Let me know if I should add these to the `Cargo.toml`.
All `cargo test` tests pass on the latest x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu
nightly.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alejandro González <me@alegon.dev>
This PR allows the Brute filter parameters to be configured rather than
using fixed constants. It also tweaks the presets to take advantage of
these new options:
o3: level=1, lines=3 (fractionally worse/faster)
o4: level=1, lines=4 (same as before)
o5: level=4, lines=4 (fractionally better/slower)
o6: level=5, lines=8 (slightly better/slower)
The parameters can be explicitly set in both the API and the CLI.
Adds an option to skip files when the uncompressed IDAT (or the file
size itself) exceeds a certain size. This provides an effective way to
limit resource usage in constrained environments.
Closes#411.
This is a collection of all the BC breaks mentioned in #714, except for
11 which I'm not including for now.
Fixes#658.
Fixes#660.
It might be best to review each commit individually, referencing the
notes in #714 and #660 (I just didn't want to create a dozen separate
PRs).
This is an experiment I started a while ago before life happened. It
reduces memory usage of fast evaluation (-o2 and lower), bringing it
inline with normal (slow) evaluation. It does this by not retaining the
filtered image data of the evaluations, but instead retaining the row
filters that were used in each line so it can be quickly re-filtered
when required. This does incur a tiny performance penalty, but it's
negligible even at `-o0`.
Although this is fully functional, there are a few rough spots in the
code so I'm just opening it as a draft for now.
```
PR -sao6
70.08 real 614.36 user 2.66 sys
2024243200 maximum resident set size
1839339520 peak memory footprint
PR -sao2
11.16 real 60.85 user 1.33 sys
1982562304 maximum resident set size
1842173824 peak memory footprint
PR -sao2 -t1
55.11 real 53.85 user 0.76 sys
429457408 maximum resident set size
245008064 peak memory footprint
master -sao6
67.70 real 616.07 user 2.72 sys
2043379712 maximum resident set size
1838340416 peak memory footprint
master -sao2
11.53 real 60.63 user 1.25 sys
2753396736 maximum resident set size
2283741440 peak memory footprint
master -sao2 -t1
54.29 real 53.55 user 0.72 sys
626311168 maximum resident set size
305252544 peak memory footprint
```
Note that this involves some refactoring of `RowFilter` and the new
`FilterStrategy`. These are breaking changes so it will ultimately be
destined for v10. One advantage to this new structure is it opens the
door for future changes such as allowing the Brute strategy to take a
parameter for the number of lines.
#719 is failing tests due to requiring a newer version of rust than we
currently specify. This PR updates to 1.85.1 and sets the edition to
2024.
I've also updated dependencies and runner images, using the ubuntu arm
runner which removes the need for qemu and other hacks.
Closes#719.
This PR extends the `--zopfli` argument with an optional iteration
count. In my case, I have a bunch of very small images (a few kB or
less), and I often like to use hundreds of iterations to squeeze off the
last several bytes. (I know that this crate isn't intended for
brute-force optimization, but I've found that some of its
transformations and filter strategies can be more creative than
`zopflipng`.) But this is also useful in the opposite direction, for
allowing Zopfli compression on large images where 15 iterations would be
prohibitive.
I have identified two potential improvements for how we perform static analysis
on our code in our CI pipeline:
- The `giraffate/clippy-action` we currently use has not been updated to Node
20, and GitHub has repeatedly indicated that they will phase out actions that
do not support the latest Node versions. Despite my efforts to help with the
update by submitting a pull request upstream, it has been ignored for months
despite its perceived ease of review, raising concerns about the ongoing
maintenance of the action. This situation suggests we should explore
alternative methods for integrating Clippy with GitHub's UI.
- As evidenced by PR 632, thoroughly testing Rust crates for every possible
feature combination is often overlooked due to the tedious nature of the task.
Our current CI setup only checks two feature combinations, which is far from
comprehensive.
To address the first improvement, these changes drop `clippy-action` entirely in
favor of utilizing GitHub's native CodeQL SARIF (Static Analysis Results
Interchange Format) file integration. Since Clippy cannot directly output lints
in SARIF, `clippy-sarif` is used to convert Clippy's JSON output to SARIF.
Additionally, `sarif-fmt` is added to turn SARIF into a human-friendly display
format in the workflow run logs.
