fixed_point *int_red_x, png_fixed_point *int_red_y,
|
|
2093 png_fixed_point *int_green_x, png_fixed_point *int_green_y,
|
|
2094 png_fixed_point *int_blue_x, png_fixed_point *int_blue_y))
|
|
2095 PNG_FIXED_EXPORT(231, png_uint_32, png_get_cHRM_XYZ_fixed,
|
|
2096 (png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_const_inforp info_ptr,
|
|
2097 png_fixed_point *int_red_X, png_fixed_point *int_red_Y,
|
|
2098 png_fixed_point *int_red_Z, png_fixed_point *int_green_X,
|
|
2099 png_fixed_point *int_green_Y, png_fixed_point *int_green_Z,
|
|
2100 png_fixed_point *int_blue_X, png_fixed_point *int_blue_Y,
|
|
2101 png_fixed_point *int_blue_Z))
|
|
2102 #endif
|
|
2103
|
|
2104 #ifdef PNG_cHRM_SUPPORTED
|
|
2105 PNG_FP_EXPORT(135, void, png_set_cHRM, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2106 png_inforp info_ptr,
|
|
2107 double white_x, double white_y, double red_x, double red_y, double green_x,
|
|
2108 double green_y, double blue_x, double blue_y))
|
|
2109 PNG_FP_EXPORT(232, void, png_set_cHRM_XYZ, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2110 png_inforp info_ptr, double red_X, double red_Y, double red_Z,
|
|
2111 double green_X, double green_Y, double green_Z, double blue_X,
|
|
2112 double blue_Y, double blue_Z))
|
|
2113 PNG_FIXED_EXPORT(136, void, png_set_cHRM_fixed, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2114 png_inforp info_ptr, png_fixed_point int_white_x,
|
|
2115 png_fixed_point int_white_y, png_fixed_point int_red_x,
|
|
2116 png_fixed_point int_red_y, png_fixed_point int_green_x,
|
|
2117 png_fixed_point int_green_y, png_fixed_point int_blue_x,
|
|
2118 png_fixed_point int_blue_y))
|
|
2119 PNG_FIXED_EXPORT(233, void, png_set_cHRM_XYZ_fixed, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2120 png_inforp info_ptr, png_fixed_point int_red_X, png_fixed_point int_red_Y,
|
|
2121 png_fixed_point int_red_Z, png_fixed_point int_green_X,
|
|
2122 png_fixed_point int_green_Y, png_fixed_point int_green_Z,
|
|
2123 png_fixed_point int_blue_X, png_fixed_point int_blue_Y,
|
|
2124 png_fixed_point int_blue_Z))
|
|
2125 #endif
|
|
2126
|
|
2127 #ifdef PNG_gAMA_SUPPORTED
|
|
2128 PNG_FP_EXPORT(137, png_uint_32, png_get_gAMA, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2129 png_const_inforp info_ptr, double *file_gamma))
|
|
2130 PNG_FIXED_EXPORT(138, png_uint_32, png_get_gAMA_fixed,
|
|
2131 (png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_const_inforp info_ptr,
|
|
2132 png_fixed_point *int_file_gamma))
|
|
2133 #endif
|
|
2134
|
|
2135 #ifdef PNG_gAMA_SUPPORTED
|
|
2136 PNG_FP_EXPORT(139, void, png_set_gAMA, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2137 png_inforp info_ptr, double file_gamma))
|
|
2138 PNG_FIXED_EXPORT(140, void, png_set_gAMA_fixed, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2139 png_inforp info_ptr, png_fixed_point int_file_gamma))
|
|
2140 #endif
|
|
2141
|
|
2142 #ifdef PNG_hIST_SUPPORTED
|
|
2143 PNG_EXPORT(141, png_uint_32, png_get_hIST, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2144 png_inforp info_ptr, png_uint_16p *hist));
|
|
2145 #endif
|
|
2146
|
|
2147 #ifdef PNG_hIST_SUPPORTED
|
|
2148 PNG_EXPORT(142, void, png_set_hIST, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2149 png_inforp info_ptr, png_const_uint_16p hist));
|
|
2150 #endif
|
|
2151
|
|
2152 PNG_EXPORT(143, png_uint_32, png_get_IHDR, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2153 png_const_inforp info_ptr, png_uint_32 *width, png_uint_32 *height,
|
|
2154 int *bit_depth, int *color_type, int *interlace_method,
|
|
2155 int *compression_method, int *filter_method));
|
|
2156
|
|
2157 PNG_EXPORT(144, void, png_set_IHDR, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2158 png_inforp info_ptr, png_uint_32 width, png_uint_32 height, int bit_depth,
|
|
2159 int color_type, int interlace_method, int compression_method,
|
|
2160 int filter_method));
|
|
2161
|
|
2162 #ifdef PNG_oFFs_SUPPORTED
|
|
2163 PNG_EXPORT(145, png_uint_32, png_get_oFFs, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2164 png_const_inforp info_ptr, png_int_32 *offset_x, png_int_32 *offset_y,
|
|
2165 int *unit_type));
|
|
2166 #endif
|
|
2167
|
|
2168 #ifdef PNG_oFFs_SUPPORTED
|
|
2169 PNG_EXPORT(146, void, png_set_oFFs, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2170 png_inforp info_ptr, png_int_32 offset_x, png_int_32 offset_y,
|
|
2171 int unit_type));
|
|
2172 #endif
|
|
2173
|
|
2174 #ifdef PNG_pCAL_SUPPORTED
|
|
2175 PNG_EXPORT(147, png_uint_32, png_get_pCAL, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2176 png_inforp info_ptr, png_charp *purpose, png_int_32 *X0,
|
|
2177 png_int_32 *X1, int *type, int *nparams, png_charp *units,
|
|
2178 png_charpp *params));
|
|
2179 #endif
|
|
2180
|
|
2181 #ifdef PNG_pCAL_SUPPORTED
|
|
2182 PNG_EXPORT(148, void, png_set_pCAL, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2183 png_inforp info_ptr, png_const_charp purpose, png_int_32 X0, png_int_32 X1,
|
|
2184 int type, int nparams, png_const_charp units, png_charpp params));
|
|
2185 #endif
|
|
2186
|
|
2187 #ifdef PNG_pHYs_SUPPORTED
|
|
2188 PNG_EXPORT(149, png_uint_32, png_get_pHYs, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2189 png_const_inforp info_ptr, png_uint_32 *res_x, png_uint_32 *res_y,
|
|
2190 int *unit_type));
|
|
2191 #endif
|
|
2192
|
|
2193 #ifdef PNG_pHYs_SUPPORTED
|
|
2194 PNG_EXPORT(150, void, png_set_pHYs, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2195 png_inforp info_ptr, png_uint_32 res_x, png_uint_32 res_y, int unit_type));
|
|
2196 #endif
|
|
2197
|
|
2198 PNG_EXPORT(151, png_uint_32, png_get_PLTE, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2199 png_inforp info_ptr, png_colorp *palette, int *num_palette));
|
|
2200
|
|
2201 PNG_EXPORT(152, void, png_set_PLTE, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2202 png_inforp info_ptr, png_const_colorp palette, int num_palette));
|
|
2203
|
|
2204 #ifdef PNG_sBIT_SUPPORTED
|
|
2205 PNG_EXPORT(153, png_uint_32, png_get_sBIT, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2206 png_inforp info_ptr, png_color_8p *sig_bit));
|
|
2207 #endif
|
|
2208
|
|
2209 #ifdef PNG_sBIT_SUPPORTED
|
|
2210 PNG_EXPORT(154, void, png_set_sBIT, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2211 png_inforp info_ptr, png_const_color_8p sig_bit));
|
|
2212 #endif
|
|
2213
|
|
2214 #ifdef PNG_sRGB_SUPPORTED
|
|
2215 PNG_EXPORT(155, png_uint_32, png_get_sRGB, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2216 png_const_inforp info_ptr, int *file_srgb_intent));
|
|
2217 #endif
|
|
2218
|
|
2219 #ifdef PNG_sRGB_SUPPORTED
|
|
2220 PNG_EXPORT(156, void, png_set_sRGB, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2221 png_inforp info_ptr, int srgb_intent));
|
|
2222 PNG_EXPORT(157, void, png_set_sRGB_gAMA_and_cHRM, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2223 png_inforp info_ptr, int srgb_intent));
|
|
2224 #endif
|
|
2225
|
|
2226 #ifdef PNG_iCCP_SUPPORTED
|
|
2227 PNG_EXPORT(158, png_uint_32, png_get_iCCP, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2228 png_inforp info_ptr, png_charpp name, int *compression_type,
|
|
2229 png_bytepp profile, png_uint_32 *proflen));
|
|
2230 #endif
|
|
2231
|
|
2232 #ifdef PNG_iCCP_SUPPORTED
|
|
2233 PNG_EXPORT(159, void, png_set_iCCP, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2234 png_inforp info_ptr, png_const_charp name, int compression_type,
|
|
2235 png_const_bytep profile, png_uint_32 proflen));
|
|
2236 #endif
|
|
2237
|
|
2238 #ifdef PNG_sPLT_SUPPORTED
|
|
2239 PNG_EXPORT(160, int, png_get_sPLT, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2240 png_inforp info_ptr, png_sPLT_tpp entries));
|
|
2241 #endif
|
|
2242
|
|
2243 #ifdef PNG_sPLT_SUPPORTED
|
|
2244 PNG_EXPORT(161, void, png_set_sPLT, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2245 png_inforp info_ptr, png_const_sPLT_tp entries, int nentries));
|
|
2246 #endif
|
|
2247
|
|
2248 #ifdef PNG_TEXT_SUPPORTED
|
|
2249 /* png_get_text also returns the number of text chunks in *num_text */
|
|
2250 PNG_EXPORT(162, int, png_get_text, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2251 png_inforp info_ptr, png_textp *text_ptr, int *num_text));
|
|
2252 #endif
|
|
2253
|
|
2254 /* Note while png_set_text() will accept a structure whose text,
|
|
2255 * language, and translated keywords are NULL pointers, the structure
|
|
2256 * returned by png_get_text will always contain regular
|
|
2257 * zero-terminated C strings. They might be empty strings but
|
|
2258 * they will never be NULL pointers.
