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/*====================================================================* - Copyright (C) 2001 Leptonica. All rights reserved. - - Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without - modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions - are met: - 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright - notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. - 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above - copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following - disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials - provided with the distribution. - - THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS - ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT - LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR - A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL ANY - CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, - EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, - PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR - PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY - OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING - NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS - SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. *====================================================================*/ README (version 1.83.1) File update: 26 Jan 2023 --------------------------- gunzip leptonica-1.83.1.tar.gz tar -xvf leptonica-1.83.1.tar
Building leptonica
I/O libraries leptonica is dependent on
Generating documentation using doxygen
Developing with leptonica
What's in leptonica?
1. Top view This tar includes: (1) src: library source and function prototypes for building liblept (2) prog: source for regression test, usage example programs, and sample images for building on these platforms: - Linux on x86 (i386) and AMD 64 (x64) - OSX (both powerPC and x86). - Cygwin, msys and mingw on x86 There is an additional zip file for building with MS Visual Studio. Libraries, executables and prototypes are easily made, as described below. When you extract from the archive, all files are put in a subdirectory 'leptonica-1.83.1'. In that directory you will find a src directory containing the source files for the library, and a prog directory containing source files for various testing and example programs. 2. Building on Linux/Unix/MacOS The software can be downloaded from either a release tar file or from the current head of the source. For the latter, go to a directory and clone the tree into it (note the '.' at the end): cd [some directory] git clone https://github.com/DanBloomberg/leptonica.git . There are three ways to build the library: (1) By customization: Use the existing static makefile, src/makefile.static and customize the build by setting flags in src/environ.h. See details below. Note: if you are going to develop with leptonica, the static makefiles are useful. (2) Using autoconf (supported by James Le Cuirot). Run ./configure in this directory to build Makefiles here and in src. Autoconf handles the following automatically: * architecture endianness * enabling Leptonica I/O image read/write functions that depend on external libraries (if the libraries exist) * enabling functions for redirecting formatted image stream I/O to memory (on Linux only) After running ./configure: make; make install. There's also a 'make check' for testing. (3) Using cmake (supported by Egor Pugin). The build must always be in a different directory from the root of the source (here). It is common to build in a subdirectory of the root. From the root directory, do this: mkdir build cd build Then to make only the library: cmake .. make To make both the library and the programs: cmake .. -DBUILD_PROG=1 make To clean out the current build, just remove everything in the build subdirectory. In more detail for these three methods: (1) Customization using the static makefiles: * FIRST THING: Run make-for-local. This simply renames src/makefile.static --> src/makefile prog/makefile.static --> prog/makefile [Note: the autoconf build will not work if you have any files named "makefile" in src or prog. If you've already run make-for-local and renamed the static makefiles, and you then want to build with autoconf, run make-for-auto to rename them back to makefile.static.] * You can customize for: (a) Including Leptonica image I/O functions that depend on external libraries, such as libpng. Use environment variables in src/environ.h, such as HAVE_LIBPNG. (b) Disabling the GNU functions for redirecting formatted stream I/O to memory. By default, HAVE_FMEMOPEN is enabled in src/environ.h. (c) Using special memory allocators (see src/environ.h). (d) Changing compile and runtime defaults for messages to stderr. The default in src/environ.h is to output info, warning and error messages. (e) Specifying the location of the object code. By default it goes into a tree whose root is also the parent of the src and prog directories. This can be changed using the ROOT_DIR variable in makefile. * Build the library: - To make an optimized version of the library (in src): make - To make a debug version of the library (in src): make DEBUG=yes debug - To make a shared library version (in src): make SHARED=yes shared - To make the prototype extraction program (in src): make (to make the library first) make xtractprotos * To use shared libraries, you need to include the location of the shared libraries in your LD_LIBRARY_PATH. For example, after you have built programs with 'make SHARED=yes' in the prog directory, you need to tell the programs where the shared libraries are: export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=../lib/shared:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH * Make the programs in prog/ (after you have make liblept): - Customize the makefile by setting ALL_LIBS to link the external image I/O libraries. By default, ALL_LIBS assumes that libtiff, libjpeg and libpng are available. - To make an optimized version of all programs (in