| =========================== |
| PNG: The Definitive Guide |
| =========================== |
| |
| Source Code |
| |
| Chapters 13, 14 and 15 of "PNG: The Definitive Guide" discuss three free, |
| cross-platform demo programs that show how to use the libpng reference |
| library: rpng, rpng2 and wpng. rpng and rpng2 are viewers; the first is |
| a very simple example that that shows how a standard file-viewer might use |
| libpng, while the second is designed to process streaming data and shows |
| how a web browser might be written. wpng is a simple command-line program |
| that reads binary PGM and PPM files (the ``raw'' grayscale and RGB subsets |
| of PBMPLUS/NetPBM) and converts them to PNG. |
| |
| The source code for all three demo programs currently compiles under |
| Unix, OpenVMS, and 32-bit Windows. (Special thanks to Martin Zinser, |
| zinser at decus.de, for making the necessary changes for OpenVMS and for |
| providing an appropriate build script.) Build instructions can be found |
| below. |
| |
| Files: |
| |
| README this file |
| LICENSE terms of distribution and reuse (BSD-like or GNU GPL) |
| COPYING GNU General Public License (GPL) |
| |
| Makefile.unx Unix makefile |
| Makefile.w32 Windows (MSVC) makefile |
| makevms.com OpenVMS build script |
| |
| rpng-win.c Windows front end for the basic viewer |
| rpng-x.c X Window System (Unix, OpenVMS) front end |
| readpng.c generic back end for the basic viewer |
| readpng.h header file for the basic viewer |
| |
| rpng2-win.c Windows front end for the progressive viewer |
| rpng2-x.c X front end for the progressive viewer |
| readpng2.c generic back end for the progressive viewer |
| readpng2.h header file for the progressive viewer |
| |
| wpng.c generic (text) front end for the converter |
| writepng.c generic back end for the converter |
| writepng.h header file for the converter |
| |
| toucan.png transparent PNG for testing (by Stefan Schneider) |
| |
| Note that, although the programs are designed to be functional, their |
| primary purpose is to illustrate how to use libpng to add PNG support to |
| other programs. As such, their user interfaces are crude and definitely |
| are not intended for everyday use. |
| |
| Please see http://www.libpng.org/pub/png/pngbook.html for further infor- |
| mation and links to the latest version of the source code, and Chapters |
| 13-15 of the book for detailed discussion of the three programs. |
| |
| Greg Roelofs |
| https://pobox.com/~newt/greg_contact.html |
| 16 March 2008 |
| |
| |
| BUILD INSTRUCTIONS |
| |
| - Prerequisites (in order of compilation): |
| |
| - zlib https://zlib.net/ |
| - libpng http://www.libpng.org/pub/png/libpng.html |
| - pngbook http://www.libpng.org/pub/png/book/sources.html |
| |
| The pngbook demo programs are explicitly designed to demonstrate proper |
| coding techniques for using the libpng reference library. As a result, |
| you need to download and build both zlib (on which libpng depends) and |
| libpng. A common build setup is to place the zlib, libpng and pngbook |
| subdirectory trees ("folders") in the same parent directory. Then the |
| libpng build can refer to files in ../zlib (or ..\zlib or [-.zlib]), |
| and similarly for the pngbook build. |
| |
| Note that all three packages are designed to be built from a command |
| line by default; those who wish to use a graphical or other integrated |
| development environments are on their own. |
| |
| |
| - Unix: |
| |
| Unpack the latest pngbook sources (which should correspond to this |
| README file) into a directory and change into that directory. |
| |
| Copy Makefile.unx to Makefile and edit the PNG* and Z* variables |
| appropriately (possibly also the X* variables if necessary). |
| |
| make |
| |
| There is no "install" target, so copy the three executables somewhere |
| in your path or run them from the current directory. All three will |
| print a basic usage screen when run without any command-line arguments; |
| see the book for more details. |
| |
| |
| - Windows: |
| |
| Unpack the latest pngbook sources (which should correspond to this |
| README file) into a folder, open a "DOS shell" or "command prompt" |
| or equivalent command-line window, and cd into the folder where you |
| unpacked the source code. |
| |
| For MSVC, set up the necessary environment variables by invoking |
| |
| %devstudio%\vc\bin\vcvars32.bat |
| |
| where where %devstudio% is the installation directory for MSVC / |
| DevStudio. If you get "environment out of space" errors under 95/98, |
| create a desktop shortcut with "c:\windows\command.com /e:4096" as |
| the program command line and set the working directory to the pngbook |
| directory. Then double-click to open the new DOS-prompt window with |
| a bigger environment and retry the commands above. |
| |
| Copy Makefile.w32 to Makefile and edit the PNGPATH and ZPATH variables |
| appropriately (possibly also the "INC" and "LIB" variables if needed). |
| Note that the names of the dynamic and static libpng and zlib libraries |
| used in the makefile may change in later releases of the libraries. |
| Also note that, as of libpng version 1.0.5, MSVC DLL builds do not work. |
| This makefile therefore builds statically linked executables, but if |
| the DLL problems ever get fixed, uncommenting the appropriate PNGLIB |
| and ZLIB lines will build dynamically linked executables instead. |
| |
| Do the build by typing |
| |
| nmake |
| |
| The result should be three executables: rpng-win.exe, rpng2-win.exe, |
| and wpng.exe. Copy them somewhere in your PATH or run them from the |
| current folder. Like the Unix versions, the two windowed programs |
| (rpng and rpng2) now display a usage screen in a console window when |
| invoked without command-line arguments; this is new behavior as of |
| the June 2001 release. Note that the programs use the Unix-style "-" |
| character to specify options, instead of the more common DOS/Windows |
| "/" character. (For example: "rpng2-win -bgpat 4 foo.png", not |
| "rpng2-win /bgpat 4 foo.png") |
| |
| |
| - OpenVMS: |
| |
| Unpack the pngbook sources into a subdirectory and change into that |
| subdirectory. |
| |
| Edit makevms.com appropriately, specifically the zpath and pngpath |
| variables. |
| |
| @makevms |
| |
| To run the programs, they probably first need to be set up as "foreign |
| symbols," with "disk" and "dir" set appropriately: |
| |
| $ rpng == "$disk:[dir]rpng-x.exe" |
| $ rpng2 == "$disk:[dir]rpng2-x.exe" |
| $ wpng == "$disk:[dir]wpng.exe" |
| |
| All three will print a basic usage screen when run without any command- |
| line arguments; see the book for more details. Note that the options |
| style is Unix-like, i.e., preceded by "-" rather than "/". |
| |
| |
| RUNNING THE PROGRAMS: (VERY) BRIEF INTRO |
| |
| rpng is a simple PNG viewer that can display transparent PNGs with a |
| specified background color; for example, |
| |
| rpng -bgcolor \#ff0000 toucan.png |
| |
| would display the image with a red background. rpng2 is a progressive |
| viewer that simulates a web browser in some respects; it can display |
| images against either a background color or a dynamically generated |
| background image. For example: |
| |
| rpng2 -bgpat 16 toucan.png |
| |
| wpng is a purely command-line image converter from binary PBMPLUS/NetPBM |
| format (.pgm or .ppm) to PNG; for example, |
| |
| wpng -time < toucan-notrans.ppm > toucan-notrans.png |
| |
| would convert the specified PPM file (using redirection) to PNG, auto- |
| matically setting the PNG modification-time chunk. |
| |
| All options can be abbreviated to the shortest unique value; for example, |
| "-bgc" for -bgcolor (versus "-bgp" for -bgpat), or "-g" for -gamma. |