|
|
2259 */
|
|
2260
|
|
2261 #ifdef PNG_TEXT_SUPPORTED
|
|
2262 PNG_EXPORT(163, void, png_set_text, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2263 png_inforp info_ptr, png_const_textp text_ptr, int num_text));
|
|
2264 #endif
|
|
2265
|
|
2266 #ifdef PNG_tIME_SUPPORTED
|
|
2267 PNG_EXPORT(164, png_uint_32, png_get_tIME, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2268 png_inforp info_ptr, png_timep *mod_time));
|
|
2269 #endif
|
|
2270
|
|
2271 #ifdef PNG_tIME_SUPPORTED
|
|
2272 PNG_EXPORT(165, void, png_set_tIME, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2273 png_inforp info_ptr, png_const_timep mod_time));
|
|
2274 #endif
|
|
2275
|
|
2276 #ifdef PNG_tRNS_SUPPORTED
|
|
2277 PNG_EXPORT(166, png_uint_32, png_get_tRNS, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2278 png_inforp info_ptr, png_bytep *trans_alpha, int *num_trans,
|
|
2279 png_color_16p *trans_color));
|
|
2280 #endif
|
|
2281
|
|
2282 #ifdef PNG_tRNS_SUPPORTED
|
|
2283 PNG_EXPORT(167, void, png_set_tRNS, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2284 png_inforp info_ptr, png_const_bytep trans_alpha, int num_trans,
|
|
2285 png_const_color_16p trans_color));
|
|
2286 #endif
|
|
2287
|
|
2288 #ifdef PNG_sCAL_SUPPORTED
|
|
2289 PNG_FP_EXPORT(168, png_uint_32, png_get_sCAL, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2290 png_const_inforp info_ptr, int *unit, double *width, double *height))
|
|
2291 #if defined(PNG_FLOATING_ARITHMETIC_SUPPORTED) || \
|
|
2292 defined(PNG_FLOATING_POINT_SUPPORTED)
|
|
2293 /* NOTE: this API is currently implemented using floating point arithmetic,
|
|
2294 * consequently it can only be used on systems with floating point support.
|
|
2295 * In any case the range of values supported by png_fixed_point is small and it
|
|
2296 * is highly recommended that png_get_sCAL_s be used instead.
|
|
2297 */
|
|
2298 PNG_FIXED_EXPORT(214, png_uint_32, png_get_sCAL_fixed,
|
|
2299 (png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_const_inforp info_ptr, int *unit,
|
|
2300 png_fixed_point *width, png_fixed_point *height))
|
|
2301 #endif
|
|
2302 PNG_EXPORT(169, png_uint_32, png_get_sCAL_s,
|
|
2303 (png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_const_inforp info_ptr, int *unit,
|
|
2304 png_charpp swidth, png_charpp sheight));
|
|
2305
|
|
2306 PNG_FP_EXPORT(170, void, png_set_sCAL, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2307 png_inforp info_ptr, int unit, double width, double height))
|
|
2308 PNG_FIXED_EXPORT(213, void, png_set_sCAL_fixed, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2309 png_inforp info_ptr, int unit, png_fixed_point width,
|
|
2310 png_fixed_point height))
|
|
2311 PNG_EXPORT(171, void, png_set_sCAL_s, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2312 png_inforp info_ptr, int unit,
|
|
2313 png_const_charp swidth, png_const_charp sheight));
|
|
2314 #endif /* PNG_sCAL_SUPPORTED */
|
|
2315
|
|
2316 #ifdef PNG_SET_UNKNOWN_CHUNKS_SUPPORTED
|
|
2317 /* Provide the default handling for all unknown chunks or, optionally, for
|
|
2318 * specific unknown chunks.
|
|
2319 *
|
|
2320 * NOTE: prior to 1.6.0 the handling specified for particular chunks on read was
|
|
2321 * ignored and the default was used, the per-chunk setting only had an effect on
|
|
2322 * write. If you wish to have chunk-specific handling on read in code that must
|
|
2323 * work on earlier versions you must use a user chunk callback to specify the
|
|
2324 * desired handling (keep or discard.)
|
|
2325 *
|
|
2326 * The 'keep' parameter is a PNG_HANDLE_CHUNK_ value as listed below. The
|
|
2327 * parameter is interpreted as follows:
|
|
2328 *
|
|
2329 * READ:
|
|
2330 * PNG_HANDLE_CHUNK_AS_DEFAULT:
|
|
2331 * Known chunks: do normal libpng processing, do not keep the chunk (but
|
|
2332 * see the comments below about PNG_HANDLE_AS_UNKNOWN_SUPPORTED)
|
|
2333 * Unknown chunks: for a specific chunk use the global default, when used
|
|
2334 * as the default discard the chunk data.
|
|
2335 * PNG_HANDLE_CHUNK_NEVER:
|
|
2336 * Discard the chunk data.
|
|
2337 * PNG_HANDLE_CHUNK_IF_SAFE:
|
|
2338 * Keep the chunk data if the chunk is not critical else raise a chunk
|
|
2339 * error.
|
|
2340 * PNG_HANDLE_CHUNK_ALWAYS:
|
|
2341 * Keep the chunk data.
|
|
2342 *
|
|
2343 * If the chunk data is saved it can be retrieved using png_get_unknown_chunks,
|
|
2344 * below. Notice that specifying "AS_DEFAULT" as a global default is equivalent
|
|
2345 * to specifying "NEVER", however when "AS_DEFAULT" is used for specific chunks
|
|
2346 * it simply resets the behavior to the libpng default.
|
|
2347 *
|
|
2348 * INTERACTION WTIH USER CHUNK CALLBACKS:
|
|
2349 * The per-chunk handling is always used when there is a png_user_chunk_ptr
|
|
2350 * callback and the callback returns 0; the chunk is then always stored *unless*
|
|
2351 * it is critical and the per-chunk setting is other than ALWAYS. Notice that
|
|
2352 * the global default is *not* used in this case. (In effect the per-chunk
|
|
2353 * value is incremented to at least IF_SAFE.)
|
|
2354 *
|
|
2355 * IMPORTANT NOTE: this behavior will change in libpng 1.7 - the global and
|
|
2356 * per-chunk defaults will be honored. If you want to preserve the current
|
|
2357 * behavior when your callback returns 0 you must set PNG_HANDLE_CHUNK_IF_SAFE
|
|
2358 * as the default - if you don't do this libpng 1.6 will issue a warning.
|
|
2359 *
|
|
2360 * If you want unhandled unknown chunks to be discarded in libpng 1.6 and
|
|
2361 * earlier simply return '1' (handled).
|
|
2362 *
|
|
2363 * PNG_HANDLE_AS_UNKNOWN_SUPPORTED:
|
|
2364 * If this is *not* set known chunks will always be handled by libpng and
|
|
2365 * will never be stored in the unknown chunk list. Known chunks listed to
|
|
2366 * png_set_keep_unknown_chunks will have no effect. If it is set then known
|
|
2367 * chunks listed with a keep other than AS_DEFAULT will *never* be processed
|
|
2368 * by libpng, in addition critical chunks must either be processed by the
|
|
2369 * callback or saved.
|
|
2370 *
|
|
2371 * The IHDR and IEND chunks must not be listed. Because this turns off the
|
|
2372 * default handling for chunks that would otherwise be recognized the
|
|
2373 * behavior of libpng transformations may well become incorrect!
|
|
2374 *
|
|
2375 * WRITE:
|
|
2376 * When writing chunks the options only apply to the chunks specified by
|
|
2377 * png_set_unknown_chunks (below), libpng will *always* write known chunks
|
|
2378 * required by png_set_ calls and will always write the core critical chunks
|
|
2379 * (as required for PLTE).
|
|
2380 *
|
|
2381 * Each chunk in the png_set_unknown_chunks list is looked up in the
|
|
2382 * png_set_keep_unknown_chunks list to find the keep setting, this is then
|
|
2383 * interpreted as follows:
|
|
2384 *
|
|
2385 * PNG_HANDLE_CHUNK_AS_DEFAULT:
|
|
2386 * Write safe-to-copy chunks and write other chunks if the global
|
|
2387 * default is set to _ALWAYS, otherwise don't write this chunk.
|
|
2388 * PNG_HANDLE_CHUNK_NEVER:
|
|
2389 * Do not write the chunk.