prog): make - To make a debug version of all programs (in prog): make DEBUG=yes - To make a shared library version of all programs (in prog): make SHARED=yes - To run the programs, be sure to set export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=../lib/shared:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH (2) Building using autoconf (Thanks to James Le Cuirot) * If you downloaded from a release tar, it will be "configure ready". * If you cloned from the git master tree, you need to make the configure executable. To do this, run autogen.sh. Use the standard incantation, in the root directory (the directory with configure): ./configure [build the Makefile] make [builds the library and shared library versions of all the progs] make install [as root; this puts liblept.a into /usr/local/lib/ and 13 of the progs into /usr/local/bin/ ] make [-j2] check [runs the alltests_reg set of regression tests. This works even if you build in a different place from the distribution. The -j parameter should not exceed half the number of cores. If the test fails, just run with 'make check'] Configure supports installing in a local directory (e.g., one that doesn't require root access). For example, to install in $HOME/local, ./configure --prefix=$HOME/local/ make install For different ways to build and link leptonica with tesseract, see https://github.com/tesseract-ocr/tesseract/wiki/Compiling In brief, using autotools to build tesseract and then install it in $HOME/local (after installing leptonica there), do the following from your tesseract root source directory: ./autogen.sh LIBLEPT_HEADERSDIR=$HOME/local/include ./configure \ --prefix=$HOME/local/ --with-extra-libraries=$HOME/local/lib make install Configure also supports building in a separate directory from the source. Run "/(path-to)/leptonica-1.83.1/configure" and then "make" from the desired build directory. Configure has a number of useful options; run "configure --help" for details. If you're not planning to modify the library, adding the "--disable-dependency-tracking" option will speed up the build. By default, both static and shared versions of the library are built. Add the "--disable-shared" or "--disable-static" option if one or the other isn't needed. To skip building the programs, use "--disable-programs". By default, the library is built with debugging symbols. If you do not want these, use "CFLAGS=-O2 ./configure" to eliminate symbols for subsequent compilations, or "make CFLAGS=-O2" to override the default for compilation only. Another option is to use the 'install-strip' target (i.e., "make install-strip") to remove the debugging symbols when the library is installed. Finally, if you find that the installed programs are unable to link at runtime to the installed library, which is in /usr/local/lib, try to run configure in this way: LDFLAGS="-Wl,-rpath -Wl,/usr/local/lib" ./configure which causes the compiler to pass those options through to the linker. For the Debian distribution, out of all the programs in the prog directory, we only build a small subset of general purpose utility programs. This subset is the same set of programs that 'make install' puts into /usr/local/bin. It has no dependency on the image files that are bundled in the prog directory for testing. (3) Using cmake The usual method is to build in a directory that is a subdirectory of the root. First do this from the root directory: mkdir build cd build The default build (shared libraries, no debug, only the library) is made with cmake .. For other options, you can use these flags on the cmake line: * To make a static library: cmake .. -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=OFF make * To build with debug: cmake .. -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug make * To make both the library and the programs: cmake .. -DBUILD_PROG=1 make The programs are put in build/bin/ To run these (e.g., for testing), move them to the prog directory and run them from there: cd bin mv * ../../prog/ cd ../../prog alltests_reg generate alltests_reg compare To build the library directly from the root directory instead of the build subdirectory: mkdir build cmake -H . -Bbuild (-H means the source directory, -B means the directory for the build make 3. Building on Windows (a) Building with Visual Studio 1. Download the latest SW (Software Network https://software-network.org/) client from https://software-network.org/client/ 2. Unpack it, add to PATH. 3. Run once to perform cmake integration: sw setup 4. Run: git clone https://github.com/danbloomberg/leptonica cd leptonica mkdir build cd build cmake .. 5. Build a solution (leptonica.sin) in your Visual Studio version. (b) Building for mingw32 with MSYS (Thanks to David Bryan) MSYS is a Unix-compatible build environment for the Windows-native mingw32 compiler. Selecting the "mingw-developer-toolkit", "mingw32-base", and "msys-base" packages during installation will allow building the library with autoconf as in (2) above. It will also allow building with the static makefile as in (1) above if this option is used in the make command line: CC='gcc -std=c99 -U__STRICT_ANSI__' Only the static library may be built this way; the autoconf method must be used if a shared (DLL) library is desired. External image libraries (see below) must be downloaded separately, built, and installed before building the library. Pre-built libraries are available from the ezwinports project. (c) Building for Cygwin (Thanks to David Bryan) Cygwin is a Unix-compatible build and runtime environment. Adding the "binutils", "gcc-core", and "make" packages from the "Devel" category and the "diffutils" package from the "Utils" category to the packages installed by default will allow building the library with autoconf as in (2) above. Pre-built external image libraries are available in the "Graphics" and "Libs" categories and may be selected for installation. If the libraries are not installed into the /lib, /usr/lib, or /usr/local/lib directories, you must run make with the "LDFLAGS=-L/(path-to-image)/lib" option. Building may also be performed with the static makefile as in (1) above if this option is used in the make command: CC='gcc -std=c99 -U__STRICT_ANSI__' Only the static library may be built this way; the autoconf method must be used if a shared (DLL) library is desired. 