For the second improvement, let's use `cargo hack` with the `--feature-powerset`
flag to run Clippy for every possible feature combination. This approach strikes
a good balance between CI runtime and thoroughness, as the number of feature
combinations grows superlinearly with the number of features: running `cargo
nextest` for every powerset element would lead to excessively long CI times.
This PR adds a build script to generate a man page using clap_mangen, as
per this example:
https://github.com/sondr3/clap-man-example/blob/main/build.rs
I'm not sure what to actually do with the man file from here, I guess
it's up to the packaging process to do something with it?
See
https://github.com/shssoichiro/oxipng/issues/69#issuecomment-1963352536
Note I couldn't see a way to include the `DISPLAY` chunk names from the
constant as we did before. They're now just hardcoded into the help and
will require manually updating if the list changes.
Closes#526
---------
Co-authored-by: Alejandro González <me@alegon.dev>
This is a minor change that allows using both `--strip` and `--keep` at
the same time.
E.g. `--strip safe --keep eXIf` will strip chunks while preserving both
the ones that aren't "safe" to remove *and* eXIf. Essentially it's a
convenience to allow extending the default list used by `--strip safe`.
Specifying chunk names for both options is not permitted, e.g. `--strip
eXIf --keep eXIf` will error.
Use of `--strip all` with `--keep` is redundant, but is permitted.
This PR brings a big overhaul to oxipng's help, with new long form
descriptions of many options.
The full output (--help) is added as a text file MANUAL.txt. Critiques
welcome.
The short output (-h) is simplified and appears as follows:
```
Losslessly improve compression of PNG files
Usage: oxipng [OPTIONS] <files>...
Arguments:
<files>... File(s) to compress (use '-' for stdin)
Options:
-o, --opt <level> Optimization level (0-6, or max) [default: 2]
-r, --recursive Recurse input directories, optimizing all PNG files
--dir <directory> Write output file(s) to <directory>
--out <file> Write output file to <file>
--stdout Write output to stdout
-p, --preserve Preserve file permissions and timestamps if possible
-P, --pretend Do not write any files, only show compression results
-s Strip safely-removable chunks, same as '--strip safe'
--strip <mode> Strip metadata (safe, all, or comma-separated list)
CAUTION: 'all' will convert APNGs to standard PNGs
--keep <list> Strip all metadata except in the comma-separated list
-a, --alpha Perform additional alpha channel optimization
-i, --interlace <type> Set PNG interlacing type (0, 1, keep) [default: 0]
--scale16 Forcibly reduce 16-bit images to 8-bit (lossy)
-v, --verbose... Run in verbose mode (use twice to increase verbosity)
-q, --quiet Run in quiet mode
-f, --filters <list> Filters to try (0-9; see '--help' for details)
--fast Use fast filter evaluation
--zc <level> Deflate compression level (1-12)
--nb Do not change bit depth
--nc Do not change color type
--np Do not change color palette
--ng Do not change to or from grayscale
--nx Do not perform any transformations
--nz Do not recompress unless transformations occur
--fix Disable checksum validation
--force Write the output even if it is larger than the input
-Z, --zopfli Use the much slower but stronger Zopfli compressor
--timeout <secs> Maximum amount of time to spend on optimizations
-t, --threads <num> Set number of threads to use [default: num CPU cores]
-h, --help Print help (see more with '--help')
-V, --version Print version
Run `oxipng --help` to see full details of all options
```
---------
Co-authored-by: Alejandro González <me@alegon.dev>
Tidy up the API by removing a couple of options we don't really need.
Backup was discussed in #542
Check was discussed in #439
@shssoichiro Just say if you prefer to keep either of these 🙂
Closes: https://github.com/shssoichiro/oxipng/issues/556
Adds a statement saying that `--timeout` isn't as useful for compression
algorithms which use fewer and slower rounds, which OxiPNG tends to use
nowadays.
---------
Co-authored-by: andrews05 <andrew@digerati.co.nz>
This PR is addressing #220. It's not super important but it's a breaking
change, so if it's something we want to do then I thought I should get
it in now before the next release.
- [x] pretend can become another variant of OutFile, probably
OutFile::None, as that's what it essentially is - just another output
destination and not a separate option
- [x] ~~backup and~~ preserve_attrs should become properties of
OutFile::Path variant (so that it would contain Path { path, ~~backup,~~
preserve_attrs }) as they don't have any effect on any other output and
so semantically belong there best
Closes#220
This PR makes two changes:
- `--nz` (`idat_recoding`) now disables all zlib recompression,
including iCCP and fDAT chunks. (Perhaps we should rename the option to
`zlib_recompression`?)