|
|
2390 * PNG_HANDLE_CHUNK_IF_SAFE:
|
|
2391 * Write the chunk if it is safe-to-copy, otherwise do not write it.
|
|
2392 * PNG_HANDLE_CHUNK_ALWAYS:
|
|
2393 * Write the chunk.
|
|
2394 *
|
|
2395 * Note that the default behavior is effectively the opposite of the read case -
|
|
2396 * in read unknown chunks are not stored by default, in write they are written
|
|
2397 * by default. Also the behavior of PNG_HANDLE_CHUNK_IF_SAFE is very different
|
|
2398 * - on write the safe-to-copy bit is checked, on read the critical bit is
|
|
2399 * checked and on read if the chunk is critical an error will be raised.
|
|
2400 *
|
|
2401 * num_chunks:
|
|
2402 * ===========
|
|
2403 * If num_chunks is positive, then the "keep" parameter specifies the manner
|
|
2404 * for handling only those chunks appearing in the chunk_list array,
|
|
2405 * otherwise the chunk list array is ignored.
|
|
2406 *
|
|
2407 * If num_chunks is 0 the "keep" parameter specifies the default behavior for
|
|
2408 * unknown chunks, as described above.
|
|
2409 *
|
|
2410 * If num_chunks is negative, then the "keep" parameter specifies the manner
|
|
2411 * for handling all unknown chunks plus all chunks recognized by libpng
|
|
2412 * except for the IHDR, PLTE, tRNS, IDAT, and IEND chunks (which continue to
|
|
2413 * be processed by libpng.
|
|
2414 */
|
|
2415 PNG_EXPORT(172, void, png_set_keep_unknown_chunks, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2416 int keep, png_const_bytep chunk_list, int num_chunks));
|
|
2417
|
|
2418 /* The "keep" PNG_HANDLE_CHUNK_ parameter for the specified chunk is returned;
|
|
2419 * the result is therefore true (non-zero) if special handling is required,
|
|
2420 * false for the default handling.
|
|
2421 */
|
|
2422 PNG_EXPORT(173, int, png_handle_as_unknown, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2423 png_const_bytep chunk_name));
|
|
2424 #endif
|
|
2425
|
|
2426 #ifdef PNG_STORE_UNKNOWN_CHUNKS_SUPPORTED
|
|
2427 PNG_EXPORT(174, void, png_set_unknown_chunks, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2428 png_inforp info_ptr, png_const_unknown_chunkp unknowns,
|
|
2429 int num_unknowns));
|
|
2430 /* NOTE: prior to 1.6.0 this routine set the 'location' field of the added
|
|
2431 * unknowns to the location currently stored in the png_struct. This is
|
|
2432 * invariably the wrong value on write. To fix this call the following API
|
|
2433 * for each chunk in the list with the correct location. If you know your
|
|
2434 * code won't be compiled on earlier versions you can rely on
|
|
2435 * png_set_unknown_chunks(write-ptr, png_get_unknown_chunks(read-ptr)) doing
|
|
2436 * the correct thing.
|
|
2437 */
|
|
2438
|
|
2439 PNG_EXPORT(175, void, png_set_unknown_chunk_location,
|
|
2440 (png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_inforp info_ptr, int chunk, int location));
|
|
2441
|
|
2442 PNG_EXPORT(176, int, png_get_unknown_chunks, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2443 png_inforp info_ptr, png_unknown_chunkpp entries));
|
|
2444 #endif
|
|
2445
|
|
2446 /* Png_free_data() will turn off the "valid" flag for anything it frees.
|
|
2447 * If you need to turn it off for a chunk that your application has freed,
|
|
2448 * you can use png_set_invalid(png_ptr, info_ptr, PNG_INFO_CHNK);
|
|
2449 */
|
|
2450 PNG_EXPORT(177, void, png_set_invalid, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2451 png_inforp info_ptr, int mask));
|
|
2452
|
|
2453 #ifdef PNG_INFO_IMAGE_SUPPORTED
|
|
2454 /* The "params" pointer is currently not used and is for future expansion. */
|
|
2455 #ifdef PNG_SEQUENTIAL_READ_SUPPORTED
|
|
2456 PNG_EXPORT(178, void, png_read_png, (png_structrp png_ptr, png_inforp info_ptr,
|
|
2457 int transforms, png_voidp params));
|
|
2458 #endif
|
|
2459 #ifdef PNG_WRITE_SUPPORTED
|
|
2460 PNG_EXPORT(179, void, png_write_png, (png_structrp png_ptr, png_inforp info_ptr,
|
|
2461 int transforms, png_voidp params));
|
|
2462 #endif
|
|
2463 #endif
|
|
2464
|
|
2465 PNG_EXPORT(180, png_const_charp, png_get_copyright,
|
|
2466 (png_const_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
2467 PNG_EXPORT(181, png_const_charp, png_get_header_ver,
|
|
2468 (png_const_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
2469 PNG_EXPORT(182, png_const_charp, png_get_header_version,
|
|
2470 (png_const_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
2471 PNG_EXPORT(183, png_const_charp, png_get_libpng_ver,
|
|
2472 (png_const_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
2473
|
|
2474 #ifdef PNG_MNG_FEATURES_SUPPORTED
|
|
2475 PNG_EXPORT(184, png_uint_32, png_permit_mng_features, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2476 png_uint_32 mng_features_permitted));
|
|
2477 #endif
|
|
2478
|
|
2479 /* For use in png_set_keep_unknown, added to version 1.2.6 */
|
|
2480 #define PNG_HANDLE_CHUNK_AS_DEFAULT 0
|
|
2481 #define PNG_HANDLE_CHUNK_NEVER 1
|
|
2482 #define PNG_HANDLE_CHUNK_IF_SAFE 2
|
|
2483 #define PNG_HANDLE_CHUNK_ALWAYS 3
|
|
2484 #define PNG_HANDLE_CHUNK_LAST 4
|
|
2485
|
|
2486 /* Strip the prepended error numbers ("#nnn ") from error and warning
|
|
2487 * messages before passing them to the error or warning handler.
|
|
2488 */
|
|
2489 #ifdef PNG_ERROR_NUMBERS_SUPPORTED
|
|
2490 PNG_EXPORT(185, void, png_set_strip_error_numbers, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2491 png_uint_32 strip_mode));
|
|
2492 #endif
|
|
2493
|
|
2494 /* Added in libpng-1.2.6 */
|
|
2495 #ifdef PNG_SET_USER_LIMITS_SUPPORTED
|
|
2496 PNG_EXPORT(186, void, png_set_user_limits, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2497 png_uint_32 user_width_max, png_uint_32 user_height_max));
|
|
2498 PNG_EXPORT(187, png_uint_32, png_get_user_width_max,
|
|
2499 (png_const_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
2500 PNG_EXPORT(188, png_uint_32, png_get_user_height_max,
|
|
2501 (png_const_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
2502 /* Added in libpng-1.4.0 */
|
|
2503 PNG_EXPORT(189, void, png_set_chunk_cache_max, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2504 png_uint_32 user_chunk_cache_max));
|
|
2505 PNG_EXPORT(190, png_uint_32, png_get_chunk_cache_max,
|
|
2506 (png_const_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
2507 /* Added in libpng-1.4.1 */
|
|
2508 PNG_EXPORT(191, void, png_set_chunk_malloc_max, (png_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2509 png_alloc_size_t user_chunk_cache_max));
|
|
2510 PNG_EXPORT(192, png_alloc_size_t, png_get_chunk_malloc_max,
|
|
2511 (png_const_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
2512 #endif
|
|
2513
|
|
2514 #if defined(PNG_INCH_CONVERSIONS_SUPPORTED)
|
|
2515 PNG_EXPORT(193, png_uint_32, png_get_pixels_per_inch,
|
|
2516 (png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_const_inforp info_ptr));
|
|
2517
|
|
2518 PNG_EXPORT(194, png_uint_32, png_get_x_pixels_per_inch,
|
|
2519 (png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_const_inforp info_ptr));
|
|
2520
|
|
2521 PNG_EXPORT(195, png_uint_32, png_get_y_pixels_per_inch,
|
|
2522 (png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_const_inforp info_ptr));
|
|
2523
|
|
2524 PNG_FP_EXPORT(196, float, png_get_x_offset_inches,
|
|
2525 (png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_const_inforp info_ptr))
|
|
2526 #ifdef PNG_FIXED_POINT_SUPPORTED /* otherwise not implemented. */
|
|
2527 PNG_FIXED_EXPORT(211, png_fixed_point, png_get_x_offset_inches_fixed,
|
|
2528 (png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_const_inforp info_ptr))
|
|
2529 #endif
|
|
2530
|
|
2531 PNG_FP_EXPORT(197, float, png_get_y_offset_inches, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2532 png_const_inforp info_ptr))
|
|
2533 #ifdef PNG_FIXED_POINT_SUPPORTED /* otherwise not implemented. */
|
|
2534 PNG_FIXED_EXPORT(212, png_fixed_point, png_get_y_offset_inches_fixed,
|
|
2535 (png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_const_inforp info_ptr))
|
|
2536 #endif
|
|
2537
|
|
2538 # ifdef PNG_pHYs_SUPPORTED
|
|
2539 PNG_EXPORT(198, png_uint_32, png_get_pHYs_dpi, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2540 png_const_inforp info_ptr, png_uint_32 *res_x, png_uint_32 *res_y,
|
|
2541 int *unit_type));
|
|
2542 # endif /* PNG_pHYs_SUPPORTED */
|
|
2543 #endif /* PNG_INCH_CONVERSIONS_SUPPORTED */
|
|
2544
|
|
2545 /* Added in libpng-1.4.0 */
|
|
2546 #ifdef PNG_IO_STATE_SUPPORTED
|
|
2547 PNG_EXPORT(199, png_uint_32, png_get_io_state, (png_const_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
2548
|
|
2549 /* Removed from libpng 1.6; use png_get_io_chunk_type. */
|
|
2550 PNG_REMOVED(200, png_const_bytep, png_get_io_chunk_name, (png_structrp png_ptr),
|
|
2551 PNG_DEPRECATED)
|
|
2552
|
|
2553 PNG_EXPORT(216, png_uint_32, png_get_io_chunk_type,
|
|
2554 (png_const_structrp png_ptr));
|
|
2555
|
|
2556 /* The flags returned by png_get_io_state() are the following: */
|
|
2557 # define PNG_IO_NONE 0x0000 /* no I/O at this moment */
|
|
2558 # define PNG_IO_READING 0x0001 /* currently reading */
|
|
2559 # define PNG_IO_WRITING 0x0002 /* currently writing */
|
|
2560 # define PNG_IO_SIGNATURE 0x0010 /* currently at the file signature */
|
|
2561 # define PNG_IO_CHUNK_HDR 0x0020 /* currently at the chunk header */
|
|
2562 # define PNG_IO_CHUNK_DATA 0x0040 /* currently at the chunk data */
|
|
2563 # define PNG_IO_CHUNK_CRC 0x0080 /* currently at the chunk crc */
|
|
2564 # define PNG_IO_MASK_OP 0x000f /* current operation: reading/writing */
|
|
2565 # define PNG_IO_MASK_LOC 0x00f0 /* current location: sig/hdr/data/crc */
|
|
2566 #endif /* ?PNG_IO_STATE_SUPPORTED */
|
|
2567
|
|
2568 /* Interlace support. The following macros are always defined so that if
|
|
2569 * libpng interlace handling is turned off the macros may be used to handle
|
|
2570 * interlaced images within the application.