4. Building and running oss-fuzz programs The oss-fuzz programs are in prog/fuzzing/. They are run by oss-fuzz on a continual basis with random inputs. clang-10, which is required to build these programs, can be installed using the command sudo apt-get install clang-10 Stefan Weil has provided this method for building the fuzzing programs. From your github root: ./autogen.sh (to make configure) mkdir -p bin/fuzzer cd bin/fuzzer Run configure to generate the Makefiles: address sanitizer issue: ../../configure CC=clang-10 CXX=clang++-10 CFLAGS="-g -O2 \ -D_GLIBCXX_DEBUG -fsanitize=fuzzer-no-link,address,undefined" \ CXXFLAGS="-g -O2 -D_GLIBCXX_DEBUG \ -fsanitize=fuzzer-no-link,address,undefined" memory sanitizer issue: ../../configure CC=clang-10 CXX=clang++-10 CFLAGS="-g -O2 \ -D_GLIBCXX_DEBUG -fsanitize=fuzzer-no-link,memory,undefined" \ CXXFLAGS="-g -O2 -D_GLIBCXX_DEBUG \ -fsanitize=fuzzer-no-link,memory,undefined" Build: address sanitizer issue: make fuzzers CXX=clang++-10 CXXFLAGS="-g -O2 -D_GLIBCXX_DEBUG \ -fsanitize=fuzzer,address,undefined" memory sanitizer issue: make fuzzers CXX=clang++-10 CXXFLAGS="-g -O2 -D_GLIBCXX_DEBUG \ -fsanitize=fuzzer,memory,undefined" When an oss-fuzz issue has been created, download the Reproducer Testcase file (e.g, name it "/tmp/payload"). To run one of the fuzzing executables in bin/fuzzer, e.g., pix4_fuzzer: cd ../../prog/fuzzing ../../bin/fuzzer/pix4_fuzzer /tmp/payload 5. The 270+ programs in the prog directory are an integral part of this package. They can be divided into four groups: (1) Programs that are useful applications for running on the command line. They can be installed from autoconf builds using 'make install'. Examples of these are the PostScript and pdf conversion programs: converttopdf, converttops, convertfilestopdf, convertfilestops, convertsegfilestopdf, convertsegfilestops, imagetops, printimage and printsplitimage. (2) Programs that are used as regression tests in alltests_reg. These are named *_reg, and 100 of them are invoked together (alltests_reg). The regression test framework has been standardized, and regresstion tests are relatively easy to write. See regutils.h for details. (3) Other regression tests, some of which have not (yet) been put into the framework. They are also named *_reg. (4) Programs that were used to test library functions or auto-generate library code. These are useful for testing the behavior of small sets of functions and for providing example code. 6. Sanitizers can be used on all the regression tests in alltests_reg.c. First run autogen.sh to generate the configure script autogen.sh Then run configure to generate the Makefile with the address sanitizer ./configure '--disable-shared' '--enable-debug' 'CFLAGS=-D_GLIBCXX_DEBUG -DDEBUG=1 -Wall -pedantic -g -O0 -fsanitize=address,undefined -fstack-protector-strong -ftrapv' Make and run all the regression tests make check
Leptonica is configured to handle image I/O using these external libraries: libjpeg, libtiff, libpng, libz, libwebp, libgif, libopenjp2 These libraries are easy to obtain. For example, using the Debian package manager: sudo apt-get installwhere = {libpng-dev, libjpeg62-turbo-dev, libtiff5-dev, libwebp-dev, libopenjp2-7-dev, libgif-dev}. Leptonica also allows image I/O with bmp and pnm formats, for which we provide the serializers (encoders and decoders). It also gives output drivers for wrapping images in PostScript and PDF, which in turn use tiffg4, jpeg and flate (i.e., zlib) encoding. PDF will also wrap jpeg2000 images. There is a programmatic interface to gnuplot. To use it, you need only the gnuplot executable (suggest version 3.7.2 or later); the gnuplot library is not required. If you build with automake, libraries on your system will be automatically found and used. The rest of this section is for building with the static makefiles. The entries in environ.h specify which of these libraries to use. The default is to link to these four libraries: libjpeg.a (standard jfif jpeg library, version 6b or 7, 8 or 9)) libtiff.a (standard Leffler tiff library, version 3.7.4 or later; libpng.a (standard png library, suggest version 1.4.0 or later) libz.a (standard gzip library, suggest version 1.2.3) current non-beta version is 3.8.2) These libraries (and their shared versions) should be in /usr/lib. (If they're not, you can change the LDFLAGS variable in the makefile.) Additionally, for compilation, the following header files are assumed to be in /usr/include: jpeg: jconfig.h png: png.h, pngconf.h tiff: tiff.h, tiffio.h If for some reason you do not want to link to specific libraries, even if you have them, stub files are included for the ten different output formats: bmp, jpeg, png, pnm, ps, pdf, tiff, gif, webp and jp2. For example, if you don't want to include the tiff library, in environ.h set: #define HAVE_LIBTIFF 0 and the stubs will be linked in. To read and write webp files: (1) Download libwebp from sourceforge (2) #define HAVE_LIBWEBP 1 (in environ.h) (3) In prog/makefile, edit ALL_LIBS to include -lwebp (4) The library will be installed into /usr/local/lib. You may need to add that directory to LDFLAGS; or, equivalently, add that path to the LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable. To read and write jpeg2000 files: (1) Download libopenjp2, version 2.3, from their distribution. (2) #define HAVE_LIBJP2K 1 (in environ.h) (2a) If you have version 2.X, X != 3, edit LIBJP2K_HEADER (in environ.h) (3) In prog/makefile, edit ALL_LIBS to include -lopenjp2 (4) The library will be installed into /usr/local/lib. To read and write gif files: (1) Download version giflib-5.1.X+ from souceforge (2) #define HAVE_LIBGIF 1 (in environ.h) (3) In prog/makefile, edit ALL_LIBS to include -lgif (4) The library will be installed into /usr/local/lib.
