c44 (1)
Leading comments
Copyright (c) 2001-2003 Leon Bottou, Yann Le Cun, Patrick Haffner, Copyright (c) 2001 AT&T Corp., and Lizardtech, Inc. This is free documentation; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. The GNU General Public License's references to "object code" and "executables" are to be interpreted as the output of any document formatti...
NAME
c44 - DjVuPhoto encode.SYNOPSIS
c44 [options] inputfilename [outputfilename]DESCRIPTION
Produces a DjVuPhoto encoded image. The input image file inputfilename can be either a portable gray-map (PGM
) or a portable pix-map (PPM
).
Input images compressed with
JPEG
are also accepted. It is however suggested to only use
high quality
JPEG
files (low compression ratio, large size)
because the wavelet compression will increase the defects
already present in highly compressed
JPEG
files.
The program produces a DjVuPhoto file
outputfilename.
If the output file name is not specified,
a default file name will be generated by replacing
the input file name suffix by suffix
djvu.
The main design objective for the DjVu wavelets consisted of allowing
progressive rendering and smooth scrolling of large images with limited memory
requirements. Decoding functions process the compressed data and update a
memory efficient representation of the wavelet coefficients. Imaging function
then can quickly render an arbitrary segment of the image using the available
data. Both process can be carried out in two threads of execution. This
design plays an important role in the DjVu system. We investigated various
state-of-the-art wavelet compression schemes. Although these schemes may
achieve slightly smaller file sizes, the decoding functions did not even
approach our requirements. The
IW44
wavelets reach these requirements today and may in the future implement more
modern refinements if these refinements can be implemented within our
constraints.
QUALITY SELECTION OPTIONS
DjVuPhoto files are logically composed of a sequence of "slices" containing successive image refinements. Slices are grouped in "chunks" defining the progressive rendering sequence. The viewer is able to display an intermediate image after processing each chunk. A typical DjVuPhoto files contains 80 to 120 slices grouped into 1 to 4 chunks. The quality selection options provide various ways to specify the number of chunks and the number of slices per chunk. The c44 program adds slices to the current chunk until exceeding a target number of slices, a target file size, or a target quality specification. The following options define targets for each chunk. The option argument contain several numerical values (one per chunk) separated by either commas or pluses.- -slice n+...+n
- Specify the number of slices in each chunk. The option argument contains plus-separated numerical values (one per chunk) indicating the number of slices per chunk. Option -slice 74+13+10, for instance, would be appropriate for compressing a photographic image with three progressive refinements. More quality and more refinements can be obtained with option -slice 72+11+10+10.
- -slice n,...,n
- Specify the cumulative number of slices for each chunk. Since the final quality is determined by the total number of slices, it is often more convenient to use comma-separated values (one per chunk) indicating the cumulative number of slices for each chunk (i.e. including those encoded in all previous chunks). The values suggested above can also be expressed as -slice 74,87,97 and -slice 72,83,93,103.
- -size n,...,n
- Specify size targets for each chunk expressed in bytes. The option argument can be either a plus-separated list specifying a size for each chunk, or a comma separated list specifying cumulative sizes for each chunk and all previous chunks. Size targets are approximates. Slices will be added to each chunk until exceeding the specified target.
- -bpp n,...,n
- Specify size targets for each chunk expressed in bits-per-pixel. Both comma-separated and plus-separated specifications are accepted. Option -bpp 0.25,0.5,1 usually provides good results.
- -percent n,...,n
-
Specify size targets for each chunk expressed as a percentage of the
input file size. Both comma-separated and plus-separated specifications
are accepted. Results can be drastically different according to the
format of the input image (raw or
JPEGcompressed).
- -decibel n,...,n
- Specify quality targets for each chunk expressed as a comma-separated list of increasing decibel values. Decibel values range from 16 (very low quality) to 48 (very high quality). This criterion should not be relied upon when re-encoding an image previously compressed by another compression scheme. Selecting this option significantly increases the compression time.
- -dbfrac frac
- Indicate that the decibel values specified in option -decibel should be computed by averaging the mean squared errors of only the fraction frac of the most mis-represented blocks of 32 x 32 pixels. This option is useful with composite images containing solid color features (e.g. an image with a large white border).
Providing no quality specification options automatically selects a default quality specification -slice 74,89,99. Multiple quality specification options are allowed. The program outputs a file whose total number of chunks is the largest number of chunks of all quality specifications. Slices are added to each chunk until reaching any of the quality target for this chunk.
OTHER OPTIONS
The following additional options are supported:- -dpi n
- Specify the resolution information encoded into the output file expressed in dots per inch. The resolution information encoded in DjVu files determine how the decoder scales the image on a particular display. Meaningful resolutions range from 25 to 1200. The default value, 100 dpi, should be suitable for most photographic images.
- -gamma n
- Specify the gamma correction information encoded into the output file. The argument n specified the gamma value of the device for which the input image was designed. The default value is 2.2. This is appropriate for images designed for a standard computer monitor.
- -mask pbmfilename
-
The design of the
IW44wavelets allows for compressing partially masked images. This option can be used when certain pixels of a background image are going to be covered by foreground objects like text or drawings. File pbmfile must be aPBMfile whose size matches the size of the input file. Each black pixel in pbmfile means that the value of the corresponding pixel in the input file is irrelevant. TheIW44encoder will replace the masked pixels by a color value whose coding cost is minimal (see www.djvuzone.org/djvu/techpapers/mask/index.djvu for technical details.)
- -crcbnormal
- Select normal chrominance encoding. Chrominance information is encoded at the same resolution as the luminance. This is the default.
- -crcbhalf
- Selects half resolution chrominance encoding. Chrominance information is encoded at half the luminance resolution.
- -crcbdelay n
- This option can be used with -crcbnormal and -crcbhalf to modify the quality of the chrominance information. The option arguments specifies a parameter n, expressed in slices, that reduces the bit-rate associated with the chrominance. The default chrominance encoding delay is 10 slices.
- -crcbfull
- Select the highest possible quality for encoding the chrominance information. This is equivalent to specifying -crcbnormal and -crcbdelay 0.
- -crcbnone
- Disable the encoding of the chrominance. Only the luminance information will be encoded. The resulting image will show in shades of gray.
REMARKS
The default quality setting of the DjVuLibre version of c44 has been increased. It produces larger files with a better quality. Quality can be lowered using the quality selection options!BUGS
The encoder requires more memory than necessary.The rechunking capability is currently broken.