1PngMinus 2-------- 3(copyright Willem van Schaik, 1999) 4 5 6License 7------- 8 9Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software and 10its documentation for any purpose and without fee is hereby granted, 11provided that the above copyright notice appear in all copies and 12that both that copyright notice and this permission notice appear in 13supporting documentation. This software is provided "as is" without 14express or implied warranty. 15 16 17Some history 18------------ 19Soon after the creation of PNG in 1995, the need was felt for a set of 20pnmtopng / pngtopnm utilities. Independantly Alexander Lehmann and I 21(Willem van Schaik) started such a project. Luckily we discovered this 22and merged the two together into pnmtopng.tar.gz, which is available 23from a/o ftp://ftp.simplesystems.org/pub/libpng/png/. 24 25These two utilities have many, many options and make use of most of the 26features of PNG, like gamma, alpha, sbit, text-chunks, etc. This makes 27the utilities quite complex and by now not anymore very maintainable. 28When we wrote these programs, libpng was still in an early stage. 29Therefore, lots of the functionality that we put in our software can now 30be done using transform-functions in libpng. 31 32Finally, to compile these programs, you need to have installed and 33compiled three libraries: libpng, zlib and netpbm. Especially the latter 34makes the whole setup a bit bulky. But that's unavoidable given the many 35features of pnmtopng. 36 37 38What now 39-------- 40At this moment libpng is in a very stable state and can do much of the 41work done in pnmtopng. Also, pnmtopng needs to be upgraded to the new 42interface of libpng. Hence, it is time for a rewrite from the ground up 43of pnmtopng and pngtopnm. This will happen in the near future (stay 44tuned). The new package will get a different name to distinguish it from 45the old one: PngPlus. 46 47To experiment a bit with the new interface of libpng, I started off with 48a small prototype that contains only the basic functionality. It doesn't 49have any of the options to read or write special chunks and it will do 50no gamma correction. But this makes it also a simple program that is 51quite easy to understand and can serve well as a template for other 52software developments. (By now there are of course a couple of programs, 53like Greg Roelofs' rpng/wpng, that can be used just as good.) 54 55 56Can and can not 57--------------- 58As this is the small brother of the future PngPlus, I called this fellow 59PngMinus. Because I started this development in good-old Turbo-C, I 60avoided the use the netpbm library, which requires DOS extenders. Again, 61another reason to call it PngMinus (minus netpbm :-). So, part of the 62program are some elementary routines to read / write pgm- and ppm-files. 63It does not read b&w pbm-files. 64 65The downside of this approach is that you can not use them on images 66that require blocks of memory bigger than 64k (the DOS version). For 67larger images you will get an out-of-memory error. 68 69As said before, PngMinus doesn't correct for gamma. When reading 70png-files you can do this just as well by piping the output of png2pnm 71to pnmgamma, one of the standard PbmPlus tools. This same scenario will 72most probably also be followed in the full-blown future PngPlus, with 73the addition of course of the possibility to create gamma-chunks when 74writing png-files. 75 76On the other hand it supports alpha-channels. When reading a png-image 77you can write the alpha-channel into a pgm-file. And when creating an 78RGB+A png-image, you just combine a ppm-file with a corresponding 79pgm-file containing the alpha-channel. When reading, transparency chunks 80are converted into an alpha-channel and from there on treated the same 81way. 82 83Finally you can opt for writing ascii or binary pgm- and ppm-files. When 84the bit-depth is 16, the format will always be ascii. 85 86 87Using it 88-------- 89To distinguish them from pnmtopng and PngPlus, the utilities are named 90png2pnm and pnm2png (2 instead of to). The input- and output-files can 91be given as parameters or through redirection. Therefore the programs 92can be part of a pipe. 93 94To list the options type "png2pnm -h" or "pnm2png -h". 95 96 97Just like Scandinavian furniture 98-------------------------------- 99You have to put it together yourself. I did test the software under 100MS-DOS with Turbo-C 3.0 and under RedHat Linux 4.2 with gcc. In both 101cases I used libpng-1.0.4 and zlib-1.1.3. Later versions should be OK, 102however some older libpng versions have a bug in pngmem.c when using 103Turbo-C 3.0 (see below). 104 105You can build it using one of the two makefiles (make -f makefile.###) 106or use the batch/script files pngminus.bat / pngminus.sh. This assumes 107that you have built the libraries in ../libpng and ../zlib. Using Linux, 108make sure that you have built libpng with makefile.std and not 109makefile.linux (also called .lnx in earlier versions of libpng). The 110latter creates a .so shared-library, while the PngMinus makefile assumes 111a normal .a static library. 112 113If you create a ../pngsuite directory and then store the basn####.png 114files from PngSuite (http://www.schaik.com/pngsuite/) in there, you can 115test in one go the proper functioning of PngMinus, see png2pnm.bat and 116pnm2png.bat (or the .sh versions). 117 118 119Warranty 120------- 121Please, remember that this was just a small experiment to learn a few 122things. It will have many unforeseen features <vbg>. Who said bugs? Use 123it when you are in need for something simple or when you want to start 124developing your own stuff. 125 126 127The Turbo bug 128------------- 129** pngmem.old 130 hptr = (png_byte huge *)((long)(hptr) & 0xfffffff0L); 131 hptr += 16L; 132** pngmem.c 133 hptr = (png_byte huge *)((long)(hptr) & 0xfffffff0L); 134 hptr = hptr + 16L; 135** 136 137** pngmem.old 138 png_ptr->offset_table_ptr[i] = (png_bytep)hptr; 139 hptr += (png_uint_32)65536L; 140** pngmem.c 141 png_ptr->offset_table_ptr[i] = (png_bytep)hptr; 142 hptr = hptr + 65536L; 143** 144 145 146The end 147------- 148Willem van Schaik 149mailto:willem@schaik.com 150http://www.schaik.com/png/ 151------- 152Oct 1999 153 154