The source code is set up to allow generation of documentation using doxygen. To do this: (1) Download the Debian doxygen package: sudo apt-get install doxygen (2) In the root client directory containing Doxyfile: doxygen Doxyfile The documentation will be generated in a 'doc' subdirectory, accessible from this file (relative to the root) ./doc/html/index.html
You are encouraged to use the static makefiles if you are developing applications using leptonica. The following instructions assume that you are using the static makefiles and customizing environ.h. 1. Automatic generation of prototypes The prototypes are automatically generated by the program xtractprotos. They can either be put in-line into allheaders.h, or they can be written to a file leptprotos.h, which is #included in allheaders.h. Note: (1) We supply the former version of allheaders.h. (2) all .c files simply include allheaders.h. First, make xtractprotos: make xtractprotos Then to generate the prototypes and make allheaders.h, do one of these two things: make allheaders [puts everything into allheaders.h] make allprotos [generates a file leptprotos.h containing the function prototypes, and includes it in allheaders.h] Things to note about xtractprotos, assuming that you are developing in Leptonica and need to regenerate the prototypes in allheaders.h: (1) xtractprotos is part of Leptonica. You can 'make' it in either src or prog (see the makefile). (2) You can output the prototypes for any C file to stdout by running: xtractprotosor xtractprotos -prestring=[string] (3) The source for xtractprotos has been packaged up into a tar containing just the Leptonica files necessary for building it in Linux. The tar file is available at: www.leptonica.com/source/xtractlib-1.5.tar.gz 2. Global parameter to enable development and testing For security reasons, with the exception of the regression utility (regutils.c), leptonica as shipped (starting with 1.77) does not allow: * 'system(3)' fork/exec * writes to temp files with compiled-in names System calls are used either to run gnuplot or display an image on the screen. This is enforced with a global parameter, LeptDebugOK, initialized to 0. It can be overridden either at compile time by changing the initialization (in writefile.c), or at runtime, using setLeptDebugOK(). The programs in the prog directory, which mostly test functions in the library, are not subject to this restriction. 3. GNU runtime functions for stream redirection to memory There are two non-standard gnu functions, fmemopen() and open_memstream(), that only work on Linux and conveniently allow memory I/O with a file stream interface. This is convenient for compressing and decompressing image data to memory rather than to file. Stubs are provided for all these I/O functions. Default is to enable them; OSX developers must disable by setting #define HAVE_FMEMOPEN 0 (in environ.h). If these functions are not enabled, raster to compressed data in memory is accomplished safely but through a temporary file. See 9 for more details on image I/O formats. If you're building with the autoconf programs, these two functions are automatically enabled if available. 4. Runtime functions not available on all platforms Some functions are not available on all systems. One example of such a function is fstatat(). If possible, such functions will be replaced by wrappers, stubs or behavioral equivalent functions. By default, such functions are disabled; enable them by setting #define HAVE_FUNC 1 (in environ.h). If you're building with the autoconf or cmake programs, these functions are automatically enabled if available. 5. Typedefs A deficiency of C is that no standard has been universally adopted for typedefs of the built-in types. As a result, typedef conflicts are common, and cause no end of havoc when you try to link different libraries. If you're lucky, you can find an order in which the libraries can be linked to avoid these conflicts, but the state of affairs is aggravating. The most common typedefs use lower case variables: uint8, int8, ... The png library avoids typedef conflicts by altruistically appending "png_" to the type names. Following that approach, Leptonica appends "l_" to the type name. This should avoid just about all conflicts. In the highly unlikely event that it doesn't, here's a simple way to change the type declarations throughout the Leptonica code: (1) customize a file "converttypes.sed" with the following lines: /l_uint8/s//YOUR_UINT8_NAME/g /l_int8/s//YOUR_INT8_NAME/g /l_uint16/s//YOUR_UINT16_NAME/g /l_int16/s//YOUR_INT16_NAME/g /l_uint32/s//YOUR_UINT32_NAME/g /l_int32/s//YOUR_INT32_NAME/g /l_float32/s//YOUR_FLOAT32_NAME/g /l_float64/s//YOUR_FLOAT64_NAME/g (2) in the src and prog directories: - if you have a version of sed that does in-place conversion: sed -i -f converttypes.sed * - else, do something like (in csh) foreach file (*) sed -f converttypes.sed $file > tempdir/$file end If you are using Leptonica with a large code base that typedefs the built-in types differently from Leptonica, just edit the typedefs in environ.h. This should have no side-effects with other libraries, and no issues should arise with the location in which liblept is included. For compatibility with 64 bit hardware and compilers, where necessary we use the typedefs in stdint.h to specify the pointer size (either 4 or 8 byte). 6. Compile and runtime control over stderr output (see environ.h and utils1.c) Leptonica provides both compile-time and run-time control over messages and debug output (thanks to Dave Bryan). Both compile-time and run-time severity thresholds can be set. The runtime threshold can also be set by an environmental variable. Messages are vararg-formatted and of 3 types: error, warning, informational. These are all macros, and can be further suppressed when NO_CONSOLE_IO is defined on the compile line. For production code where no output is to go to stderr, compile with -DNO_CONSOLE_IO. Runtime redirection of stderr output is also possible, using a callback mechanism. The callback function is registered using leptSetStderrHandler(). See utils1.c for details. 7. In-memory raster format (Pix) Unlike many other open source packages, Leptonica uses packed data for images with all bit/pixel (bpp) depths, allowing us to process pixels in parallel. For example, rasterops works on all depths with 32-bit parallel operations throughout. Leptonica is also explicitly configured to work on both little-endian and big-endian hardware. RGB image pixels are always stored in 32-bit words, and a few special functions are provided for scaling and rotation of RGB images that have been optimized by making explicit assumptions about the location of the R, G and B components in the 32-bit pixel. In such cases, the restriction is documented in the function header. The in-memory data structure used throughout Leptonica to hold the packed data is a Pix, which is defined and documented in pix.h. The alpha component in RGB images is significantly better supported, starting in 1.70. Additionally, a FPix is provided for handling 2D arrays of floats, and a DPix is provided for 2D arrays of doubles. Converters between these and the Pix are given. 8. Conversion between Pix and other in-memory raster formats . If you use Leptonica with other imaging libraries, you will need functions to convert between the Pix and other image data structures. To make a Pix from other image data structures, you will need to understand pixel packing, pixel padding, component ordering and byte ordering on raster lines. See the file pix.h for the specification of image data in the pix. 9. Custom memory management Leptonica allows you to use custom memory management (allocator, deallocator). For Pix, which tend to be large, the alloc/dealloc functions can be set programmatically. For all other structs and arrays, the allocators are specified in environ.h. Default functions are malloc and free. We have also provided a sample custom allocator/deallocator for Pix, in pixalloc.c.
