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weston/libweston/color-lcms/color-lcms.c

294 lines
8.4 KiB

/*
* Copyright 2021 Collabora, Ltd.
* Copyright 2021 Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.
*
* Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining
* a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
* "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
* without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
* distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to
* permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to
* the following conditions:
*
* The above copyright notice and this permission notice (including the
* next paragraph) shall be included in all copies or substantial
* portions of the Software.
*
* THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
* EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
* MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND
* NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS
* BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN
* ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN
* CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE
* SOFTWARE.
*/
#include "config.h"
#include <assert.h>
#include <libweston/libweston.h>
#include "color.h"
#include "color-lcms.h"
#include "shared/helpers.h"
static cmsUInt32Number
cmlcms_get_render_intent(enum cmlcms_category cat,
struct weston_surface *surface,
struct weston_output *output)
{
/*
* TODO: Take into account client provided content profile,
* output profile, and the category of the wanted color
* transformation.
*/
cmsUInt32Number intent = INTENT_RELATIVE_COLORIMETRIC;
return intent;
}
static struct cmlcms_color_profile *
get_cprof_or_stock_sRGB(struct weston_color_manager_lcms *cm,
struct weston_color_profile *cprof_base)
{
if (cprof_base)
return get_cprof(cprof_base);
else
return cm->sRGB_profile;
}
static void
cmlcms_destroy_color_transform(struct weston_color_transform *xform_base)
{
struct cmlcms_color_transform *xform = get_xform(xform_base);
cmlcms_color_transform_destroy(xform);
}
static bool
cmlcms_get_surface_color_transform(struct weston_color_manager *cm_base,
struct weston_surface *surface,
struct weston_output *output,
struct weston_surface_color_transform *surf_xform)
{
struct weston_color_manager_lcms *cm = get_cmlcms(cm_base);
struct cmlcms_color_transform *xform;
/* TODO: take weston_output::eotf_mode into account */
struct cmlcms_color_transform_search_param param = {
.category = CMLCMS_CATEGORY_INPUT_TO_BLEND,
.input_profile = get_cprof_or_stock_sRGB(cm, NULL /* TODO: surface->color_profile */),
.output_profile = get_cprof_or_stock_sRGB(cm, output->color_profile),
};
param.intent_output = cmlcms_get_render_intent(param.category,
surface, output);
xform = cmlcms_color_transform_get(cm, &param);
if (!xform)
return false;
surf_xform->transform = &xform->base;
/*
* When we introduce LCMS plug-in we can precisely answer this question
* by examining the color pipeline using precision parameters. For now
* we just compare if it is same pointer or not.
*/
if (xform->search_key.input_profile == xform->search_key.output_profile)
surf_xform->identity_pipeline = true;
else
surf_xform->identity_pipeline = false;
return true;
}
static bool
cmlcms_get_blend_to_output_color_transform(struct weston_color_manager_lcms *cm,
struct weston_output *output,
struct weston_color_transform **xform_out)
{
struct cmlcms_color_transform *xform;
/* TODO: take weston_output::eotf_mode into account */
struct cmlcms_color_transform_search_param param = {
.category = CMLCMS_CATEGORY_BLEND_TO_OUTPUT,
.input_profile = NULL,
.output_profile = get_cprof_or_stock_sRGB(cm, output->color_profile),
};
param.intent_output = cmlcms_get_render_intent(param.category,
NULL, output);
xform = cmlcms_color_transform_get(cm, &param);
if (!xform)
return false;
*xform_out = &xform->base;
return true;
}
static bool
cmlcms_get_sRGB_to_output_color_transform(struct weston_color_manager_lcms *cm,
struct weston_output *output,
struct weston_color_transform **xform_out)
{
struct cmlcms_color_transform *xform;
/* TODO: take weston_output::eotf_mode into account */
struct cmlcms_color_transform_search_param param = {
.category = CMLCMS_CATEGORY_INPUT_TO_OUTPUT,
.input_profile = cm->sRGB_profile,
.output_profile = get_cprof_or_stock_sRGB(cm, output->color_profile),
};
param.intent_output = cmlcms_get_render_intent(param.category,
NULL, output);
/*
* Create a color transformation when output profile is not stock
* sRGB profile.