|
|
2571 */
|
|
2572 #define PNG_INTERLACE_ADAM7_PASSES 7
|
|
2573
|
|
2574 /* Two macros to return the first row and first column of the original,
|
|
2575 * full, image which appears in a given pass. 'pass' is in the range 0
|
|
2576 * to 6 and the result is in the range 0 to 7.
|
|
2577 */
|
|
2578 #define PNG_PASS_START_ROW(pass) (((1&~(pass))<<(3-((pass)>>1)))&7)
|
|
2579 #define PNG_PASS_START_COL(pass) (((1& (pass))<<(3-(((pass)+1)>>1)))&7)
|
|
2580
|
|
2581 /* A macro to return the offset between pixels in the output row for a pair of
|
|
2582 * pixels in the input - effectively the inverse of the 'COL_SHIFT' macro that
|
|
2583 * follows. Note that ROW_OFFSET is the offset from one row to the next whereas
|
|
2584 * COL_OFFSET is from one column to the next, within a row.
|
|
2585 */
|
|
2586 #define PNG_PASS_ROW_OFFSET(pass) ((pass)>2?(8>>(((pass)-1)>>1)):8)
|
|
2587 #define PNG_PASS_COL_OFFSET(pass) (1<<((7-(pass))>>1))
|
|
2588
|
|
2589 /* Two macros to help evaluate the number of rows or columns in each
|
|
2590 * pass. This is expressed as a shift - effectively log2 of the number or
|
|
2591 * rows or columns in each 8x8 tile of the original image.
|
|
2592 */
|
|
2593 #define PNG_PASS_ROW_SHIFT(pass) ((pass)>2?(8-(pass))>>1:3)
|
|
2594 #define PNG_PASS_COL_SHIFT(pass) ((pass)>1?(7-(pass))>>1:3)
|
|
2595
|
|
2596 /* Hence two macros to determine the number of rows or columns in a given
|
|
2597 * pass of an image given its height or width. In fact these macros may
|
|
2598 * return non-zero even though the sub-image is empty, because the other
|
|
2599 * dimension may be empty for a small image.
|
|
2600 */
|
|
2601 #define PNG_PASS_ROWS(height, pass) (((height)+(((1<<PNG_PASS_ROW_SHIFT(pass))\
|
|
2602 -1)-PNG_PASS_START_ROW(pass)))>>PNG_PASS_ROW_SHIFT(pass))
|
|
2603 #define PNG_PASS_COLS(width, pass) (((width)+(((1<<PNG_PASS_COL_SHIFT(pass))\
|
|
2604 -1)-PNG_PASS_START_COL(pass)))>>PNG_PASS_COL_SHIFT(pass))
|
|
2605
|
|
2606 /* For the reader row callbacks (both progressive and sequential) it is
|
|
2607 * necessary to find the row in the output image given a row in an interlaced
|
|
2608 * image, so two more macros:
|
|
2609 */
|
|
2610 #define PNG_ROW_FROM_PASS_ROW(y_in, pass) \
|
|
2611 (((y_in)<<PNG_PASS_ROW_SHIFT(pass))+PNG_PASS_START_ROW(pass))
|
|
2612 #define PNG_COL_FROM_PASS_COL(x_in, pass) \
|
|
2613 (((x_in)<<PNG_PASS_COL_SHIFT(pass))+PNG_PASS_START_COL(pass))
|
|
2614
|
|
2615 /* Two macros which return a boolean (0 or 1) saying whether the given row
|
|
2616 * or column is in a particular pass. These use a common utility macro that
|
|
2617 * returns a mask for a given pass - the offset 'off' selects the row or
|
|
2618 * column version. The mask has the appropriate bit set for each column in
|
|
2619 * the tile.
|
|
2620 */
|
|
2621 #define PNG_PASS_MASK(pass,off) ( \
|
|
2622 ((0x110145AF>>(((7-(off))-(pass))<<2)) & 0xF) | \
|
|
2623 ((0x01145AF0>>(((7-(off))-(pass))<<2)) & 0xF0))
|
|
2624
|
|
2625 #define PNG_ROW_IN_INTERLACE_PASS(y, pass) \
|
|
2626 ((PNG_PASS_MASK(pass,0) >> ((y)&7)) & 1)
|
|
2627 #define PNG_COL_IN_INTERLACE_PASS(x, pass) \
|
|
2628 ((PNG_PASS_MASK(pass,1) >> ((x)&7)) & 1)
|
|
2629
|
|
2630 #ifdef PNG_READ_COMPOSITE_NODIV_SUPPORTED
|
|
2631 /* With these routines we avoid an integer divide, which will be slower on
|
|
2632 * most machines. However, it does take more operations than the corresponding
|
|
2633 * divide method, so it may be slower on a few RISC systems. There are two
|
|
2634 * shifts (by 8 or 16 bits) and an addition, versus a single integer divide.
|
|
2635 *
|
|
2636 * Note that the rounding factors are NOT supposed to be the same! 128 and
|
|
2637 * 32768 are correct for the NODIV code; 127 and 32767 are correct for the
|
|
2638 * standard method.
|
|
2639 *
|
|
2640 * [Optimized code by Greg Roelofs and Mark Adler...blame us for bugs. :-) ]
|
|
2641 */
|
|
2642
|
|
2643 /* fg and bg should be in `gamma 1.0' space; alpha is the opacity */
|
|
2644
|
|
2645 # define png_composite(composite, fg, alpha, bg) \
|
|
2646 { png_uint_16 temp = (png_uint_16)((png_uint_16)(fg) \
|
|
2647 * (png_uint_16)(alpha) \
|
|
2648 + (png_uint_16)(bg)*(png_uint_16)(255 \
|
|
2649 - (png_uint_16)(alpha)) + 128); \
|
|
2650 (composite) = (png_byte)((temp + (temp >> 8)) >> 8); }
|
|
2651
|
|
2652 # define png_composite_16(composite, fg, alpha, bg) \
|
|
2653 { png_uint_32 temp = (png_uint_32)((png_uint_32)(fg) \
|
|
2654 * (png_uint_32)(alpha) \
|
|
2655 + (png_uint_32)(bg)*(65535 \
|
|
2656 - (png_uint_32)(alpha)) + 32768); \
|
|
2657 (composite) = (png_uint_16)((temp + (temp >> 16)) >> 16); }
|
|
2658
|
|
2659 #else /* Standard method using integer division */
|
|
2660
|
|
2661 # define png_composite(composite, fg, alpha, bg) \
|
|
2662 (composite) = (png_byte)(((png_uint_16)(fg) * (png_uint_16)(alpha) + \
|
|
2663 (png_uint_16)(bg) * (png_uint_16)(255 - (png_uint_16)(alpha)) + \
|
|
2664 127) / 255)
|
|
2665
|
|
2666 # define png_composite_16(composite, fg, alpha, bg) \
|
|
2667 (composite) = (png_uint_16)(((png_uint_32)(fg) * (png_uint_32)(alpha) + \
|
|
2668 (png_uint_32)(bg)*(png_uint_32)(65535 - (png_uint_32)(alpha)) + \
|
|
2669 32767) / 65535)
|
|
2670 #endif /* PNG_READ_COMPOSITE_NODIV_SUPPORTED */
|
|
2671
|
|
2672 #ifdef PNG_READ_INT_FUNCTIONS_SUPPORTED
|
|
2673 PNG_EXPORT(201, png_uint_32, png_get_uint_32, (png_const_bytep buf));
|
|
2674 PNG_EXPORT(202, png_uint_16, png_get_uint_16, (png_const_bytep buf));
|
|
2675 PNG_EXPORT(203, png_int_32, png_get_int_32, (png_const_bytep buf));
|
|
2676 #endif
|
|
2677
|
|
2678 PNG_EXPORT(204, png_uint_32, png_get_uint_31, (png_const_structrp png_ptr,
|
|
2679 png_const_bytep buf));
|
|
2680 /* No png_get_int_16 -- may be added if there's a real need for it. */
|
|
2681
|
|
2682 /* Place a 32-bit number into a buffer in PNG byte order (big-endian). */
|
|
2683 #ifdef PNG_WRITE_INT_FUNCTIONS_SUPPORTED
|
|
2684 PNG_EXPORT(205, void, png_save_uint_32, (png_bytep buf, png_uint_32 i));
|
|
2685 #endif
|
|
2686 #ifdef PNG_SAVE_INT_32_SUPPORTED
|
|
2687 PNG_EXPORT(206, void, png_save_int_32, (png_bytep buf, png_int_32 i));
|
|
2688 #endif
|
|
2689
|
|
2690 /* Place a 16-bit number into a buffer in PNG byte order.