1. Rasterops This is a source for a clean, fast implementation of rasterops. You can find details starting at the Leptonica home page, and also by looking directly at the source code. Some of the low-level code is in roplow.c, and an interface is given in rop.c to the simple Pix image data structure. 2. Binary morphology This is a source for efficient implementations of binary morphology Details are found starting at the Leptonica home page, and by reading the source code. Binary morphology is implemented two ways: (a) Successive full image rasterops for arbitrary structuring elements (Sels) (b) Destination word accumulation (dwa) for specific Sels. This code is automatically generated. See, for example, the code in fmorphgen.1.c and fmorphgenlow.1.c. These files were generated by running the program prog/fmorphautogen.c. Results can be checked by comparing dwa and full image rasterops; e.g., prog/fmorphauto_reg.c. Method (b) is considerably faster than (a), which is the reason we've gone to the effort of supporting the use of this method for all Sels. We also support two different boundary conditions for erosion. Similarly, dwa code for the general hit-miss transform can be auto-generated from an array of hit-miss Sels. When prog/fhmtautogen.c is compiled and run, it generates the dwa C code in fhmtgen.1.c and fhmtgenlow.1.c. These files can then be compiled into the libraries or into other programs. Results can be checked by comparing dwa and rasterop results; e.g., prog/fhmtauto_reg.c Several functions with simple parsers are provided to execute a sequence of morphological operations (plus binary rank reduction and replicative expansion). See morphseq.c. The structuring element is represented by a simple Sel data structure defined in morph.h. We provide (at least) seven ways to generate Sels in sel1.c, and several simple methods to generate hit-miss Sels for pattern finding in selgen.c. In use, the most common morphological Sels are separable bricks, of dimension n x m (where either n or m, but not both, is commonly 1). Accordingly, we provide separable morphological operations on brick Sels, using for binary both rasterops and dwa. Parsers are provided for a sequence of separable binary (rasterop and dwa) and grayscale brick morphological operations, in morphseq.c. The main advantage in using the parsers is that you don't have to create and destroy Sels, or do any of the intermediate image bookkeeping. We also give composable separable brick functions for binary images, for both rasterop and dwa. These decompose each of the linear operations into a sequence of two operations at different scales, reducing the operation count to a sum of decomposition factors, rather than the (un-decomposed) product of factors. As always, parsers are provided for a sequence of such operations. 3. Grayscale morphology and rank order filters We give an efficient implementation of grayscale morphology for brick Sels. See the Leptonica home page and the source code. Brick Sels are separable into linear horizontal and vertical elements. We use the van Herk/Gil-Werman algorithm, that performs the calculations in a time that is independent of the size of the Sels. Implementations of tophat and hdome are also given. We also provide grayscale rank order filters for brick filters. The rank order filter is a generalization of grayscale morphology, that selects the rank-valued pixel (rather than the min or max). A color rank order filter applies the grayscale rank operation independently to each of the (r,g,b) components. 4. Image scaling Leptonica provides many simple and relatively efficient implementations of image scaling. Some of them are listed here; for the full set see the web page and the source code. Grayscale and color images are scaled using: - sampling - lowpass filtering followed by sampling, - area mapping - linear interpolation Scaling operations with antialiased sampling, area mapping, and linear interpolation are limited to 2, 4 and 8 bpp gray, 24 bpp full RGB color, and 2, 4 and 8 bpp colormapped (bpp == bits/pixel). Scaling operations with simple sampling can be done at 1, 2, 4, 8, 16 and 32 bpp. Linear interpolation is slower but gives better results, especially for upsampling. For moderate downsampling, best results are obtained with area mapping scaling. With very high downsampling, either area mapping or antialias sampling (lowpass filter followed by sampling) give good results. Fast area map with power-of-2 reduction are also provided. Optional sharpening after resampling is provided to improve appearance by reducing the visual effect of averaging across sharp boundaries. For fast analysis of grayscale and color images, it is useful to have integer subsampling combined with pixel depth reduction. RGB color images can thus be converted to low-resolution grayscale and binary images. For binary scaling, the dest pixel can be selected from the closest corresponding source pixel. For the special case of power-of-2 binary reduction, low-pass rank-order filtering can be done in advance. Isotropic integer expansion is done by pixel replication. We also provide 2x, 3x, 4x, 6x, 8x, and 16x scale-to-gray reduction on binary images, to produce high quality reduced grayscale images. These are integrated into a scale-to-gray function with arbitrary reduction. Conversely, we have special 2x and 4x scale-to-binary expansion on grayscale images, using linear interpolation on grayscale raster line buffers followed by either thresholding or dithering. There are also image depth converters that don't have scaling, such as unpacking operations from 1 bpp to grayscale, and thresholding and dithering operations from grayscale to 1, 2 and 4 bpp. 