*/
if (param.output_profile != cm->sRGB_profile) {
xform = cmlcms_color_transform_get(cm, &param);
if (!xform)
return false;
*xform_out = &xform->base;
} else {
*xform_out = NULL; /* Identity transform */
}
return true;
}
static bool
cmlcms_get_sRGB_to_blend_color_transform(struct weston_color_manager_lcms *cm,
struct weston_output *output,
struct weston_color_transform **xform_out)
{
struct cmlcms_color_transform *xform;
/* TODO: take weston_output::eotf_mode into account */
struct cmlcms_color_transform_search_param param = {
.category = CMLCMS_CATEGORY_INPUT_TO_BLEND,
.input_profile = cm->sRGB_profile,
.output_profile = get_cprof_or_stock_sRGB(cm, output->color_profile),
};
param.intent_output = cmlcms_get_render_intent(param.category,
NULL, output);
xform = cmlcms_color_transform_get(cm, &param);
if (!xform)
return false;
*xform_out = &xform->base;
return true;
}
static struct weston_output_color_outcome *
cmlcms_create_output_color_outcome(struct weston_color_manager *cm_base,
struct weston_output *output)
{
struct weston_color_manager_lcms *cm = get_cmlcms(cm_base);
struct weston_output_color_outcome *co;
co = zalloc(sizeof *co);
if (!co)
return NULL;
if (!cmlcms_get_blend_to_output_color_transform(cm, output,
&co->from_blend_to_output))
goto out_fail;
if (!cmlcms_get_sRGB_to_blend_color_transform(cm, output,
&co->from_sRGB_to_blend))
goto out_fail;
if (!cmlcms_get_sRGB_to_output_color_transform(cm, output,
&co->from_sRGB_to_output))
goto out_fail;
co->hdr_meta.group_mask = 0;
return co;
out_fail:
weston_output_color_outcome_destroy(&co);
return NULL;
}
static void
lcms_error_logger(cmsContext context_id,
cmsUInt32Number error_code,
const char *text)
{
weston_log("LittleCMS error: %s\n", text);
}
static bool
cmlcms_init(struct weston_color_manager *cm_base)
{
struct weston_color_manager_lcms *cm = get_cmlcms(cm_base);
if (!(cm->base.compositor->capabilities & WESTON_CAP_COLOR_OPS)) {
weston_log("color-lcms: error: color operations capability missing. Is GL-renderer not in use?\n");
return false;
}
cm->lcms_ctx = cmsCreateContext(NULL, cm);
if (!cm->lcms_ctx) {
weston_log("color-lcms error: creating LittCMS context failed.\n");
return false;
}
cmsSetLogErrorHandlerTHR(cm->lcms_ctx, lcms_error_logger);
if (!cmlcms_create_stock_profile(cm)) {
weston_log("color-lcms: error: cmlcms_create_stock_profile failed\n");
return false;
}
weston_log("LittleCMS %d initialized.\n", cmsGetEncodedCMMversion());
return true;
}
static void
cmlcms_destroy(struct weston_color_manager *cm_base)
{
struct weston_color_manager_lcms *cm = get_cmlcms(cm_base);
if (cm->sRGB_profile)
cmlcms_color_profile_destroy(cm->sRGB_profile);
assert(wl_list_empty(&cm->color_transform_list));
color: introduce weston_color_profile Roughly speaking, a color profile describes the color space of content or an output. Under the hood, the description includes one or more ways to map colors between the profile space and some standard profile connecting space (PCS). This object is not called a color space. A color space has a unique definition, while a color profile may contain multiple different mappings depending on render intent. Some of these mappings may be subjective, with an artistic touch. When a source color profile and a destination color profile are combined under a specific render intent, they produce a color transformation. Color transformations are already preresented by weston_color_transform. This patch adds the basic API for color profile objects. Everything worthwhile of these objects is implemented in the color managers: color-noop never creates these, and in color-lcms they are basically a container for cmsHPROFILE, the Little CMS object for color profiles. Color profile objects will not be interpreted outside of the color managers, unlike color transformations. For a start, the color manager API has one function to create color profiles: from ICC profile data. More creation functions for other sources will be added later. The API has errmsg return parameter for error messages. These are not simply weston_log()'d, because CM&HDR protocol will allow clients to trigger errors and the protocol handles that gracefully. Therefore instead of flooding the compositor logs, the error messages will probably need to be relayed back to clients. Color-lcms is expected to create a cmsHPROFILE for all kinds of color profiles, not just for those created from ICC profile data. Hence, color-lcms will fingerprint color profiles by the MD5 hash which Little CMS computes for us. The fingerprint is used for de-duplication: instead of creating copies, reference existing color profiles. This code is very much based on Sebastian Wick's earlier work on Weston color management, but structured and named differently. Co-authored-by: Sebastian Wick <sebastian@sebastianwick.net> Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <pekka.paalanen@collabora.com>
3 years ago
assert(wl_list_empty(&cm->color_profile_list));
cmsDeleteContext(cm->lcms_ctx);
free(cm);
}
WL_EXPORT struct weston_color_manager *
weston_color_manager_create(struct weston_compositor *compositor)
{