|
|
2691 * The parameter is declared unsigned int, not png_uint_16,
|
|
2692 * just to avoid potential problems on pre-ANSI C compilers.
|
|
2693 */
|
|
2694 #ifdef PNG_WRITE_INT_FUNCTIONS_SUPPORTED
|
|
2695 PNG_EXPORT(207, void, png_save_uint_16, (png_bytep buf, unsigned int i));
|
|
2696 /* No png_save_int_16 -- may be added if there's a real need for it. */
|
|
2697 #endif
|
|
2698
|
|
2699 #ifdef PNG_USE_READ_MACROS
|
|
2700 /* Inline macros to do direct reads of bytes from the input buffer.
|
|
2701 * The png_get_int_32() routine assumes we are using two's complement
|
|
2702 * format for negative values, which is almost certainly true.
|
|
2703 */
|
|
2704 # define PNG_get_uint_32(buf) \
|
|
2705 (((png_uint_32)(*(buf)) << 24) + \
|
|
2706 ((png_uint_32)(*((buf) + 1)) << 16) + \
|
|
2707 ((png_uint_32)(*((buf) + 2)) << 8) + \
|
|
2708 ((png_uint_32)(*((buf) + 3))))
|
|
2709
|
|
2710 /* From libpng-1.4.0 until 1.4.4, the png_get_uint_16 macro (but not the
|
|
2711 * function) incorrectly returned a value of type png_uint_32.
|
|
2712 */
|
|
2713 # define PNG_get_uint_16(buf) \
|
|
2714 ((png_uint_16) \
|
|
2715 (((unsigned int)(*(buf)) << 8) + \
|
|
2716 ((unsigned int)(*((buf) + 1)))))
|
|
2717
|
|
2718 # define PNG_get_int_32(buf) \
|
|
2719 ((png_int_32)((*(buf) & 0x80) \
|
|
2720 ? -((png_int_32)((png_get_uint_32(buf) ^ 0xffffffffL) + 1)) \
|
|
2721 : (png_int_32)png_get_uint_32(buf)))
|
|
2722
|
|
2723 /* If PNG_PREFIX is defined the same thing as below happens in pnglibconf.h,
|
|
2724 * but defining a macro name prefixed with PNG_PREFIX.
|
|
2725 */
|
|
2726 # ifndef PNG_PREFIX
|
|
2727 # define png_get_uint_32(buf) PNG_get_uint_32(buf)
|
|
2728 # define png_get_uint_16(buf) PNG_get_uint_16(buf)
|
|
2729 # define png_get_int_32(buf) PNG_get_int_32(buf)
|
|
2730 # endif
|
|
2731 #else
|
|
2732 # ifdef PNG_PREFIX
|
|
2733 /* No macros; revert to the (redefined) function */
|
|
2734 # define PNG_get_uint_32 (png_get_uint_32)
|
|
2735 # define PNG_get_uint_16 (png_get_uint_16)
|
|
2736 # define PNG_get_int_32 (png_get_int_32)
|
|
2737 # endif
|
|
2738 #endif
|
|
2739
|
|
2740 /*******************************************************************************
|
|
2741 * SIMPLIFIED API
|
|
2742 *******************************************************************************
|
|
2743 *
|
|
2744 * Please read the documentation in libpng-manual.txt (TODO: write said
|
|
2745 * documentation) if you don't understand what follows.
|
|
2746 *
|
|
2747 * The simplified API hides the details of both libpng and the PNG file format
|
|
2748 * itself. It allows PNG files to be read into a very limited number of
|
|
2749 * in-memory bitmap formats or to be written from the same formats. If these
|
|
2750 * formats do not accomodate your needs then you can, and should, use the more
|
|
2751 * sophisticated APIs above - these support a wide variety of in-memory formats
|
|
2752 * and a wide variety of sophisticated transformations to those formats as well
|
|
2753 * as a wide variety of APIs to manipulate ancillary information.
|
|
2754 *
|
|
2755 * To read a PNG file using the simplified API:
|
|
2756 *
|
|
2757 * 1) Declare a 'png_image' structure (see below) on the stack and set the
|
|
2758 * version field to PNG_IMAGE_VERSION.
|
|
2759 * 2) Call the appropriate png_image_begin_read... function.
|
|
2760 * 3) Set the png_image 'format' member to the required sample format.
|
|
2761 * 4) Allocate a buffer for the image and, if required, the color-map.
|
|
2762 * 5) Call png_image_finish_read to read the image and, if required, the
|
|
2763 * color-map into your buffers.
|
|
2764 *
|
|
2765 * There are no restrictions on the format of the PNG input itself; all valid
|
|
2766 * color types, bit depths, and interlace methods are acceptable, and the
|
|
2767 * input image is transformed as necessary to the requested in-memory format
|
|
2768 * during the png_image_finish_read() step. The only caveat is that if you
|
|
2769 * request a color-mapped image from a PNG that is full-color or makes
|
|
2770 * complex use of an alpha channel the transformation is extremely lossy and the
|
|
2771 * result may look terrible.
|
|
2772 *
|
|
2773 * To write a PNG file using the simplified API:
|
|
2774 *
|
|
2775 * 1) Declare a 'png_image' structure on the stack and memset() it to all zero.
|
|
2776 * 2) Initialize the members of the structure that describe the image, setting
|
|
2777 * the 'format' member to the format of the image samples.
|
|
2778 * 3) Call the appropriate png_image_write... function with a pointer to the
|
|
2779 * image and, if necessary, the color-map to write the PNG data.
|
|
2780 *
|
|
2781 * png_image is a structure that describes the in-memory format of an image
|
|
2782 * when it is being read or defines the in-memory format of an image that you
|
|
2783 * need to write:
|
|
2784 */
|
|
2785 #define PNG_IMAGE_VERSION 1
|
|
2786
|
|
2787 typedef struct png_control *png_controlp;
|
|
2788 typedef struct
|
|
2789 {
|
|
2790 png_controlp opaque; /* Initialize to NULL, free with png_image_free */
|
|
2791 png_uint_32 version; /* Set to PNG_IMAGE_VERSION */
|
|
2792 png_uint_32 width; /* Image width in pixels (columns) */
|
|
2793 png_uint_32 height; /* Image height in pixels (rows) */
|
|
2794 png_uint_32 format; /* Image format as defined below */
|
|
2795 png_uint_32 flags; /* A bit mask containing informational flags */
|
|
2796 png_uint_32 colormap_entries;
|
|
2797 /* Number of entries in the color-map */
|
|
2798
|
|
2799 /* In the event of an error or warning the following field will be set to a
|
|
2800 * non-zero value and the 'message' field will contain a '\0' terminated
|
|
2801 * string with the libpng error or warning message. If both warnings and
|
|
2802 * an error were encountered, only the error is recorded. If there
|
|
2803 * are multiple warnings, only the first one is recorded.
|
|
2804 *
|
|
2805 * The upper 30 bits of this value are reserved, the low two bits contain
|
|
2806 * a value as follows:
|
|
2807 */
|
|
2808 # define PNG_IMAGE_WARNING 1
|
|
2809 # define PNG_IMAGE_ERROR 2
|
|
2810 /*
|
|
2811 * The result is a two bit code such that a value more than 1 indicates
|
|
2812 * a failure in the API just called:
|
|
2813 *
|
|
2814 * 0 - no warning or error
|
|
2815 * 1 - warning
|
|
2816 * 2 - error
|
|
2817 * 3 - error preceded by warning
|
|
2818 */
|
|
2819 # define PNG_IMAGE_FAILED(png_cntrl) ((((png_cntrl).warning_or_error)&0x03)>1)
|
|
2820
|
|
2821 png_uint_32 warning_or_error;
|
|
2822
|
|
2823 char message[64];
|
|
2824 } png_image, *png_imagep;
|
|
2825
|
|
2826 /* The samples of the image have one to four channels whose components have
|
|
2827 * original values in the range 0 to 1.0:
|
|
2828 *
|
|
2829 * 1: A single gray or luminance channel (G).
