Plan 9 from Bell Labs’s /usr/web/sources/contrib/stallion/root/386/go/src/image/gif/reader.go

Copyright © 2021 Plan 9 Foundation.
Distributed under the MIT License.
Download the Plan 9 distribution.


// Copyright 2011 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.

// Package gif implements a GIF image decoder and encoder.
//
// The GIF specification is at https://www.w3.org/Graphics/GIF/spec-gif89a.txt.
package gif

import (
	"bufio"
	"compress/lzw"
	"errors"
	"fmt"
	"image"
	"image/color"
	"io"
)

var (
	errNotEnough = errors.New("gif: not enough image data")
	errTooMuch   = errors.New("gif: too much image data")
	errBadPixel  = errors.New("gif: invalid pixel value")
)

// If the io.Reader does not also have ReadByte, then decode will introduce its own buffering.
type reader interface {
	io.Reader
	io.ByteReader
}

// Masks etc.
const (
	// Fields.
	fColorTable         = 1 << 7
	fInterlace          = 1 << 6
	fColorTableBitsMask = 7

	// Graphic control flags.
	gcTransparentColorSet = 1 << 0
	gcDisposalMethodMask  = 7 << 2
)

// Disposal Methods.
const (
	DisposalNone       = 0x01
	DisposalBackground = 0x02
	DisposalPrevious   = 0x03
)

// Section indicators.
const (
	sExtension       = 0x21
	sImageDescriptor = 0x2C
	sTrailer         = 0x3B
)

// Extensions.
const (
	eText           = 0x01 // Plain Text
	eGraphicControl = 0xF9 // Graphic Control
	eComment        = 0xFE // Comment
	eApplication    = 0xFF // Application
)

func readFull(r io.Reader, b []byte) error {
	_, err := io.ReadFull(r, b)
	if err == io.EOF {
		err = io.ErrUnexpectedEOF
	}
	return err
}

func readByte(r io.ByteReader) (byte, error) {
	b, err := r.ReadByte()
	if err == io.EOF {
		err = io.ErrUnexpectedEOF
	}
	return b, err
}

// decoder is the type used to decode a GIF file.
type decoder struct {
	r reader

	// From header.
	vers            string
	width           int
	height          int
	loopCount       int
	delayTime       int
	backgroundIndex byte
	disposalMethod  byte

	// From image descriptor.
	imageFields byte

	// From graphics control.
	transparentIndex    byte
	hasTransparentIndex bool

	// Computed.
	globalColorTable color.Palette

	// Used when decoding.
	delay    []int
	disposal []byte
	image    []*image.Paletted
	tmp      [1024]byte // must be at least 768 so we can read color table
}

// blockReader parses the block structure of GIF image data, which comprises
// (n, (n bytes)) blocks, with 1 <= n <= 255. It is the reader given to the
// LZW decoder, which is thus immune to the blocking. After the LZW decoder
// completes, there will be a 0-byte block remaining (0, ()), which is
// consumed when checking that the blockReader is exhausted.
//
// To avoid the allocation of a bufio.Reader for the lzw Reader, blockReader
// implements io.ReadByte and buffers blocks into the decoder's "tmp" buffer.
type blockReader struct {
	d    *decoder
	i, j uint8 // d.tmp[i:j] contains the buffered bytes
	err  error
}

func (b *blockReader) fill() {
	if b.err != nil {
		return
	}
	b.j, b.err = readByte(b.d.r)
	if b.j == 0 && b.err == nil {
		b.err = io.EOF
	}
	if b.err != nil {
		return
	}

	b.i = 0
	b.err = readFull(b.d.r, b.d.tmp[:b.j])
	if b.err != nil {
		b.j = 0
	}
}

func (b *blockReader) ReadByte() (byte, error) {
	if b.i == b.j {
		b.fill()
		if b.err != nil {
			return 0, b.err
		}
	}

	c := b.d.tmp[b.i]
	b.i++
	return c, nil
}

// blockReader must implement io.Reader, but its Read shouldn't ever actually
// be called in practice. The compress/lzw package will only call ReadByte.
func (b *blockReader) Read(p []byte) (int, error) {
	if len(p) == 0 || b.err != nil {
		return 0, b.err
	}
	if b.i == b.j {
		b.fill()
		if b.err != nil {
			return 0, b.err
		}
	}

