c01afbc559
the examples page was using the old python binding
174 lines
4.5 KiB
Markdown
174 lines
4.5 KiB
Markdown
<refmeta>
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<refentrytitle>Examples</refentrytitle>
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<manvolnum>3</manvolnum>
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<refmiscinfo>libvips</refmiscinfo>
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</refmeta>
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<refnamediv>
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<refname>libvips examples</refname>
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<refpurpose>A few example Python programs using libvips</refpurpose>
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</refnamediv>
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This page shows a few libvips examples using Python. They will work with
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small syntax changes in any language with a libvips binding.
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The libvips test suite is written in Python and exercises every operation
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in the API. It's also a useful source of examples.
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# Average a region of interest box on an image
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``` python
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#!/usr/bin/env python
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import sys
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import pyvips
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left = 10
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top = 10
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width = 64
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height = 64
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image = pyvips.Image.new_from_file(sys.argv[1])
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roi = image.crop(left, top, width, height)
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print 'average:', roi.avg()
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```
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# libvips and numpy
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You can use `pyvips.Image.new_from_memory()` to make a vips image from
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an area of memory. The memory array needs to be laid out band-interleaved,
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as a set of scanlines, with no padding between lines.
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```python
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#!/usr/bin/env python
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import sys
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import time
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import pyvips
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from PIL import Image
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import numpy as np
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if len(sys.argv) != 3:
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print('usage: {0} input-filename output-filename'.format(sys.argv[0]))
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sys.exit(-1)
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# map vips formats to np dtypes
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format_to_dtype = {
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'uchar': np.uint8,
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'char': np.int8,
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'ushort': np.uint16,
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'short': np.int16,
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'uint': np.uint32,
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'int': np.int32,
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'float': np.float32,
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'double': np.float64,
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'complex': np.complex64,
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'dpcomplex': np.complex128,
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}
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# map np dtypes to vips
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dtype_to_format = {
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'uint8': 'uchar',
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'int8': 'char',
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'uint16': 'ushort',
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'int16': 'short',
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'uint32': 'uint',
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'int32': 'int',
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'float32': 'float',
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'float64': 'double',
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'complex64': 'complex',
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'complex128': 'dpcomplex',
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}
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# load with PIL
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start_pillow = time.time()
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pillow_img = np.asarray(Image.open(sys.argv[1]))
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print('Pillow Time:', time.time()-start_pillow)
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print('original shape', pillow_img.shape)
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# load with vips to a memory array
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start_vips = time.time()
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img = pyvips.Image.new_from_file(sys.argv[1], access='sequential')
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mem_img = img.write_to_memory()
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# then make a numpy array from that buffer object
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np_3d = np.ndarray(buffer=mem_img,
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dtype=format_to_dtype[img.format],
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shape=[img.height, img.width, img.bands])
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print('Vips Time:', time.time()-start_vips)
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print('final shape', np_3d.shape)
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# verify we have the same result
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print('Sum of the Differences:', np.sum(np_3d-pillow_img))
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# make a vips image from the numpy array
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height, width, bands = np_3d.shape
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linear = np_3d.reshape(width * height * bands)
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vi = pyvips.Image.new_from_memory(linear.data, width, height, bands,
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dtype_to_format[str(np_3d.dtype)])
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# and write back to disc for checking
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vi.write_to_file(sys.argv[2])
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```
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# Build huge image mosaic
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This makes a 100,000 x 100,000 black image, then inserts all the images you
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pass on the command-line into it at random positions. libvips is able to run
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this program in sequential mode: it'll open all the input images at the same
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time, and stream pixels from them as it needs them to generate the output.
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To test it, first make a large 1-bit image. This command will take the
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green channel and write as a 1-bit fax image. `wtc.jpg` is a test 10,000
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x 10,000 jpeg:
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```
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$ vips extract_band wtc.jpg x.tif[squash,compression=ccittfax4,strip] 1
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```
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Now make 1,000 copies of that image in a subdirectory:
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```
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$ mkdir test
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$ for i in {1..1000}; do cp x.tif test/$i.tif; done
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```
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And run this Python program on them:
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```
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$ time ./try255.py x.tif[squash,compression=ccittfax4,strip,bigtif] test/*
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real 1m59.924s
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user 4m5.388s
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sys 0m8.936s
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```
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It completes in just under two minutes on this laptop, and needs about
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7gb of RAM to run. It would need about the same amount of memory for a
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full-colour RGB image, I was just keen to keep disc usage down.
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If you wanted to handle transparency, or if you wanted mixed CMYK and RGB
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images, you'd need to do some more work to convert them all into the same
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colourspace before inserting them.
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``` python
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#!/usr/bin/env python
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import sys
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import random
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import pyvips
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# this makes a 8-bit, mono image of 100,000 x 100,000 pixels, each pixel zero
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im = pyvips.Image.black(100000, 100000)
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for filename in sys.argv[2:]:
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tile = pyvips.Image.new_from_file(filename, access='sequential')
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im = im.insert(tile,
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random.randint(0, im.width - tile.width),
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random.randint(0, im.height - tile.height))
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im.write_to_file(sys.argv[1])
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```
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