|
|
2830 * 2: A gray/luminance channel and an alpha channel (GA).
|
|
2831 * 3: Three red, green, blue color channels (RGB).
|
|
2832 * 4: Three color channels and an alpha channel (RGBA).
|
|
2833 *
|
|
2834 * The components are encoded in one of two ways:
|
|
2835 *
|
|
2836 * a) As a small integer, value 0..255, contained in a single byte. For the
|
|
2837 * alpha channel the original value is simply value/255. For the color or
|
|
2838 * luminance channels the value is encoded according to the sRGB specification
|
|
2839 * and matches the 8-bit format expected by typical display devices.
|
|
2840 *
|
|
2841 * The color/gray channels are not scaled (pre-multiplied) by the alpha
|
|
2842 * channel and are suitable for passing to color management software.
|
|
2843 *
|
|
2844 * b) As a value in the range 0..65535, contained in a 2-byte integer. All
|
|
2845 * channels can be converted to the original value by dividing by 65535; all
|
|
2846 * channels are linear. Color channels use the RGB encoding (RGB end-points) of
|
|
2847 * the sRGB specification. This encoding is identified by the
|
|
2848 * PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_LINEAR flag below.
|
|
2849 *
|
|
2850 * When the simplified API needs to convert between sRGB and linear colorspaces,
|
|
2851 * the actual sRGB transfer curve defined in the sRGB specification (see the
|
|
2852 * article at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SRGB) is used, not the gamma=1/2.2
|
|
2853 * approximation used elsewhere in libpng.
|
|
2854 *
|
|
2855 * When an alpha channel is present it is expected to denote pixel coverage
|
|
2856 * of the color or luminance channels and is returned as an associated alpha
|
|
2857 * channel: the color/gray channels are scaled (pre-multiplied) by the alpha
|
|
2858 * value.
|
|
2859 *
|
|
2860 * The samples are either contained directly in the image data, between 1 and 8
|
|
2861 * bytes per pixel according to the encoding, or are held in a color-map indexed
|
|
2862 * by bytes in the image data. In the case of a color-map the color-map entries
|
|
2863 * are individual samples, encoded as above, and the image data has one byte per
|
|
2864 * pixel to select the relevant sample from the color-map.
|
|
2865 */
|
|
2866
|
|
2867 /* PNG_FORMAT_*
|
|
2868 *
|
|
2869 * #defines to be used in png_image::format. Each #define identifies a
|
|
2870 * particular layout of sample data and, if present, alpha values. There are
|
|
2871 * separate defines for each of the two component encodings.
|
|
2872 *
|
|
2873 * A format is built up using single bit flag values. All combinations are
|
|
2874 * valid. Formats can be built up from the flag values or you can use one of
|
|
2875 * the predefined values below. When testing formats always use the FORMAT_FLAG
|
|
2876 * macros to test for individual features - future versions of the library may
|
|
2877 * add new flags.
|
|
2878 *
|
|
2879 * When reading or writing color-mapped images the format should be set to the
|
|
2880 * format of the entries in the color-map then png_image_{read,write}_colormap
|
|
2881 * called to read or write the color-map and set the format correctly for the
|
|
2882 * image data. Do not set the PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_COLORMAP bit directly!
|
|
2883 *
|
|
2884 * NOTE: libpng can be built with particular features disabled, if you see
|
|
2885 * compiler errors because the definition of one of the following flags has been
|
|
2886 * compiled out it is because libpng does not have the required support. It is
|
|
2887 * possible, however, for the libpng configuration to enable the format on just
|
|
2888 * read or just write; in that case you may see an error at run time. You can
|
|
2889 * guard against this by checking for the definition of the appropriate
|
|
2890 * "_SUPPORTED" macro, one of:
|
|
2891 *
|
|
2892 * PNG_SIMPLIFIED_{READ,WRITE}_{BGR,AFIRST}_SUPPORTED
|
|
2893 */
|
|
2894 #define PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_ALPHA 0x01U /* format with an alpha channel */
|
|
2895 #define PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_COLOR 0x02U /* color format: otherwise grayscale */
|
|
2896 #define PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_LINEAR 0x04U /* 2 byte channels else 1 byte */
|
|
2897 #define PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_COLORMAP 0x08U /* image data is color-mapped */
|
|
2898
|
|
2899 #ifdef PNG_FORMAT_BGR_SUPPORTED
|
|
2900 # define PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_BGR 0x10U /* BGR colors, else order is RGB */
|
|
2901 #endif
|
|
2902
|
|
2903 #ifdef PNG_FORMAT_AFIRST_SUPPORTED
|
|
2904 # define PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_AFIRST 0x20U /* alpha channel comes first */
|
|
2905 #endif
|
|
2906
|
|
2907 /* Commonly used formats have predefined macros.
|
|
2908 *
|
|
2909 * First the single byte (sRGB) formats:
|
|
2910 */
|
|
2911 #define PNG_FORMAT_GRAY 0
|
|
2912 #define PNG_FORMAT_GA PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_ALPHA
|
|
2913 #define PNG_FORMAT_AG (PNG_FORMAT_GA|PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_AFIRST)
|
|
2914 #define PNG_FORMAT_RGB PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_COLOR
|
|
2915 #define PNG_FORMAT_BGR (PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_COLOR|PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_BGR)
|
|
2916 #define PNG_FORMAT_RGBA (PNG_FORMAT_RGB|PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_ALPHA)
|
|
2917 #define PNG_FORMAT_ARGB (PNG_FORMAT_RGBA|PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_AFIRST)
|
|
2918 #define PNG_FORMAT_BGRA (PNG_FORMAT_BGR|PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_ALPHA)
|
|
2919 #define PNG_FORMAT_ABGR (PNG_FORMAT_BGRA|PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_AFIRST)
|
|
2920
|
|
2921 /* Then the linear 2-byte formats. When naming these "Y" is used to
|
|
2922 * indicate a luminance (gray) channel.
|
|
2923 */
|
|
2924 #define PNG_FORMAT_LINEAR_Y PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_LINEAR
|
|
2925 #define PNG_FORMAT_LINEAR_Y_ALPHA (PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_LINEAR|PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_ALPHA)
|
|
2926 #define PNG_FORMAT_LINEAR_RGB (PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_LINEAR|PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_COLOR)
|
|
2927 #define PNG_FORMAT_LINEAR_RGB_ALPHA \
|
|
2928 (PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_LINEAR|PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_COLOR|PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_ALPHA)
|
|
2929
|
|
2930 /* With color-mapped formats the image data is one byte for each pixel, the byte
|
|
2931 * is an index into the color-map which is formatted as above. To obtain a
|
|
2932 * color-mapped format it is sufficient just to add the PNG_FOMAT_FLAG_COLORMAP
|
|
2933 * to one of the above definitions, or you can use one of the definitions below.
|
|
2934 */
|
|
2935 #define PNG_FORMAT_RGB_COLORMAP (PNG_FORMAT_RGB|PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_COLORMAP)
|
|
2936 #define PNG_FORMAT_BGR_COLORMAP (PNG_FORMAT_BGR|PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_COLORMAP)
|
|
2937 #define PNG_FORMAT_RGBA_COLORMAP (PNG_FORMAT_RGBA|PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_COLORMAP)
|
|
2938 #define PNG_FORMAT_ARGB_COLORMAP (PNG_FORMAT_ARGB|PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_COLORMAP)
|
|
2939 #define PNG_FORMAT_BGRA_COLORMAP (PNG_FORMAT_BGRA|PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_COLORMAP)
|
|
2940 #define PNG_FORMAT_ABGR_COLORMAP (PNG_FORMAT_ABGR|PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_COLORMAP)
|
|
2941
|
|
2942 /* PNG_IMAGE macros
|
|
2943 *
|
|
2944 * These are convenience macros to derive information from a png_image
|
|
2945 * structure. The PNG_IMAGE_SAMPLE_ macros return values appropriate to the
|
|
2946 * actual image sample values - either the entries in the color-map or the
|
|
2947 * pixels in the image. The PNG_IMAGE_PIXEL_ macros return corresponding values
|
|
2948 * for the pixels and will always return 1 for color-mapped formats. The
|
|
2949 * remaining macros return information about the rows in the image and the
|
|
2950 * complete image.
|
|
2951 *
|
|
2952 * NOTE: All the macros that take a png_image::format parameter are compile time
|
|
2953 * constants if the format parameter is, itself, a constant. Therefore these
|
|
2954 * macros can be used in array declarations and case labels where required.
|
|
2955 * Similarly the macros are also pre-processor constants (sizeof is not used) so
|
|
2956 * they can be used in #if tests.
|
|
2957 *
|
|
2958 * First the information about the samples.