	n := copy(p, b.d.tmp[b.i:b.j])
	b.i += uint8(n)
	return n, nil
}

// close primarily detects whether or not a block terminator was encountered
// after reading a sequence of data sub-blocks. It allows at most one trailing
// sub-block worth of data. I.e., if some number of bytes exist in one sub-block
// following the end of LZW data, the very next sub-block must be the block
// terminator. If the very end of LZW data happened to fill one sub-block, at
// most one more sub-block of length 1 may exist before the block-terminator.
// These accommodations allow us to support GIFs created by less strict encoders.
// See https://golang.org/issue/16146.
func (b *blockReader) close() error {
	if b.err == io.EOF {
		// A clean block-sequence terminator was encountered while reading.
		return nil
	} else if b.err != nil {
		// Some other error was encountered while reading.
		return b.err
	}

	if b.i == b.j {
		// We reached the end of a sub block reading LZW data. We'll allow at
		// most one more sub block of data with a length of 1 byte.
		b.fill()
		if b.err == io.EOF {
			return nil
		} else if b.err != nil {
			return b.err
		} else if b.j > 1 {
			return errTooMuch
		}
	}

	// Part of a sub-block remains buffered. We expect that the next attempt to
	// buffer a sub-block will reach the block terminator.
	b.fill()
	if b.err == io.EOF {
		return nil
	} else if b.err != nil {
		return b.err
	}

	return errTooMuch
}

// decode reads a GIF image from r and stores the result in d.
func (d *decoder) decode(r io.Reader, configOnly, keepAllFrames bool) error {
	// Add buffering if r does not provide ReadByte.
	if rr, ok := r.(reader); ok {
		d.r = rr
	} else {
		d.r = bufio.NewReader(r)
	}

	d.loopCount = -1

	err := d.readHeaderAndScreenDescriptor()
	if err != nil {
		return err
	}
	if configOnly {
		return nil
	}

	for {
		c, err := readByte(d.r)
		if err != nil {
			return fmt.Errorf("gif: reading frames: %v", err)
		}
		switch c {
		case sExtension:
			if err = d.readExtension(); err != nil {
				return err
			}

		case sImageDescriptor:
			if err = d.readImageDescriptor(keepAllFrames); err != nil {
				return err
			}

		case sTrailer:
			if len(d.image) == 0 {
				return fmt.Errorf("gif: missing image data")
			}
			return nil

		default:
			return fmt.Errorf("gif: unknown block type: 0x%.2x", c)
		}
	}
}

func (d *decoder) readHeaderAndScreenDescriptor() error {
	err := readFull(d.r, d.tmp[:13])
	if err != nil {
		return fmt.Errorf("gif: reading header: %v", err)
	}
	d.vers = string(d.tmp[:6])
	if d.vers != "GIF87a" && d.vers != "GIF89a" {
		return fmt.Errorf("gif: can't recognize format %q", d.vers)
	}
	d.width = int(d.tmp[6]) + int(d.tmp[7])<<8
	d.height = int(d.tmp[8]) + int(d.tmp[9])<<8
	if fields := d.tmp[10]; fields&fColorTable != 0 {
		d.backgroundIndex = d.tmp[11]
		// readColorTable overwrites the contents of d.tmp, but that's OK.
		if d.globalColorTable, err = d.readColorTable(fields); err != nil {
			return err
		}
	}
	// d.tmp[12] is the Pixel Aspect Ratio, which is ignored.
	return nil
}

func (d *decoder) readColorTable(fields byte) (color.Palette, error) {
	n := 1 << (1 + uint(fields&fColorTableBitsMask))
	err := readFull(d.r, d.tmp[:3*n])
	if err != nil {
		return nil, fmt.Errorf("gif: reading color table: %s", err)
	}
	j, p := 0, make(color.Palette, n)
	for i := range p {
		p[i] = color.RGBA{d.tmp[j+0], d.tmp[j+1], d.tmp[j+2], 0xFF}
		j += 3
	}
	return p, nil
}