5. Image shear and rotation (and affine, projective, ...) Image shear is implemented with both rasterops and linear interpolation. The rasterop implementation is faster and has no constraints on image depth. We provide horizontal and vertical shearing about an arbitrary point (really, a line), both in-place and from source to dest. The interpolated shear is used on 8 bpp and 32 bpp images, and gives a smoother result. Shear is used for the fastest implementations of rotation. There are three different types of general image rotators: a. Grayscale rotation using area mapping - pixRotateAM() for 8 bit gray and 24 bit color, about center - pixRotateAMCorner() for 8 bit gray, about image UL corner - pixRotateAMColorFast() for faster 24 bit color, about center b. Rotation of an image of arbitrary bit depth, using either 2 or 3 shears. These rotations can be done about an arbitrary point, and they can be either from source to dest or in-place; e.g. - pixRotateShear() - pixRotateShearIP() c. Rotation by sampling. This can be used on images of arbitrary depth, and done about an arbitrary point. Colormaps are retained. The area mapping rotations are slower and more accurate, because each new pixel is composed using an average of four neighboring pixels in the original image; this is sometimes also also called "antialiasing". Very fast color area mapping rotation is provided. The shear rotations are much faster, and work on images of arbitrary pixel depth, but they just move pixels around without doing any averaging. The pixRotateShearIP() operates on the image in-place. We also provide orthogonal rotators (90, 180, 270 degree; left-right flip and top-bottom flip) for arbitrary image depth. And we provide implementations of affine, projective and bilinear transforms, with both sampling (for speed) and interpolation (for antialiasing). 6. Sequential algorithms We provide a number of fast sequential algorithms, including binary and grayscale seedfill, and the distance function for a binary image. The most efficient binary seedfill is pixSeedfill(), which uses Luc Vincent's algorithm to iterate raster- and antiraster-ordered propagation, and can be used for either 4- or 8-connected fills. Similar raster/antiraster sequential algorithms are used to generate a distance map from a binary image, and for grayscale seedfill. We also use Heckbert's stack-based filling algorithm for identifying 4- and 8-connected components in a binary image. A fast implementation of the watershed transform, using a priority queue, is included. 7. Image enhancement Some simple image enhancement routines for grayscale and color images have been provided. These include intensity mapping with gamma correction and contrast enhancement, histogram equalization, edge sharpening, smoothing, and various color-shifting operations. 8. Convolution and cousins A number of standard image processing operations are also included, such as block convolution, binary block rank filtering, grayscale and rgb rank order filtering, and edge and local minimum/maximum extraction. Generic convolution is included, for both separable and non-separable kernels, using float arrays in the Pix. Two implementations are included for grayscale and color bilateral filtering: a straightforward (slow) one, and a fast, approximate, separable one. 9. Image I/O Some facilities have been provided for image input and output. This is of course required to build executables that handle images, and many examples of such programs, most of which are for testing, can be built in the prog directory. Functions have been provided to allow reading and writing of files in JPEG, PNG, TIFF, BMP, PNM ,GIF, WEBP and JP2 formats. These formats were chosen for the following reasons: - JFIF JPEG is the standard method for lossy compression of grayscale and color images. It is supported natively in all browsers, and uses a good open source compression library. Decompression is supported by the rasterizers in PS and PDF, for level 2 and above. It has a progressive mode that compresses about 10% better than standard, but is considerably slower to decompress. See jpegio.c. - PNG is the standard method for lossless compression of binary, grayscale and color images. It is supported natively in all browsers, and uses a good open source compression library (zlib). It is superior in almost every respect to GIF (which, until recently, contained proprietary LZW compression). See pngio.c. - TIFF is a common interchange format, which supports different depths, colormaps, etc., and also has a relatively good and widely used binary compression format (CCITT Group 4). Decompression of G4 is supported by rasterizers in PS and PDF, level 2 and above. G4 compresses better than PNG for most text and line art images, but it does quite poorly for halftones. It has good and stable support by Leffler's open source library, which is clean and small. Tiff also supports multipage images through a directory structure. See tiffio.c - BMP has (until recently) had no compression. It is a simple format with colormaps that requires no external libraries. It is commonly used because it is a Microsoft standard, but has little besides simplicity to recommend it. See bmpio.c. - PNM is a very simple, old format that still has surprisingly wide use in the image processing community. It does not support compression or colormaps, but it does support binary, grayscale and rgb images. Like BMP, the implementation is simple and requires no external libraries. See pnmio.c. - WEBP is a new wavelet encoding method derived from libvpx, a video compression library. It is rapidly growing in acceptance, and is supported natively in several browsers. Leptonica