|
|
2959 */
|
|
2960 #define PNG_IMAGE_SAMPLE_CHANNELS(fmt)\
|
|
2961 (((fmt)&(PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_COLOR|PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_ALPHA))+1)
|
|
2962 /* Return the total number of channels in a given format: 1..4 */
|
|
2963
|
|
2964 #define PNG_IMAGE_SAMPLE_COMPONENT_SIZE(fmt)\
|
|
2965 ((((fmt) & PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_LINEAR) >> 2)+1)
|
|
2966 /* Return the size in bytes of a single component of a pixel or color-map
|
|
2967 * entry (as appropriate) in the image: 1 or 2.
|
|
2968 */
|
|
2969
|
|
2970 #define PNG_IMAGE_SAMPLE_SIZE(fmt)\
|
|
2971 (PNG_IMAGE_SAMPLE_CHANNELS(fmt) * PNG_IMAGE_SAMPLE_COMPONENT_SIZE(fmt))
|
|
2972 /* This is the size of the sample data for one sample. If the image is
|
|
2973 * color-mapped it is the size of one color-map entry (and image pixels are
|
|
2974 * one byte in size), otherwise it is the size of one image pixel.
|
|
2975 */
|
|
2976
|
|
2977 #define PNG_IMAGE_MAXIMUM_COLORMAP_COMPONENTS(fmt)\
|
|
2978 (PNG_IMAGE_SAMPLE_CHANNELS(fmt) * 256)
|
|
2979 /* The maximum size of the color-map required by the format expressed in a
|
|
2980 * count of components. This can be used to compile-time allocate a
|
|
2981 * color-map:
|
|
2982 *
|
|
2983 * png_uint_16 colormap[PNG_IMAGE_MAXIMUM_COLORMAP_COMPONENTS(linear_fmt)];
|
|
2984 *
|
|
2985 * png_byte colormap[PNG_IMAGE_MAXIMUM_COLORMAP_COMPONENTS(sRGB_fmt)];
|
|
2986 *
|
|
2987 * Alternatively use the PNG_IMAGE_COLORMAP_SIZE macro below to use the
|
|
2988 * information from one of the png_image_begin_read_ APIs and dynamically
|
|
2989 * allocate the required memory.
|
|
2990 */
|
|
2991
|
|
2992 /* Corresponding information about the pixels */
|
|
2993 #define PNG_IMAGE_PIXEL_(test,fmt)\
|
|
2994 (((fmt)&PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_COLORMAP)?1:test(fmt))
|
|
2995
|
|
2996 #define PNG_IMAGE_PIXEL_CHANNELS(fmt)\
|
|
2997 PNG_IMAGE_PIXEL_(PNG_IMAGE_SAMPLE_CHANNELS,fmt)
|
|
2998 /* The number of separate channels (components) in a pixel; 1 for a
|
|
2999 * color-mapped image.
|
|
3000 */
|
|
3001
|
|
3002 #define PNG_IMAGE_PIXEL_COMPONENT_SIZE(fmt)\
|
|
3003 PNG_IMAGE_PIXEL_(PNG_IMAGE_SAMPLE_COMPONENT_SIZE,fmt)
|
|
3004 /* The size, in bytes, of each component in a pixel; 1 for a color-mapped
|
|
3005 * image.
|
|
3006 */
|
|
3007
|
|
3008 #define PNG_IMAGE_PIXEL_SIZE(fmt) PNG_IMAGE_PIXEL_(PNG_IMAGE_SAMPLE_SIZE,fmt)
|
|
3009 /* The size, in bytes, of a complete pixel; 1 for a color-mapped image. */
|
|
3010
|
|
3011 /* Information about the whole row, or whole image */
|
|
3012 #define PNG_IMAGE_ROW_STRIDE(image)\
|
|
3013 (PNG_IMAGE_PIXEL_CHANNELS((image).format) * (image).width)
|
|
3014 /* Return the total number of components in a single row of the image; this
|
|
3015 * is the minimum 'row stride', the minimum count of components between each
|
|
3016 * row. For a color-mapped image this is the minimum number of bytes in a
|
|
3017 * row.
|
|
3018 */
|
|
3019
|
|
3020 #define PNG_IMAGE_BUFFER_SIZE(image, row_stride)\
|
|
3021 (PNG_IMAGE_PIXEL_COMPONENT_SIZE((image).format)*(image).height*(row_stride))
|
|
3022 /* Return the size, in bytes, of an image buffer given a png_image and a row
|
|
3023 * stride - the number of components to leave space for in each row.
|
|
3024 */
|
|
3025
|
|
3026 #define PNG_IMAGE_SIZE(image)\
|
|
3027 PNG_IMAGE_BUFFER_SIZE(image, PNG_IMAGE_ROW_STRIDE(image))
|
|
3028 /* Return the size, in bytes, of the image in memory given just a png_image;
|
|
3029 * the row stride is the minimum stride required for the image.
|
|
3030 */
|
|
3031
|
|
3032 #define PNG_IMAGE_COLORMAP_SIZE(image)\
|
|
3033 (PNG_IMAGE_SAMPLE_SIZE((image).format) * (image).colormap_entries)
|
|
3034 /* Return the size, in bytes, of the color-map of this image. If the image
|
|
3035 * format is not a color-map format this will return a size sufficient for
|
|
3036 * 256 entries in the given format; check PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_COLORMAP if
|
|
3037 * you don't want to allocate a color-map in this case.
|
|
3038 */
|
|
3039
|
|
3040 /* PNG_IMAGE_FLAG_*
|
|
3041 *
|
|
3042 * Flags containing additional information about the image are held in the
|
|
3043 * 'flags' field of png_image.
|
|
3044 */
|
|
3045 #define PNG_IMAGE_FLAG_COLORSPACE_NOT_sRGB 0x01
|
|
3046 /* This indicates the the RGB values of the in-memory bitmap do not
|
|
3047 * correspond to the red, green and blue end-points defined by sRGB.
|
|
3048 */
|
|
3049
|
|
3050 #define PNG_IMAGE_FLAG_FAST 0x02
|
|
3051 /* On write emphasise speed over compression; the resultant PNG file will be
|
|
3052 * larger but will be produced significantly faster, particular for large
|
|
3053 * images. Do not use this option for images which will be distributed, only
|
|
3054 * used it when producing intermediate files that will be read back in
|
|
3055 * repeatedly. For a typical 24-bit image the option will double the read
|
|
3056 * speed at the cost of increasing the image size by 25%, however for many
|
|
3057 * more compressible images the PNG file can be 10 times larger with only a
|
|
3058 * slight speed gain.
|
|
3059 */
|
|
3060
|
|
3061 #define PNG_IMAGE_FLAG_16BIT_sRGB 0x04
|
|
3062 /* On read if the image is a 16-bit per component image and there is no gAMA
|
|
3063 * or sRGB chunk assume that the components are sRGB encoded. Notice that
|
|
3064 * images output by the simplified API always have gamma information; setting
|
|
3065 * this flag only affects the interpretation of 16-bit images from an
|
|
3066 * external source. It is recommended that the application expose this flag
|
|
3067 * to the user; the user can normally easily recognize the difference between
|
|
3068 * linear and sRGB encoding. This flag has no effect on write - the data
|
|
3069 * passed to the write APIs must have the correct encoding (as defined
|
|
3070 * above.)
|
|
3071 *
|
|
3072 * If the flag is not set (the default) input 16-bit per component data is
|
|
3073 * assumed to be linear.
|
|
3074 *
|
|
3075 * NOTE: the flag can only be set after the png_image_begin_read_ call,
|
|
3076 * because that call initializes the 'flags' field.
|
|
3077 */
|
|
3078
|
|
3079 #ifdef PNG_SIMPLIFIED_READ_SUPPORTED
|
|
3080 /* READ APIs
|
|
3081 * ---------
|
|
3082 *
|
|
3083 * The png_image passed to the read APIs must have been initialized by setting
|
|
3084 * the png_controlp field 'opaque' to NULL (or, safer, memset the whole thing.)
|
|
3085 */
|
|
3086 #ifdef PNG_STDIO_SUPPORTED
|
|
3087 PNG_EXPORT(234, int, png_image_begin_read_from_file, (png_imagep image,
|
|
3088 const char *file_name));
|
|
3089 /* The named file is opened for read and the image header is filled in
|
|
3090 * from the PNG header in the file.
|
|
3091 */
|
|
3092
|
|
3093 PNG_EXPORT(235, int, png_image_begin_read_from_stdio, (png_imagep image,
|
|
3094 FILE* file));
|
|
3095 /* The PNG header is read from the stdio FILE object. */
|
|
3096 #endif /* PNG_STDIO_SUPPORTED */
|
|
3097
|
|
3098 PNG_EXPORT(236, int, png_image_begin_read_from_memory, (png_imagep image,
|
|
3099 png_const_voidp memory, png_size_t size));
|
|
3100 /* The PNG header is read from the given memory buffer. */
|
|
3101
|
|
3102 PNG_EXPORT(237, int, png_image_finish_read, (png_imagep image,
|
|
3103 png_const_colorp background, void *buffer, png_int_32 row_stride,
|
|
3104 void *colormap));
|
|
3105 /* Finish reading the image into the supplied buffer and clean up the
|
|
3106 * png_image structure.
