.gradle/4.10 | ||
src/main | ||
test_pic | ||
.gitignore | ||
pom.xml | ||
README.md |
webp-imageio-core
forked from qwong/j-webp Java Image I/O reader and writer for the Google WebP image format without system lib file.
In source program, coders need to put native lib files like .so/.dll/.dylib into the folder of java.library.path
.
For easier to use, qwong/j-webp (bases on webp project of Luciad 0.4.2) import native-lib-loader to load native lib files from project resource folder, instead of java.library.path
. (more details to see com.luciad.imageio.webp.WebP.loadNativeLibrary
)
However, coders pefer using jar package instead of source java code in personal project. So I fork and edit qwong/j-webp to privide a usable jar. It is a fat jar includes dependencies and native lib file (includes windows/linux/mac both 32&64bit).
Update 20181119: sync from webp project of Luciad 1.0.0
Usage
Because it is not in maven repo, so you have to put the jar file webp-imageio-core-{version}.jar
into libs folder of your project manually.
if you use gradle, you can put it into src/main/resource/libs
, and edit config filebuild.gradle
to add local dependencies
dependencies {
compile fileTree(dir:'src/main/resources/libs',include:['*.jar'])
}
if you use maven, you can put it ${project.basedir}/libs
, and edit config file pom.xml
to add local dependencies
<dependency>
<groupId>com.github.nintha</groupId>
<artifactId>webp-imageio-core</artifactId>
<version>{versoin}</version>
<scope>system</scope>
<systemPath>${project.basedir}/libs/webp-imageio-core-{version}.jar</systemPath>
</dependency>
The usage of api, you can see example cases in src/main/java/example
.
Compiling the native library
download source code of webp project of Luciad , and unzip it.
wget https://bitbucket.org/luciad/webp-imageio/get/873c5677244b.zip -O luciad-webp-imageio-873c5677244b.zip
unzip luciad-webp-imageio-873c5677244b.zip
download source code of google webp project
git clone https://chromium.googlesource.com/webm/libwebp
or use the mirror repo
copy folder libwebp into folder luciad-webp-imageio-873c5677244b, and create a directory called build
in the folder luciad-webp-imageio-873c5677244b
folder tree like this:
luciad-webp-imageio-873c5677244b/
|_ build/ <-- just created
|_ gradle/
|_ src/
|_ libwebp/ <-- copy from project libwebp
|_ .hgignore
|....
|.... (other files)
Install CMake 2.8 or newer. CMake can be downloaded from www.cmake.org or installed using your systems package manager. if you use Win10 and VS 2019, it need CMake 3.14 or newer.
Open a terminal and navigate to the newly created 'build' directory.
cd ./build
cmake ..
cmake --build .
The compiled library can be found under the directory build/src/main/c
if you need specific the generator-name, please add -G <generator-name>
parameter for cmake, like this
// cmake ..
cmake .. -G "Visual Studio 16 2019"
Compiling the Java library
- Run
./gradlew build -x test
in the root of the project - The compiled Java library can be found under the
build
directory