struct weston_color_manager_lcms *cm;
cm = zalloc(sizeof *cm);
if (!cm)
return NULL;
cm->base.name = "work-in-progress";
cm->base.compositor = compositor;
cm->base.supports_client_protocol = true;
cm->base.init = cmlcms_init;
cm->base.destroy = cmlcms_destroy;
color: introduce weston_color_profile Roughly speaking, a color profile describes the color space of content or an output. Under the hood, the description includes one or more ways to map colors between the profile space and some standard profile connecting space (PCS). This object is not called a color space. A color space has a unique definition, while a color profile may contain multiple different mappings depending on render intent. Some of these mappings may be subjective, with an artistic touch. When a source color profile and a destination color profile are combined under a specific render intent, they produce a color transformation. Color transformations are already preresented by weston_color_transform. This patch adds the basic API for color profile objects. Everything worthwhile of these objects is implemented in the color managers: color-noop never creates these, and in color-lcms they are basically a container for cmsHPROFILE, the Little CMS object for color profiles. Color profile objects will not be interpreted outside of the color managers, unlike color transformations. For a start, the color manager API has one function to create color profiles: from ICC profile data. More creation functions for other sources will be added later. The API has errmsg return parameter for error messages. These are not simply weston_log()'d, because CM&HDR protocol will allow clients to trigger errors and the protocol handles that gracefully. Therefore instead of flooding the compositor logs, the error messages will probably need to be relayed back to clients. Color-lcms is expected to create a cmsHPROFILE for all kinds of color profiles, not just for those created from ICC profile data. Hence, color-lcms will fingerprint color profiles by the MD5 hash which Little CMS computes for us. The fingerprint is used for de-duplication: instead of creating copies, reference existing color profiles. This code is very much based on Sebastian Wick's earlier work on Weston color management, but structured and named differently. Co-authored-by: Sebastian Wick <sebastian@sebastianwick.net> Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <pekka.paalanen@collabora.com>
3 years ago
cm->base.destroy_color_profile = cmlcms_destroy_color_profile;
cm->base.get_color_profile_from_icc = cmlcms_get_color_profile_from_icc;
cm->base.destroy_color_transform = cmlcms_destroy_color_transform;
cm->base.get_surface_color_transform = cmlcms_get_surface_color_transform;
cm->base.create_output_color_outcome = cmlcms_create_output_color_outcome;
wl_list_init(&cm->color_transform_list);
color: introduce weston_color_profile Roughly speaking, a color profile describes the color space of content or an output. Under the hood, the description includes one or more ways to map colors between the profile space and some standard profile connecting space (PCS). This object is not called a color space. A color space has a unique definition, while a color profile may contain multiple different mappings depending on render intent. Some of these mappings may be subjective, with an artistic touch. When a source color profile and a destination color profile are combined under a specific render intent, they produce a color transformation. Color transformations are already preresented by weston_color_transform. This patch adds the basic API for color profile objects. Everything worthwhile of these objects is implemented in the color managers: color-noop never creates these, and in color-lcms they are basically a container for cmsHPROFILE, the Little CMS object for color profiles. Color profile objects will not be interpreted outside of the color managers, unlike color transformations. For a start, the color manager API has one function to create color profiles: from ICC profile data. More creation functions for other sources will be added later. The API has errmsg return parameter for error messages. These are not simply weston_log()'d, because CM&HDR protocol will allow clients to trigger errors and the protocol handles that gracefully. Therefore instead of flooding the compositor logs, the error messages will probably need to be relayed back to clients. Color-lcms is expected to create a cmsHPROFILE for all kinds of color profiles, not just for those created from ICC profile data. Hence, color-lcms will fingerprint color profiles by the MD5 hash which Little CMS computes for us. The fingerprint is used for de-duplication: instead of creating copies, reference existing color profiles. This code is very much based on Sebastian Wick's earlier work on Weston color management, but structured and named differently. Co-authored-by: Sebastian Wick <sebastian@sebastianwick.net> Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <pekka.paalanen@collabora.com>
3 years ago
wl_list_init(&cm->color_profile_list);
return &cm->base;
}