func (d *decoder) readExtension() error {
	extension, err := readByte(d.r)
	if err != nil {
		return fmt.Errorf("gif: reading extension: %v", err)
	}
	size := 0
	switch extension {
	case eText:
		size = 13
	case eGraphicControl:
		return d.readGraphicControl()
	case eComment:
		// nothing to do but read the data.
	case eApplication:
		b, err := readByte(d.r)
		if err != nil {
			return fmt.Errorf("gif: reading extension: %v", err)
		}
		// The spec requires size be 11, but Adobe sometimes uses 10.
		size = int(b)
	default:
		return fmt.Errorf("gif: unknown extension 0x%.2x", extension)
	}
	if size > 0 {
		if err := readFull(d.r, d.tmp[:size]); err != nil {
			return fmt.Errorf("gif: reading extension: %v", err)
		}
	}

	// Application Extension with "NETSCAPE2.0" as string and 1 in data means
	// this extension defines a loop count.
	if extension == eApplication && string(d.tmp[:size]) == "NETSCAPE2.0" {
		n, err := d.readBlock()
		if err != nil {
			return fmt.Errorf("gif: reading extension: %v", err)
		}
		if n == 0 {
			return nil
		}
		if n == 3 && d.tmp[0] == 1 {
			d.loopCount = int(d.tmp[1]) | int(d.tmp[2])<<8
		}
	}
	for {
		n, err := d.readBlock()
		if err != nil {
			return fmt.Errorf("gif: reading extension: %v", err)
		}
		if n == 0 {
			return nil
		}
	}
}

func (d *decoder) readGraphicControl() error {
	if err := readFull(d.r, d.tmp[:6]); err != nil {
		return fmt.Errorf("gif: can't read graphic control: %s", err)
	}
	if d.tmp[0] != 4 {
		return fmt.Errorf("gif: invalid graphic control extension block size: %d", d.tmp[0])
	}
	flags := d.tmp[1]
	d.disposalMethod = (flags & gcDisposalMethodMask) >> 2
	d.delayTime = int(d.tmp[2]) | int(d.tmp[3])<<8
	if flags&gcTransparentColorSet != 0 {
		d.transparentIndex = d.tmp[4]
		d.hasTransparentIndex = true
	}
	if d.tmp[5] != 0 {
		return fmt.Errorf("gif: invalid graphic control extension block terminator: %d", d.tmp[5])
	}
	return nil
}

func (d *decoder) readImageDescriptor(keepAllFrames bool) error {
	m, err := d.newImageFromDescriptor()
	if err != nil {
		return err
	}
	useLocalColorTable := d.imageFields&fColorTable != 0
	if useLocalColorTable {
		m.Palette, err = d.readColorTable(d.imageFields)
		if err != nil {
			return err
		}
	} else {
		if d.globalColorTable == nil {
			return errors.New("gif: no color table")
		}
		m.Palette = d.globalColorTable
	}
	if d.hasTransparentIndex {
		if !useLocalColorTable {
			// Clone the global color table.
			m.Palette = append(color.Palette(nil), d.globalColorTable...)
		}
		if ti := int(d.transparentIndex); ti < len(m.Palette) {
			m.Palette[ti] = color.RGBA{}
		} else {
			// The transparentIndex is out of range, which is an error
			// according to the spec, but Firefox and Google Chrome
			// seem OK with this, so we enlarge the palette with
			// transparent colors. See golang.org/issue/15059.
			p := make(color.Palette, ti+1)
			copy(p, m.Palette)
			for i := len(m.Palette); i < len(p); i++ {
				p[i] = color.RGBA{}
			}
			m.Palette = p
		}
	}
	litWidth, err := readByte(d.r)
	if err != nil {
		return fmt.Errorf("gif: reading image data: %v", err)
	}
	if litWidth < 2 || litWidth > 8 {
		return fmt.Errorf("gif: pixel size in decode out of range: %d", litWidth)
	}
	// A wonderfully Go-like piece of magic.
	br := &blockReader{d: d}
	lzwr := lzw.NewReader(br, lzw.LSB, int(litWidth))
	defer lzwr.Close()
	if err = readFull(lzwr, m.Pix); err != nil {
		if err != io.ErrUnexpectedEOF {
			return fmt.Errorf("gif: reading image data: %v", err)
		}
		return errNotEnough
	}
	// In theory, both lzwr and br should be exhausted. Reading from them
	// should yield (0, io.EOF).
	//
	// The spec (Appendix F - Compression), says that "An End of
	// Information code... must be the last code output by the encoder
	// for an image". In practice, though, giflib (a widely used C
	// library) does not enforce this, so we also accept lzwr returning
	// io.ErrUnexpectedEOF (meaning that the encoded stream hit io.EOF
	// before the LZW decoder saw an explicit end code), provided that
	// the io.ReadFull call above successfully read len(m.Pix) bytes.
	// See https://golang.org/issue/9856 for an example GIF.
	if n, err := lzwr.Read(d.tmp[256:257]); n != 0 || (err != io.EOF && err != io.ErrUnexpectedEOF) {
		if err != nil {
			return fmt.Errorf("gif: reading image data: %v", err)
		}
		return errTooMuch
	}

