/*
* reserved comment block
* DO NOT REMOVE OR ALTER!
*/
/*
*
* Copyright (C) 1994-1998, Thomas G. Lane.
* This file is part of the Independent JPEG Group's software.
* For conditions of distribution and use, see the accompanying README file.
*
* This file contains application interface code for the compression half
* of the JPEG library. These are the "minimum" API routines that may be
* needed in either the normal full-compression case or the transcoding-only
* case.
*
* Most of the routines intended to be called directly by an application
* are in this file or in jcapistd.c. But also see jcparam.c for
* parameter-setup helper routines, jcomapi.c for routines shared by
* compression and decompression, and jctrans.c for the transcoding case.
*/
#define JPEG_INTERNALS
#include "jinclude.h"
#include "jpeglib.h"
/*
* Initialization of a JPEG compression object.
* The error manager must already be set up (in case memory manager fails).
*/
GLOBAL(void)
{
int i;
/* Guard against version mismatches between library and caller. */
if (version != JPEG_LIB_VERSION)
/* For debugging purposes, we zero the whole master structure.
* But the application has already set the err pointer, and may have set
* client_data, so we have to save and restore those fields.
* Note: if application hasn't set client_data, tools like Purify may
* complain here.
*/
{
}
/* Initialize a memory manager instance for this object */
/* Zero out pointers to permanent structures. */
for (i = 0; i < NUM_QUANT_TBLS; i++)
for (i = 0; i < NUM_HUFF_TBLS; i++) {
}
/* OK, I'm ready */
}
/*
* Destruction of a JPEG compression object
*/
GLOBAL(void)
{
}
/*
* Abort processing of a JPEG compression operation,
* but don't destroy the object itself.
*/
GLOBAL(void)
{
}
/*
* Forcibly suppress or un-suppress all quantization and Huffman tables.
* Marks all currently defined tables as already written (if suppress)
* or not written (if !suppress). This will control whether they get emitted
* by a subsequent jpeg_start_compress call.
*
* This routine is exported for use by applications that want to produce
* abbreviated JPEG datastreams. It logically belongs in jcparam.c, but
* since it is called by jpeg_start_compress, we put it here --- otherwise
* jcparam.o would be linked whether the application used it or not.
*/
GLOBAL(void)
{
int i;
for (i = 0; i < NUM_QUANT_TBLS; i++) {
}
for (i = 0; i < NUM_HUFF_TBLS; i++) {
}
}
/*
* Finish JPEG compression.
*
* If a multipass operating mode was selected, this may do a great deal of
* work including most of the actual output.
*/
GLOBAL(void)
{
/* Terminate first pass */
/* Perform any remaining passes */
}
/* We bypass the main controller and invoke coef controller directly;
* all work is being done from the coefficient buffer.
*/
}
}
/* Write EOI, do final cleanup */
/* We can use jpeg_abort to release memory and reset global_state */
}
/*
* Write a special marker.
* This is only recommended for writing COM or APPn markers.
* Must be called after jpeg_start_compress() and before
* first call to jpeg_write_scanlines() or jpeg_write_raw_data().
*/
GLOBAL(void)
{
if (cinfo->next_scanline != 0 ||
while (datalen--) {
dataptr++;
}
}
/* Same, but piecemeal. */
GLOBAL(void)
{
if (cinfo->next_scanline != 0 ||
}
GLOBAL(void)
{
}
/*
* Alternate compression function: just write an abbreviated table file.
* Before calling this, all parameters and a data destination must be set up.
*
* To produce a pair of files containing abbreviated tables and abbreviated
* image data, one would proceed as follows:
*
* initialize JPEG object
* set JPEG parameters
* set destination to table file
* jpeg_write_tables(cinfo);
* set destination to image file
* jpeg_start_compress(cinfo, FALSE);
* write data...
* jpeg_finish_compress(cinfo);
*
* jpeg_write_tables has the side effect of marking all tables written
* (same as jpeg_suppress_tables(..., TRUE)). Thus a subsequent start_compress
* will not re-emit the tables unless it is passed write_all_tables=TRUE.
*/
GLOBAL(void)
{
/* (Re)initialize error mgr and destination modules */
/* Initialize the marker writer ... bit of a crock to do it here. */
/* Write them tables! */
/* And clean up. */
/*
* In library releases up through v6a, we called jpeg_abort() here to free
* any working memory allocated by the destination manager and marker
* writer. Some applications had a problem with that: they allocated space
* of their own from the library memory manager, and didn't want it to go
* away during write_tables. So now we do nothing. This will cause a
* memory leak if an app calls write_tables repeatedly without doing a full
* compression cycle or otherwise resetting the JPEG object. However, that
* seems less bad than unexpectedly freeing memory in the normal case.
* An app that prefers the old behavior can call jpeg_abort for itself after
* each call to jpeg_write_tables().
*/
}