Installing and Using the JBIG-KIT Package ----------------------------------------- Markus Kuhn -- 2003-06-11 This text will help you to compile the included demonstration software and get started with a guided tour to playing around with example files. You should be able to use any ANSI/ISO C compiler, such as GNU gcc. On a Unix system, check Makefile to suit your compiler, then start "make". If libjbig.a has been produced correctly, then activate the automatic library test suite with "make test" or just start libjbig/test_codec. If this test fails, please do let me know. On other operating systems, just link libjbig/jbig.c and libjbig/jbig_tables.c together with any application in which you want to use the JBIG-KIT library. In subdirectory pbmtools/, you will find the programs pbmtojbg and jbgtopbm. These are two file converters as examples for applications which use the JBIG-KIT library. After testing them on some of the example JBIG files, you can move these executable files together with the man-pages (if you are in a UNIX style environment) to the appropriate directories on your system. Options -h and --help will give you short command line usage summaries of both programs. The subdirectory examples/ contains a few files as raw JBIG data streams (these are called bi-level image entities (BIE) in the standard). A few examples which you might want to try: jbgtopbm ccitt1.jbg ccitt1.pbm decompresses the CCITT test letter number one into a portable bitmap file which you can further convert using Jef Poskanzer's PBM tools or view with many popular image processing systems like xv (available for Unix/X11 systems on ). The ccitt1.jbg image is 1728 x 2376 pixels large and can not be easily displayed on your screen. However fortunately, I have stored it in progressive mode with the following resolution layers: layer 0: 216 x 297 pixel layer 1: 432 x 594 pixel layer 2: 864 x 1188 pixel layer 3: 1728 x 2376 pixel In progressive mode, each layer has twice the resolution of the previous one. Resolution layer 0 encodes all is pixels independent from any other data, all other resolution layers encode only the difference between the previous and the new resolution layer which requires much less space than encoding resolution layers without referring to the lower layer. By default, the BIE files produced by pbmtojbg start all with a lowest resolution layer 0 which will fit on a 640 x 480 screen. In order to tell jbgtopbm that you do not want to decode higher resolution layers if they will not fit on your e.g. 1024 x 768 pixel display, then simply use jbgtopbm -x 1024 -y 768 ccitt1.jbg ccitt1.pbm and you will get much faster a 4 times smaller image, the highest resolution layer that still fits on your screen. You can also directly pipe the image to another application using standard output by removing the second file name, e.g. jbgtopbm -x 1024 -y 768 ccitt1.jbg | xv - Now let's do some compression. With jbgtopbm ccitt1.jbg ccitt1.pbm followed by pbmtojbg ccitt1.pbm test.jbg you produce again the same data stream as ccitt1.jbg. However if you want that the lowest resolution layer is not larger than 70 x 100 pixel (thumb nail image), then use pbmtojbg -v -x 100 -y 150 ccitt1.pbm test.jbg Option -v will tell you that this has caused 5 additional resolution layers to the lowest 54 x 75 pixel large layer 0. If you have a look at the lowest resolution layer in test.jbg with jbgtopbm -x 100 test.jbg | xv - you will still be able to clearly recognize the layout and line structure of the page, which is not the case if less sophisticated resolution reduction techniques would have been utilized (e.g. as in xv). With pbmtojbg -q ccitt1.pbm test.jbg you can enforce a single resolution layer which is usually a little bit more efficient and requires a little bit less space than progressive encoding. OK, another small exercise: Assume you want to build a document database in which you want to store scanned images in two resolution layers, one for screen previewing and one for laser printer output. However you do not want that your decision to store images in two resolutions causes too much additional storage requirement. You decide that 3 resolution layers in JBIG fit your requirement and you want to store layer 0: 432 x 594 pixels in the first file test-low.jbg and the two layers layer 1: 864 x 1188 pixels layer 2: 1728 x 2376 pixels in the second file test-high.jbg. No problem, just call pbmtojbg -d 2 -l 0 -h 0 ccitt1.pbm test-low.jbg pbmtojbg -d 2 -l 1 -h 2 ccitt1.pbm test-high.jbg where -d specifies the total number of layers and -l/-h select the range of layers written to the output file. You will see that the low and high resolution file together are only 1.6 kb larger than if you would have stored only the high-res version directly without progressive mode (option -q). Progressive mode has here reduced the additional storage requirement by 50 % compared to storing the 3.2 kb long low resolution version completely separately from the high resolution image. In order to view only the screen version, use jbgtopbm test-low.jbg | xv - and in order to send the full version to the printer, just concatenate both BIE files like in cat test-low.jbg test-high.jbg | jbgtopbm -m | .... All this functionality and a few tricky things more are available as functions in the libjbig C library which you can link into your application. Just copy the relevant files from libjbig/ into your own source code directory and adapt your Makefile. In libjbig/jbig.doc, you will find documentation about how to use the library. Markus