	// In practice, some GIFs have an extra byte in the data sub-block
	// stream, which we ignore. See https://golang.org/issue/16146.
	if err := br.close(); err == errTooMuch {
		return errTooMuch
	} else if err != nil {
		return fmt.Errorf("gif: reading image data: %v", err)
	}

	// Check that the color indexes are inside the palette.
	if len(m.Palette) < 256 {
		for _, pixel := range m.Pix {
			if int(pixel) >= len(m.Palette) {
				return errBadPixel
			}
		}
	}

	// Undo the interlacing if necessary.
	if d.imageFields&fInterlace != 0 {
		uninterlace(m)
	}

	if keepAllFrames || len(d.image) == 0 {
		d.image = append(d.image, m)
		d.delay = append(d.delay, d.delayTime)
		d.disposal = append(d.disposal, d.disposalMethod)
	}
	// The GIF89a spec, Section 23 (Graphic Control Extension) says:
	// "The scope of this extension is the first graphic rendering block
	// to follow." We therefore reset the GCE fields to zero.
	d.delayTime = 0
	d.hasTransparentIndex = false
	return nil
}

func (d *decoder) newImageFromDescriptor() (*image.Paletted, error) {
	if err := readFull(d.r, d.tmp[:9]); err != nil {
		return nil, fmt.Errorf("gif: can't read image descriptor: %s", err)
	}
	left := int(d.tmp[0]) + int(d.tmp[1])<<8
	top := int(d.tmp[2]) + int(d.tmp[3])<<8
	width := int(d.tmp[4]) + int(d.tmp[5])<<8
	height := int(d.tmp[6]) + int(d.tmp[7])<<8
	d.imageFields = d.tmp[8]

	// The GIF89a spec, Section 20 (Image Descriptor) says: "Each image must
	// fit within the boundaries of the Logical Screen, as defined in the
	// Logical Screen Descriptor."
	//
	// This is conceptually similar to testing
	//	frameBounds := image.Rect(left, top, left+width, top+height)
	//	imageBounds := image.Rect(0, 0, d.width, d.height)
	//	if !frameBounds.In(imageBounds) { etc }
	// but the semantics of the Go image.Rectangle type is that r.In(s) is true
	// whenever r is an empty rectangle, even if r.Min.X > s.Max.X. Here, we
	// want something stricter.
	//
	// Note that, by construction, left >= 0 && top >= 0, so we only have to
	// explicitly compare frameBounds.Max (left+width, top+height) against
	// imageBounds.Max (d.width, d.height) and not frameBounds.Min (left, top)
	// against imageBounds.Min (0, 0).
	if left+width > d.width || top+height > d.height {
		return nil, errors.New("gif: frame bounds larger than image bounds")
	}
	return image.NewPaletted(image.Rectangle{
		Min: image.Point{left, top},
		Max: image.Point{left + width, top + height},
	}, nil), nil
}

func (d *decoder) readBlock() (int, error) {
	n, err := readByte(d.r)
	if n == 0 || err != nil {
		return 0, err
	}
	if err := readFull(d.r, d.tmp[:n]); err != nil {
		return 0, err
	}
	return int(n), nil
}