- `--nx` now also disables the default deinterlacing, though it can
still be overridden with `-i`.
`--nx --nz` does disable all optimisations in the v8 release and we
should ensure it continues to do so in the next release. (This is
related to discussions around removing the `--check` option.)
This adds a new palette sorting algorithm that attempts to minimise
entropy by an approximate solution to the Traveling Salesman Problem.
The algorithm comes from "An efficient Re-indexing algorithm for
color-mapped images" by Battiato et al
(https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/1344033).
It's fast and effective and works in addition to the luma sort (which
remains the single most effective sort). In order to keep lower presets
fast though, I've only enabled this for o3 and higher.
Results on a set of 190 indexed images at `-o5`:
18,932,727 bytes - master
18,578,306 bytes - PR
18,559,863 bytes - PR + #509
(These images may be particularly suited to alternative sorting methods
- the gains here are not necessarily what should be expected on average)
Note I looked into the 120 different palette sorting methods from
TruePNG, as mentioned in #74 (and seen in action in the Zopfli KrzYmod
fork). They're... largely ineffective. The combination of all 120
methods are outperformed by just the existing luma sort plus this new
one. That's not to say there's nothing further to be gained from them,
but trying to brute force all the combinations definitely seems like a
bad idea. There are other algorithms I hope to explore in future...
@ace-dent Thought this might interest you
UPDATE: I realised a quick tweak to alpha values in the luma sort can
provide a great improvement on images with transparency. The following
numbers were taken with PR #509 as base.
`-o2`:
19,065,549 bytes - base (luma sort)
18,949,747 bytes - modified luma sort
`-o5`:
18,922,165 bytes - base (luma sort)
18,559,863 bytes - new sorting algorithm + luma sort
18,544,813 bytes - new sorting algorithm + modified luma sort
This PR makes the oxipng binary process multiple files in parallel,
finally fulfilling #275. There seemed to be some debate about whether
oxipng _should_ do this or not but there's a couple of reasons I think
it makes sense:
1. The concern seemed mostly around the complexity of such a feature.
Not to worry, it was trivial* 🙂
2. Since then, oxipng has dropped from a max of something like 180
simultaneous compression trials down to 10, which is very much a good
thing but it does mean it's not utilising any more cores than that.
Some benchmarks on around 100 files on a machine with 8 cores:
Level | Master time | PR time
-|-|-
2 | 28.303 | 19.005
3 | 36.507 | 23.089
5 | 1:10.86 | 1:16.01
*Some additional changes were required in order to make sure sensible
output is printed to the terminal, since things won't be in order
anymore. Here's some example output from before:
```
Processing: tests/files/fully_optimized.png
file size = 67 bytes (0 bytes = 0.00% decrease)
File already optimized
Processing: tests/files/corrupted_header.png
Invalid PNG header detected
Processing: tests/files/verbose_mode.png
file size = 102480 bytes (12228 bytes = 10.66% decrease)
Output: tests/files/verbose_mode.png
```
And after:
```
Processing: tests/files/verbose_mode.png
Processing: tests/files/fully_optimized.png
Processing: tests/files/corrupted_header.png
tests/files/corrupted_header.png: Invalid PNG header detected
tests/files/fully_optimized.png: Could not optimize further, no change written
102480 bytes (10.66% smaller): tests/files/verbose_mode.png
```
Closes#275, #84, #169, #196 and #419.
[edit] This is the last thing I wanted to land before the next release 🥳
* Add .whitesource configuration file
* Experimental: allow Zopfli to use any size BufWriter
* Allow user to specify the output buffer size as well
* Allow user to specify maximum block splits
* Reformat and fix warnings
* Use deflater on iCCP chunk as well
* Bug fix: need to implement Zlib format
* Make functions const when possible
* Switch to using zopfli::Options in prep for https://github.com/zopfli-rs/zopfli/pull/21
* Switch to using zopfli::Options in prep for https://github.com/zopfli-rs/zopfli/pull/21
* Cargo fmt
* Fix compilation
* Fix tests
* Fix more lints
* Fix more lints
* Fix compilation more
---------
Co-authored-by: mend-bolt-for-github[bot] <42819689+mend-bolt-for-github[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Chris Hennick <hennickc@amazon.com>
Co-authored-by: Chris Hennick <4961925+Pr0methean@users.noreply.github.com>