Index: third_party/libjpeg/jmorecfg.h |
diff --git a/third_party/libjpeg/jmorecfg.h b/third_party/libjpeg/jmorecfg.h |
deleted file mode 100644 |
index afb5bb4c141b1d3f291f2e8eddaf73a3c65ce050..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000 |
--- a/third_party/libjpeg/jmorecfg.h |
+++ /dev/null |
@@ -1,414 +0,0 @@ |
-/* |
- * jmorecfg.h |
- * |
- * Copyright (C) 1991-1997, 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 additional configuration options that customize the |
- * JPEG software for special applications or support machine-dependent |
- * optimizations. Most users will not need to touch this file. |
- */ |
- |
-/* |
- * This file has been modified for the Mozilla/Netscape environment. |
- * Modifications are distributed under the Netscape Public License and are |
- * Copyright (C) 1998 Netscape Communications Corporation. All Rights |
- * Reserved. |
- */ |
- |
- |
-/* |
- * Define BITS_IN_JSAMPLE as either |
- * 8 for 8-bit sample values (the usual setting) |
- * 12 for 12-bit sample values |
- * Only 8 and 12 are legal data precisions for lossy JPEG according to the |
- * JPEG standard, and the IJG code does not support anything else! |
- * We do not support run-time selection of data precision, sorry. |
- */ |
- |
-#define BITS_IN_JSAMPLE 8 /* use 8 or 12 */ |
- |
- |
-/* |
- * Maximum number of components (color channels) allowed in JPEG image. |
- * To meet the letter of the JPEG spec, set this to 255. However, darn |
- * few applications need more than 4 channels (maybe 5 for CMYK + alpha |
- * mask). We recommend 10 as a reasonable compromise; use 4 if you are |
- * really short on memory. (Each allowed component costs a hundred or so |
- * bytes of storage, whether actually used in an image or not.) |
- */ |
- |
-#define MAX_COMPONENTS 10 /* maximum number of image components */ |
- |
- |
-/* |
- * Basic data types. |
- * You may need to change these if you have a machine with unusual data |
- * type sizes; for example, "char" not 8 bits, "short" not 16 bits, |
- * or "long" not 32 bits. We don't care whether "int" is 16 or 32 bits, |
- * but it had better be at least 16. |
- */ |
- |
-/* Representation of a single sample (pixel element value). |
- * We frequently allocate large arrays of these, so it's important to keep |
- * them small. But if you have memory to burn and access to char or short |
- * arrays is very slow on your hardware, you might want to change these. |
- */ |
- |
-#if BITS_IN_JSAMPLE == 8 |
-/* JSAMPLE should be the smallest type that will hold the values 0..255. |
- * You can use a signed char by having GETJSAMPLE mask it with 0xFF. |
- */ |
- |
-#ifdef HAVE_UNSIGNED_CHAR |
- |
-typedef unsigned char JSAMPLE; |
-#define GETJSAMPLE(value) ((int) (value)) |
- |
-#else /* not HAVE_UNSIGNED_CHAR */ |
- |
-typedef char JSAMPLE; |
-#ifdef CHAR_IS_UNSIGNED |
-#define GETJSAMPLE(value) ((int) (value)) |
-#else |
-#define GETJSAMPLE(value) ((int) (value) & 0xFF) |
-#endif /* CHAR_IS_UNSIGNED */ |
- |
-#endif /* HAVE_UNSIGNED_CHAR */ |
- |
-#define MAXJSAMPLE 255 |
-#define CENTERJSAMPLE 128 |
- |
-#endif /* BITS_IN_JSAMPLE == 8 */ |
- |
- |
-#if BITS_IN_JSAMPLE == 12 |
-/* JSAMPLE should be the smallest type that will hold the values 0..4095. |
- * On nearly all machines "short" will do nicely. |
- */ |
- |
-typedef short JSAMPLE; |
-#define GETJSAMPLE(value) ((int) (value)) |
- |
-#define MAXJSAMPLE 4095 |
-#define CENTERJSAMPLE 2048 |
- |
-#endif /* BITS_IN_JSAMPLE == 12 */ |
- |
- |
-/* Representation of a DCT frequency coefficient. |
- * This should be a signed value of at least 16 bits; "short" is usually OK. |
- * Again, we allocate large arrays of these, but you can change to int |
- * if you have memory to burn and "short" is really slow. |
- */ |
- |
-typedef short JCOEF; |
- |
-/* Defines for MMX/SSE2 support. */ |
- |
-#if defined(XP_WIN32) && defined(_M_IX86) && !defined(__GNUC__) |
-#define HAVE_MMX_INTEL_MNEMONICS |
- |
-/* SSE2 code appears broken for some cpus (bug 247437) */ |
-/* #define HAVE_SSE2_INTEL_MNEMONICS */ |
-#endif |
- |
-/* Compressed datastreams are represented as arrays of JOCTET. |
