Replace usage of _WIN32 in examples as this does not guarantee the
presence of wincodec.h.
mingw-w64 notably includes wincodec.h, though other releases do not.
Under cygwin the following can be used for a WIC enabled binary:
./configure --target=i686-pc-mingw32 CC=i686-w64-mingw32-gcc.exe
Change-Id: Ica6a714c3356a8eaf88486a1c3f5aa6adde394c0
picture->error_code can be looked up for finer error diagnose.
Added readable error messages to cwebp too.
Should close bug #75 (http://code.google.com/p/webp/issues/detail?id=75)
Change-Id: I8889d06642d90702f698cd5c27441a058ddb3636
+ add a simple rescaling function: WebPPictureRescale() for encoding
+ clean-up the memory managment around the alpha plane
+ fix some includes path by using "../webp/xxx.h" instead of "webp/xxx.h"
New flags for 'cwebp':
-resize <width> <height>
-444 (no effect)
-422 (no effect)
-400
Change-Id: I25a95f901493f939c2dd789e658493b83bd1abfa
This is a (minor) bitstream change: if the 'color_space' bit is set to '1'
(which is normally an undefined/invalid behaviour), we add extra data at the
end of partition #0 (so-called 'extensions')
Namely, we add the size of the extension data as 3 bytes (little-endian),
followed by a set of bits telling which extensions we're incorporating.
The data then _preceeds_ this trailing tags.
This is all experimental, and you'll need to have
'#define WEBP_EXPERIMENTAL_FEATURES' in webp/types.h to enable this code
(at your own risk! :))
Still, this hack produces almost-valid WebP file for decoders that don't
check this color_space bit. In particular, previous 'dwebp' (and for instance
Chrome) will recognize this files and decode them, but without the alpha
of course. Other decoder will just see random extra stuff at the end of
partition #0.
To experiment with the alpha-channel, you need to compile on Unix platform
and use PNGs for input/output.
If 'alpha.png' is a source with alpha channel, then you can try (on Unix):
cwebp alpha.png -o alpha.webp
dwebp alpha.webp -o test.png
cwebp now has a '-noalpha' flag to ignore any alpha information from the
source, if present.
More hacking and experimenting welcome!
Change-Id: I3c7b1fd8411c9e7a9f77690e898479ad85c52f3e
For now, SSE2 functions are compiled a-minima: only on platforms
where __SSE2__ is defined. Let's later add some autoconf-based
config to enable/disable at will.
One can disable SSE2 at run-time by hooking-up VP8GetInfo.
There is a new option "-noasm" in cwebp for that.
Output should be binary the same between C and SSE2 version. If not,
that's a bug!
patch by Christian Duvivier (cduvivier at google dot com)
Change-Id: Iae006c3cdcb7e8280e846cedb94d239dab1e42ae
going down to strict -ansi c89 is quite overkill (no 'inline',
and /* */-style comments).
But with these fixes, the code compiles with the stringent flags:
-Wextra -Wold-style-definition -Wmissing-prototypes
-Wmissing-declarations and -Wdeclaration-after-statement
Change-Id: I36222f8f505bcba3d9d1309ad98b5ccb04ec17e3
WebPGetDecoderVersion() and WebPGetEncoderVersion()
will not return 0.1.2 encoded as 0x000102
dwebp and cwebp also have a new "-version" flag
Change-Id: I4fb4b5a8fc4e53681a386ff4b74fffb639fa237a
converts PNG & JPEG to WebP
This is an experimental early version, with lot of room
of later optimizations in both speed and quality.
Compile with the usual `./configure && make`
Command line example is examples/cwebp
Usage:
cwebp [options] -q quality input.png -o output.webp
where 'quality' is between 0 (poor) to 100 (very good).
Typical value is around 80.
More encoding options with 'cwebp -longhelp'
Change-Id: I577a94f6f622a0c44bdfa9daf1086ace89d45539