provides an interface through webp into the underlying codec. You need to download libwebp. See webpio.c. - JP2 (jpeg2000) is a wavelet encoding method, that has clear advantages over jpeg in compression and quality (especially when the image has sharp edges, such as scanned documents), but is only slowly growing in acceptance. For it to be widely supported, it will require support on a major browser (as with webp). Leptonica provides an interface through openjpeg into the underlying codec. You need to download libopenjp2, version 2.X. See jp2kio.c. - GIF is still widely used in the world. With the expiration of the LZW patent, it is practical to add support for GIF files. The open source gif library is relatively incomplete and unsupported (because of the Sperry-Rand-Burroughs-Univac patent history). Leptonica supports versions 5.1+. See gifio.c. Here's a summary of compression support and limitations: - All formats except JPEG, WEBP and JP2K support 1 bpp binary. - All formats support 8 bpp grayscale (GIF must have a colormap). - All formats except GIF support rgb color. - All formats except PNM, JPEG, WEBP and JP2K support 8 bpp colormap. - PNG and PNM support 2 and 4 bpp images. - PNG supports 2 and 4 bpp colormap, and 16 bpp without colormap. - PNG, JPEG, TIFF, WEBP, JP2K and GIF support image compression; PNM and BMP do not. - WEBP supports rgb color and rgba. - JP2 supports 8 bpp grayscale, rgb color and rgba. Use prog/ioformats_reg for a regression test on all formats, including thorough testing on TIFF. For more thorough testing on other formats, use: - prog/pngio_reg for PNG. - prog/gifio_reg for GIF - prog/webpio_reg for WEBP - prog/jp2kio_reg for JP2 We provide generators for PS output, from all types of input images. The output can be either uncompressed or compressed with level 2 (ccittg4 or dct) or level 3 (flate) encoding. You have flexibility for scaling and placing of images, and for printing at different resolutions. You can also compose mixed raster (text, image) PS. See psio1.c for examples of how to output PS for different applications. As examples of usage, see: * prog/converttops.c for a general image --> PS conversion for printing. You can specify the PS compression level (1, 2, or 3). * prog/imagetops.c for a special image --> PS conversion for printing at maximum size on 8.5 x 11 paper. You can specify the PS compression level (1, 2, or 3). * prog/convertfilestops.c to generate a multipage level 3 compressed PS file that can then be converted to pdf with ps2pdf. * prog/convertsegfilestops.c to generate a multipage, mixed raster, level 2 compressed PS file. We provide generators for PDF output, again from all types of input images, and with ccittg4, dct, flate and jpx (jpeg2000) compression. You can do the following for PDF: * Put any number of images onto a page, with specified input resolution, location and compression. * Write a mixed raster PDF, given an input image and a segmentation mask. Non-image regions are written in G4 (fax) encoding. * Concatenate single-page PDF wrapped images into a single PDF file. * Build a PDF file of all images in a directory or array of file names. As examples of usage, see: * prog/converttopdf.c: fast pdf generation with one image/page. For speed, this avoids transcoding whenever possible. * prog/convertfilestopdf.c: more flexibility in the output. You can set the resolution, scaling, encoding type and jpeg quality. * prog/convertsegfilestopdf.c: generates a multipage, mixed raster pdf, with separate controls for compressing text and non-text regions. Note: any or all of these I/O library calls can be stubbed out at compile time, using the environment variables in environ.h. For all formatted reads and writes, we support read from memory and write to memory. The gnu C runtime library (glibc) supports two I/O functions, open_memstream() and fmemopen(), which read and write directly to memory as if writing to a file stream. * On all platforms, leptonica supports direct read/write with memory for TIFF, PNG, BMP, GIF and WEBP formats. * On linux, leptonica uses the special gnu libraries to enable direct read/write with memory for JPEG, PNM and JP2. * On platforms without the gnu libraries, such as OSX, Windows and Solaris, read/write with memory for JPEG, PNM and JP2 goes through temp files. To enable/disable memory I/O for image read/write, see environ.h. We also provide fast serialization and deserialization between a pix in memory and a file (spixio.c). This works on all types of pix images. 10. Colormap removal and color quantization Leptonica provides functions that remove colormaps, for conversion to either 8 bpp gray or 24 bpp RGB. It also provides the inverse function to colormap removal; namely, color quantization from 24 bpp full color to 8 bpp colormap with some number of colormap colors. Several versions are provided, some that use a fast octree vector quantizer and others that use a variation of the median cut quantizer. For high-level interfaces, see for example: pixConvertRGBToColormap(), pixOctreeColorQuant(), pixOctreeQuantByPopulation(), pixFixedOctcubeQuant256(), and pixMedianCutQuant(). 11. Programmatic image display For debugging, pixDisplay() and pixDisplayWithTitle() in writefile.c can be called to display an image using one of several display programs (xzgv, xli, xv, l_view). If necessary to fit on the screen, the image is reduced in size, with 1 bpp images being converted to grayscale for readability. Another common debug method is to accumulate intermediate images in a pixa, and then either view these as a mosaic (using functions in pixafunc2.c), or gather them into a compressed PDF or PostScript file for viewing with evince. Common image display programs are: xzgv, xli, xv, display, gthumb, gqview, evince, gv and acroread. 