- * These must be EXACTLY 8 bits wide, at least once they are written to |
- * external storage. Note that when using the stdio data source/destination |
- * managers, this is also the data type passed to fread/fwrite. |
- */ |
- |
-#ifdef HAVE_UNSIGNED_CHAR |
- |
-typedef unsigned char JOCTET; |
-#define GETJOCTET(value) (value) |
- |
-#else /* not HAVE_UNSIGNED_CHAR */ |
- |
-typedef char JOCTET; |
-#ifdef CHAR_IS_UNSIGNED |
-#define GETJOCTET(value) (value) |
-#else |
-#define GETJOCTET(value) ((value) & 0xFF) |
-#endif /* CHAR_IS_UNSIGNED */ |
- |
-#endif /* HAVE_UNSIGNED_CHAR */ |
- |
- |
-/* These typedefs are used for various table entries and so forth. |
- * They must be at least as wide as specified; but making them too big |
- * won't cost a huge amount of memory, so we don't provide special |
- * extraction code like we did for JSAMPLE. (In other words, these |
- * typedefs live at a different point on the speed/space tradeoff curve.) |
- */ |
- |
-/* UINT8 must hold at least the values 0..255. */ |
- |
-#ifdef HAVE_UNSIGNED_CHAR |
-typedef unsigned char UINT8; |
-#else /* not HAVE_UNSIGNED_CHAR */ |
-#ifdef CHAR_IS_UNSIGNED |
-typedef char UINT8; |
-#else /* not CHAR_IS_UNSIGNED */ |
-typedef short UINT8; |
-#endif /* CHAR_IS_UNSIGNED */ |
-#endif /* HAVE_UNSIGNED_CHAR */ |
- |
-/* UINT16 must hold at least the values 0..65535. */ |
- |
-#ifdef HAVE_UNSIGNED_SHORT |
-typedef unsigned short UINT16; |
-#else /* not HAVE_UNSIGNED_SHORT */ |
-typedef unsigned int UINT16; |
-#endif /* HAVE_UNSIGNED_SHORT */ |
- |
-/* INT16 must hold at least the values -32768..32767. */ |
- |
-#ifndef XMD_H /* X11/xmd.h correctly defines INT16 */ |
-typedef short INT16; |
-#endif |
- |
-/* INT32 must hold at least signed 32-bit values. */ |
- |
-#ifndef XMD_H /* X11/xmd.h correctly defines INT32 */ |
-#ifndef _BASETSD_H_ /* basetsd.h correctly defines INT32 */ |
-#ifndef _BASETSD_H |
-typedef long INT32; |
-#endif |
-#endif |
-#endif |
- |
-/* Datatype used for image dimensions. The JPEG standard only supports |
- * images up to 64K*64K due to 16-bit fields in SOF markers. Therefore |
- * "unsigned int" is sufficient on all machines. However, if you need to |
- * handle larger images and you don't mind deviating from the spec, you |
- * can change this datatype. |
- */ |
- |
-typedef unsigned int JDIMENSION; |
- |
-#define JPEG_MAX_DIMENSION 65500L /* a tad under 64K to prevent overflows */ |
- |
- |
-/* These macros are used in all function definitions and extern declarations. |
- * You could modify them if you need to change function linkage conventions; |
- * in particular, you'll need to do that to make the library a Windows DLL. |
- * Another application is to make all functions global for use with debuggers |
- * or code profilers that require it. |
- */ |
- |
-/* a function called through method pointers: */ |
-#define METHODDEF(type) static type |
-/* a function used only in its module: */ |
-#define LOCAL(type) static type |
-/* a function referenced thru EXTERNs: */ |
-#define GLOBAL(type) type |
-/* a reference to a GLOBAL function: */ |
-#define EXTERN(type) extern type |
- |
- |
-/* This macro is used to declare a "method", that is, a function pointer. |
- * We want to supply prototype parameters if the compiler can cope. |
- * Note that the arglist parameter must be parenthesized! |
- * Again, you can customize this if you need special linkage keywords. |
- */ |
- |
-#ifdef HAVE_PROTOTYPES |
-#define JMETHOD(type,methodname,arglist) type (*methodname) arglist |
-#else |
-#define JMETHOD(type,methodname,arglist) type (*methodname) () |
-#endif |
- |
- |
-/* Here is the pseudo-keyword for declaring pointers that must be "far" |
- * on 80x86 machines. Most of the specialized coding for 80x86 is handled |
- * by just saying "FAR *" where such a pointer is needed. In a few places |
- * explicit coding is needed; see uses of the NEED_FAR_POINTERS symbol. |
- */ |
- |
-#ifndef FAR |
-#ifdef NEED_FAR_POINTERS |
-#define FAR far |
-#else |
-#define FAR |
-#endif |
-#endif |
- |
- |
-/* |
- * On a few systems, type boolean and/or its values FALSE, TRUE may appear |
- * in standard header files. Or you may have conflicts with application- |