|
|
3107 *
|
|
3108 * row_stride is the step, in byte or 2-byte units as appropriate,
|
|
3109 * between adjacent rows. A positive stride indicates that the top-most row
|
|
3110 * is first in the buffer - the normal top-down arrangement. A negative
|
|
3111 * stride indicates that the bottom-most row is first in the buffer.
|
|
3112 *
|
|
3113 * background need only be supplied if an alpha channel must be removed from
|
|
3114 * a png_byte format and the removal is to be done by compositing on a solid
|
|
3115 * color; otherwise it may be NULL and any composition will be done directly
|
|
3116 * onto the buffer. The value is an sRGB color to use for the background,
|
|
3117 * for grayscale output the green channel is used.
|
|
3118 *
|
|
3119 * background must be supplied when an alpha channel must be removed from a
|
|
3120 * single byte color-mapped output format, in other words if:
|
|
3121 *
|
|
3122 * 1) The original format from png_image_begin_read_from_* had
|
|
3123 * PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_ALPHA set.
|
|
3124 * 2) The format set by the application does not.
|
|
3125 * 3) The format set by the application has PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_COLORMAP set and
|
|
3126 * PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_LINEAR *not* set.
|
|
3127 *
|
|
3128 * For linear output removing the alpha channel is always done by compositing
|
|
3129 * on black and background is ignored.
|
|
3130 *
|
|
3131 * colormap must be supplied when PNG_FORMAT_FLAG_COLORMAP is set. It must
|
|
3132 * be at least the size (in bytes) returned by PNG_IMAGE_COLORMAP_SIZE.
|
|
3133 * image->colormap_entries will be updated to the actual number of entries
|
|
3134 * written to the colormap; this may be less than the original value.
|
|
3135 */
|
|
3136
|
|
3137 PNG_EXPORT(238, void, png_image_free, (png_imagep image));
|
|
3138 /* Free any data allocated by libpng in image->opaque, setting the pointer to
|
|
3139 * NULL. May be called at any time after the structure is initialized.
|
|
3140 */
|
|
3141 #endif /* PNG_SIMPLIFIED_READ_SUPPORTED */
|
|
3142
|
|
3143 #ifdef PNG_SIMPLIFIED_WRITE_SUPPORTED
|
|
3144 #ifdef PNG_STDIO_SUPPORTED
|
|
3145 /* WRITE APIS
|
|
3146 * ----------
|
|
3147 * For write you must initialize a png_image structure to describe the image to
|
|
3148 * be written. To do this use memset to set the whole structure to 0 then
|
|
3149 * initialize fields describing your image.
|
|
3150 *
|
|
3151 * version: must be set to PNG_IMAGE_VERSION
|
|
3152 * opaque: must be initialized to NULL
|
|
3153 * width: image width in pixels
|
|
3154 * height: image height in rows
|
|
3155 * format: the format of the data (image and color-map) you wish to write
|
|
3156 * flags: set to 0 unless one of the defined flags applies; set
|
|
3157 * PNG_IMAGE_FLAG_COLORSPACE_NOT_sRGB for color format images where the RGB
|
|
3158 * values do not correspond to the colors in sRGB.
|
|
3159 * colormap_entries: set to the number of entries in the color-map (0 to 256)
|
|
3160 */
|
|
3161 PNG_EXPORT(239, int, png_image_write_to_file, (png_imagep image,
|
|
3162 const char *file, int convert_to_8bit, const void *buffer,
|
|
3163 png_int_32 row_stride, const void *colormap));
|
|
3164 /* Write the image to the named file. */
|
|
3165
|
|
3166 PNG_EXPORT(240, int, png_image_write_to_stdio, (png_imagep image, FILE *file,
|
|
3167 int convert_to_8_bit, const void *buffer, png_int_32 row_stride,
|
|
3168 const void *colormap));
|
|
3169 /* Write the image to the given (FILE*). */
|
|
3170
|
|
3171 /* With both write APIs if image is in one of the linear formats with 16-bit
|
|
3172 * data then setting convert_to_8_bit will cause the output to be an 8-bit PNG
|
|
3173 * gamma encoded according to the sRGB specification, otherwise a 16-bit linear
|
|
3174 * encoded PNG file is written.
|
|
3175 *
|
|
3176 * With color-mapped data formats the colormap parameter point to a color-map
|
|
3177 * with at least image->colormap_entries encoded in the specified format. If
|
|
3178 * the format is linear the written PNG color-map will be converted to sRGB
|
|
3179 * regardless of the convert_to_8_bit flag.
|
|
3180 *
|
|
3181 * With all APIs row_stride is handled as in the read APIs - it is the spacing
|
|
3182 * from one row to the next in component sized units (1 or 2 bytes) and if
|
|
3183 * negative indicates a bottom-up row layout in the buffer.
|
|
3184 *
|
|
3185 * Note that the write API does not support interlacing or sub-8-bit pixels.
|
|
3186 */
|
|
3187 #endif /* PNG_STDIO_SUPPORTED */
|
|
3188 #endif /* PNG_SIMPLIFIED_WRITE_SUPPORTED */
|
|
3189 /*******************************************************************************
|
|
3190 * END OF SIMPLIFIED API
|
|
3191 ******************************************************************************/
|
|
3192
|
|
3193 #ifdef PNG_CHECK_FOR_INVALID_INDEX_SUPPORTED
|
|
3194 PNG_EXPORT(242, void, png_set_check_for_invalid_index,
|
|
3195 (png_structrp png_ptr, int allowed));
|
|
3196 # ifdef PNG_GET_PALETTE_MAX_SUPPORTED
|
|
3197 PNG_EXPORT(243, int, png_get_palette_max, (png_const_structp png_ptr,
|
|
3198 png_const_infop info_ptr));
|
|
3199 # endif
|
|
3200 #endif /* CHECK_FOR_INVALID_INDEX */
|
|
3201
|
|
3202 /*******************************************************************************
|
|
3203 * IMPLEMENTATION OPTIONS
|
|
3204 *******************************************************************************
|
|
3205 *
|
|
3206 * Support for arbitrary implementation-specific optimizations. The API allows
|
|
3207 * particular options to be turned on or off. 'Option' is the number of the
|
|
3208 * option and 'onoff' is 0 (off) or non-0 (on). The value returned is given
|
|
3209 * by the PNG_OPTION_ defines below.
|
|
3210 *
|
|
3211 * HARDWARE: normally hardware capabilites, such as the Intel SSE instructions,
|
|
3212 * are detected at run time, however sometimes it may be impossible
|
|
3213 * to do this in user mode, in which case it is necessary to discover
|
|
3214 * the capabilities in an OS specific way. Such capabilities are
|
|
3215 * listed here when libpng has support for them and must be turned
|
|
3216 * ON by the application if present.
|
|
3217 *
|
|
3218 * SOFTWARE: sometimes software optimizations actually result in performance
|
|
3219 * decrease on some architectures or systems, or with some sets of
|
|
3220 * PNG images. 'Software' options allow such optimizations to be
|
|
3221 * selected at run time.
|
|
3222 */
|
|
3223 #ifdef PNG_SET_OPTION_SUPPORTED
|
|
3224 #ifdef PNG_ARM_NEON_API_SUPPORTED
|
|
3225 # define PNG_ARM_NEON 0 /* HARDWARE: ARM Neon SIMD instructions supported */
|
|
3226 #endif
|
|
3227 #define PNG_MAXIMUM_INFLATE_WINDOW 2 /* SOFTWARE: force maximum window */
|
|
3228 #define PNG_OPTION_NEXT 4 /* Next option - numbers must be even */
|
|
3229
|
|
3230 /* Return values: NOTE: there are four values and 'off' is *not* zero */
|
|
3231 #define PNG_OPTION_UNSET 0 /* Unset - defaults to off */
|
|
3232 #define PNG_OPTION_INVALID 1 /* Option number out of range */
|
|
3233 #define PNG_OPTION_OFF 2
|
|
3234 #define PNG_OPTION_ON 3
|
|
3235
|
|
3236 PNG_EXPORT(244, int, png_set_option, (png_structrp png_ptr, int option,
|
|
3237 int onoff));
|
|
3238 #endif
|
|
3239
|
|
3240 /*******************************************************************************
|
|
3241 * END OF HARDWARE OPTIONS
|
|
3242 ******************************************************************************/
|
|
3243
|
|
3244 /* Maintainer: Put new public prototypes here ^, in libpng.3, and project
|
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3245 * defs, scripts/pnglibconf.h, and scripts/pnglibconf.h.prebuilt
|
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3246 */
|
|
3247
|
|
3248 /* The last ordinal number (this is the *last* one already used; the next
|
|
3249 * one to use is one more than this.) Maintainer, remember to add an entry to
|
|
3250 * scripts/symbols.def as well.
|
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3251 */
|
|
3252 #ifdef PNG_EXPORT_LAST_ORDINAL
|
|
3253 PNG_EXPORT_LAST_ORDINAL(244);
|
|
3254 #endif
|
|
3255
|
|
3256 #ifdef __cplusplus
|
|
3257 }
|
|
3258 #endif
|
|
3259
|
|
3260 #endif /* PNG_VERSION_INFO_ONLY */
|
|
3261 /* Do not put anything past this line */
|
|
3262 #endif /* PNG_H */
|