CHANGE LOG for Independent JPEG Group's JPEG software Version 6 2-Aug-95 ------------------- Progressive JPEG support: library can read and write full progressive JPEG files. A "buffered image" mode supports incremental decoding for on-the-fly display of progressive images. Simply recompiling an existing IJG-v5-based decoder with v6 should allow it to read progressive files, though of course without any special progressive display. New "jpegtran" application performs lossless transcoding between different JPEG formats; primarily, it can be used to convert baseline to progressive JPEG and vice versa. In support of jpegtran, the library now allows lossless reading and writing of JPEG files as DCT coefficient arrays. This ability may be of use in other applications. Notes for programmers: * We changed jpeg_start_decompress() to be able to suspend; this makes all decoding modes available to suspending-input applications. However, existing applications that use suspending input will need to be changed to check the return value from jpeg_start_decompress(). You don't need to do anything if you don't use a suspending data source. * We changed the interface to the virtual array routines: access_virt_array routines now take a count of the number of rows to access this time. The last parameter to request_virt_array routines is now interpreted as the maximum number of rows that may be accessed at once, but not necessarily the height of every access. Version 5b 15-Mar-95 --------------------- Correct bugs with grayscale images having v_samp_factor > 1. jpeg_write_raw_data() now supports output suspension. Correct bugs in "configure" script for case of compiling in a directory other than the one containing the source files. Repair bug in jquant1.c: sometimes didn't use as many colors as it could. Borland C makefile and jconfig file work under either MS-DOS or OS/2. Miscellaneous improvements to documentation. Version 5a 7-Dec-94 -------------------- Changed color conversion roundoff behavior so that grayscale values are represented exactly. (This causes test image files to change.) Make ordered dither use 16x16 instead of 4x4 pattern for a small quality improvement. New configure script based on latest GNU Autoconf. Fix configure script to handle CFLAGS correctly. Rename *.auto files to *.cfg, so that configure script still works if file names have been truncated for DOS. Fix bug in rdbmp.c: didn't allow for extra data between header and image. Modify rdppm.c/wrppm.c to handle 2-byte raw PPM/PGM formats for 12-bit data. Fix several bugs in rdrle.c. NEED_SHORT_EXTERNAL_NAMES option was broken. Revise jerror.h/jerror.c for more flexibility in message table. Repair oversight in jmemname.c NO_MKTEMP case: file could be there but unreadable. Version 5 24-Sep-94 -------------------- Version 5 represents a nearly complete redesign and rewrite of the IJG software. Major user-visible changes include: * Automatic configuration simplifies installation for most Unix systems. * A range of speed vs. image quality tradeoffs are supported. This includes resizing of an image during decompression: scaling down by a factor of 1/2, 1/4, or 1/8 is handled very efficiently. * New programs rdjpgcom and wrjpgcom allow insertion and extraction of text comments in a JPEG file. The application programmer's interface to the library has changed completely. Notable improvements include: * We have eliminated the use of callback routines for handling the uncompressed image data. The application now sees the library as a set of routines that it calls to read or write image data on a scanline-by-scanline basis. * The application image data is represented in a conventional interleaved- pixel format, rather than as a separate array for each color channel. This can save a copying step in many programs. * The handling of compressed data has been cleaned up: the application can supply routines to source or sink the compressed data. It is possible to suspend processing on source/sink buffer overrun, although this is not supported in all operating modes. * All static state has been eliminated from the library, so that multiple instances of compression or decompression can be active concurrently. * JPEG abbreviated datastream formats are supported, ie, quantization and Huffman tables can be stored separately from the image data. * And not only that, but the documentation of the library has improved considerably! The last widely used release before the version 5 rewrite was version 4A of 18-Feb-93. Change logs before that point have been discarded, since they are not of much interest after the rewrite.