// interlaceScan defines the ordering for a pass of the interlace algorithm.
type interlaceScan struct {
	skip, start int
}

// interlacing represents the set of scans in an interlaced GIF image.
var interlacing = []interlaceScan{
	{8, 0}, // Group 1 : Every 8th. row, starting with row 0.
	{8, 4}, // Group 2 : Every 8th. row, starting with row 4.
	{4, 2}, // Group 3 : Every 4th. row, starting with row 2.
	{2, 1}, // Group 4 : Every 2nd. row, starting with row 1.
}

// uninterlace rearranges the pixels in m to account for interlaced input.
func uninterlace(m *image.Paletted) {
	var nPix []uint8
	dx := m.Bounds().Dx()
	dy := m.Bounds().Dy()
	nPix = make([]uint8, dx*dy)
	offset := 0 // steps through the input by sequential scan lines.
	for _, pass := range interlacing {
		nOffset := pass.start * dx // steps through the output as defined by pass.
		for y := pass.start; y < dy; y += pass.skip {
			copy(nPix[nOffset:nOffset+dx], m.Pix[offset:offset+dx])
			offset += dx
			nOffset += dx * pass.skip
		}
	}
	m.Pix = nPix
}

// Decode reads a GIF image from r and returns the first embedded
// image as an image.Image.
func Decode(r io.Reader) (image.Image, error) {
	var d decoder
	if err := d.decode(r, false, false); err != nil {
		return nil, err
	}
	return d.image[0], nil
}

// GIF represents the possibly multiple images stored in a GIF file.
type GIF struct {
	Image []*image.Paletted // The successive images.
	Delay []int             // The successive delay times, one per frame, in 100ths of a second.
	// LoopCount controls the number of times an animation will be
	// restarted during display.
	// A LoopCount of 0 means to loop forever.
	// A LoopCount of -1 means to show each frame only once.
	// Otherwise, the animation is looped LoopCount+1 times.
	LoopCount int
	// Disposal is the successive disposal methods, one per frame. For
	// backwards compatibility, a nil Disposal is valid to pass to EncodeAll,
	// and implies that each frame's disposal method is 0 (no disposal
	// specified).
	Disposal []byte
	// Config is the global color table (palette), width and height. A nil or
	// empty-color.Palette Config.ColorModel means that each frame has its own
	// color table and there is no global color table. Each frame's bounds must
	// be within the rectangle defined by the two points (0, 0) and
	// (Config.Width, Config.Height).
	//
	// For backwards compatibility, a zero-valued Config is valid to pass to
	// EncodeAll, and implies that the overall GIF's width and height equals
	// the first frame's bounds' Rectangle.Max point.
	Config image.Config
	// BackgroundIndex is the background index in the global color table, for
	// use with the DisposalBackground disposal method.
	BackgroundIndex byte
}

// DecodeAll reads a GIF image from r and returns the sequential frames
// and timing information.
func DecodeAll(r io.Reader) (*GIF, error) {
	var d decoder
	if err := d.decode(r, false, true); err != nil {
		return nil, err
	}
	gif := &GIF{
		Image:     d.image,
		LoopCount: d.loopCount,
		Delay:     d.delay,
		Disposal:  d.disposal,
		Config: image.Config{
			ColorModel: d.globalColorTable,
			Width:      d.width,
			Height:     d.height,
		},
		BackgroundIndex: d.backgroundIndex,
	}
	return gif, nil
}

// DecodeConfig returns the global color model and dimensions of a GIF image
// without decoding the entire image.
func DecodeConfig(r io.Reader) (image.Config, error) {
	var d decoder
	if err := d.decode(r, true, false); err != nil {
		return image.Config{}, err
	}
	return image.Config{
		ColorModel: d.globalColorTable,
		Width:      d.width,
		Height:     d.height,
	}, nil
}

func init() {
	image.RegisterFormat("gif", "GIF8?a", Decode, DecodeConfig)
}

Bell Labs OSI certified Powered by Plan 9

(Return to Plan 9 Home Page)

Copyright © 2021 Plan 9 Foundation. All Rights Reserved.
Comments to webmaster@9p.io.