12. Document image analysis Many functions have been included specifically to help with document image analysis. These include skew and text orientation detection; page segmentation; baseline finding for text; unsupervised classification of connected components, characters and words; dewarping camera images; adaptive binarization; and a simple book-adaptive classifier for various character sets, segmentation for newspaper articles, etc. 13. Data structures Several simple data structures are provided for safe and efficient handling of arrays of numbers, strings, pointers, and bytes. The generic pointer array is implemented in four ways: as a stack, a queue, a heap (used to implement a priority queue), and an array with insertion and deletion, from which the stack operations form a subset. Byte arrays are implemented both as a wrapper around the actual array and as a queue. The string arrays are particularly useful for both parsing and composing text. Generic lists with doubly-linked cons cells are also provided. Other data structures are provided for handling ordered sets and maps, as well as hash sets and hash maps. 14. Examples of programs that are easily built using the library: - for plotting x-y data, we give a programmatic interface to the gnuplot program, with output to X11, png, ps or eps. We also allow serialization of the plot data, in a form such that the data can be read, the commands generated, and (finally) the plot constructed by running gnuplot. - a simple jbig2-type classifier, using various distance metrics between image components (correlation, rank hausdorff); see prog/jbcorrelation.c, prog/jbrankhaus.c. - a simple color segmenter, giving a smoothed image with a small number of the most significant colors. - a program for converting all images in a directory to a PostScript file, and a program for printing an image in any (supported) format to a PostScript printer. - various programs for generating pdf files from compressed images, including very fast ones that don't scale and avoid transcoding if possible. - converters between binary images and SVG format. - an adaptive recognition utility for training and identifying text characters in a multipage document such as a book. - a bitmap font facility that allows painting text onto images. We currently support one font in several sizes. The font images and postscript programs for generating them are stored in prog/fonts/, and also as compiled strings in bmfdata.h. - a binary maze game lets you generate mazes and find shortest paths between two arbitrary points, if such a path exists. You can also compute the "shortest" (i.e., least cost) path between points on a grayscale image. - a 1D barcode reader. This is still in an early stage of development, with little testing, and it only decodes 6 formats. - a utility that will dewarp images of text that were captured with a camera at close range. - a sudoku solver and generator, including a good test for uniqueness - see (13, above) for other document image applications. 15. JBig2 encoder Leptonica supports an open source jbig2 encoder (yes, there is one!), which can be downloaded from: http://www.imperialviolet.org/jbig2.html. To build the encoder, use the most recent version. This bundles Leptonica 1.63. Once you've built the encoder, use it to compress a set of input image files: (e.g.) ./jbig2 -v -s> You can also generate a pdf wrapping for the output jbig2. To do that, call jbig2 with the -p arg, which generates a symbol file (output.sym) plus a set of location files for each input image (output.0000, ...): ./jbig2 -v -s -p and then generate the pdf: python pdf.py output > See the usage documentation for the jbig2 compressor at: http://www.imperialviolet.org/binary/jbig2enc.html You can uncompress the jbig2 files using jbig2dec, which can be downloaded and built from: http://jbig2dec.sourceforge.net/ 16. Versions New versions of the Leptonica library are released several times a year, and version numbers are provided for each release in the following files: src/makefile.static CMakeLists.txt configure.ac allheaders_top.txt (and propagated to allheaders.h) All even versions from 1.42 to 1.60 were originally archived at http://code.google.com/p/leptonica, as well as all versions after 1.60. These have now been transferred by Egor Pugin to github: github.com/danbloomberg/leptonica where all releases (1.42 - 1.83.1) are available; e.g., https://github.com/DanBloomberg/leptonica/releases/tag/1.83.1 The more recent releases, from 1.74, are also available at leptonica.org/download.html Note that if you are downloading from github, the releases are more likely to be stable than the master. Also, if you download from the master and use autotools (e.g., Makefile.am), you must first run autogen.sh to generate the configure program and the Makefiles. The number of downloads of leptonica increased by nearly an order of magnitude with 1.69, due to bundling with tesseract and incorporation in ubuntu 12-04. Jeff Breidenbach has built all the Debian releases, which require release version numbers. The Debian binary release versions to date are: 1.69 : 3.0.0 1.70 : 4.0.0 1.71 : 4.2.0 1.72 : 4.3.0 1.73 : 5.0.0 1.74 : 5.1.0 1.75 : 5.2.0 1.76 : 5.3.0 1.77 : 5.3.0 1.78 : 5.3.0 1.79 : 5.4.0 1.80 : 5.4.0 1.81 : 5.4.0 1.82 : 5.4.0 1.83 : 6.0.0 A brief version chronology is maintained in version-notes.html. Starting with gcc 4.3.3, error warnings (-Werror) are given for minor infractions like not checking return values of built-in C functions. I have attempted to eliminate these warnings. In any event, you will see warnings with the -Wall flag.