- * specific header files that you want to include together with these files. |
- * Defining HAVE_BOOLEAN before including jpeglib.h should make it work. |
- */ |
- |
-/* Mozilla mod: IJG distribution makes boolean = int, but on Windows |
- * it's far safer to define boolean = unsigned char. Easier to switch |
- * than fight. |
- */ |
- |
-/* For some reason, on SunOS 5.3 HAVE_BOOLEAN gets defined when using |
- * gcc, but boolean doesn't. Even if you use -UHAVE_BOOLEAN, it still |
- * gets reset somewhere. |
- */ |
-#if defined(MUST_UNDEF_HAVE_BOOLEAN_AFTER_INCLUDES) && defined(HAVE_BOOLEAN) |
-#undef HAVE_BOOLEAN |
-#endif |
-#ifndef HAVE_BOOLEAN |
-typedef unsigned char boolean; |
-#endif |
-#ifndef FALSE /* in case these macros already exist */ |
-#define FALSE 0 /* values of boolean */ |
-#endif |
-#ifndef TRUE |
-#define TRUE 1 |
-#endif |
- |
- |
-/* |
- * The remaining options affect code selection within the JPEG library, |
- * but they don't need to be visible to most applications using the library. |
- * To minimize application namespace pollution, the symbols won't be |
- * defined unless JPEG_INTERNALS or JPEG_INTERNAL_OPTIONS has been defined. |
- */ |
- |
-#ifdef JPEG_INTERNALS |
-#define JPEG_INTERNAL_OPTIONS |
-#endif |
- |
-#ifdef JPEG_INTERNAL_OPTIONS |
- |
- |
-/* |
- * These defines indicate whether to include various optional functions. |
- * Undefining some of these symbols will produce a smaller but less capable |
- * library. Note that you can leave certain source files out of the |
- * compilation/linking process if you've #undef'd the corresponding symbols. |
- * (You may HAVE to do that if your compiler doesn't like null source files.) |
- */ |
- |
-/* |
- * Mozilla mods here: undef some features not actually used by the browser. |
- * This reduces object code size and more importantly allows us to compile |
- * even with broken compilers that crash when fed certain modules of the |
- * IJG sources. Currently we undef: |
- * DCT_FLOAT_SUPPORTED INPUT_SMOOTHING_SUPPORTED IDCT_SCALING_SUPPORTED |
- * QUANT_1PASS_SUPPORTED QUANT_2PASS_SUPPORTED |
- */ |
- |
-/* Arithmetic coding is unsupported for legal reasons. Complaints to IBM. */ |
- |
-/* Capability options common to encoder and decoder: */ |
- |
-#define DCT_ISLOW_SUPPORTED /* slow but accurate integer algorithm */ |
-#undef DCT_IFAST_SUPPORTED /* faster, less accurate integer method */ |
-#undef DCT_FLOAT_SUPPORTED /* floating-point: accurate, fast on fast HW */ |
- |
-/* Encoder capability options: */ |
- |
-#undef C_ARITH_CODING_SUPPORTED /* Arithmetic coding back end? */ |
-#define C_MULTISCAN_FILES_SUPPORTED /* Multiple-scan JPEG files? */ |
-#define C_PROGRESSIVE_SUPPORTED /* Progressive JPEG? (Requires MULTISCAN)*/ |
-#define ENTROPY_OPT_SUPPORTED /* Optimization of entropy coding parms? */ |
-/* Note: if you selected 12-bit data precision, it is dangerous to turn off |
- * ENTROPY_OPT_SUPPORTED. The standard Huffman tables are only good for 8-bit |
- * precision, so jchuff.c normally uses entropy optimization to compute |
- * usable tables for higher precision. If you don't want to do optimization, |
- * you'll have to supply different default Huffman tables. |
- * The exact same statements apply for progressive JPEG: the default tables |
- * don't work for progressive mode. (This may get fixed, however.) |
- */ |
-#undef INPUT_SMOOTHING_SUPPORTED /* Input image smoothing option? */ |
- |
-/* TextResourceDecoder capability options: */ |
- |
-#undef D_ARITH_CODING_SUPPORTED /* Arithmetic coding back end? */ |
-#define D_MULTISCAN_FILES_SUPPORTED /* Multiple-scan JPEG files? */ |
-#define D_PROGRESSIVE_SUPPORTED /* Progressive JPEG? (Requires MULTISCAN)*/ |
-#define SAVE_MARKERS_SUPPORTED /* jpeg_save_markers() needed? */ |
-#define BLOCK_SMOOTHING_SUPPORTED /* Block smoothing? (Progressive only) */ |
-#undef IDCT_SCALING_SUPPORTED /* Output rescaling via IDCT? */ |
-#undef UPSAMPLE_SCALING_SUPPORTED /* Output rescaling at upsample stage? */ |
-#define UPSAMPLE_MERGING_SUPPORTED /* Fast path for sloppy upsampling? */ |
-#undef QUANT_1PASS_SUPPORTED /* 1-pass color quantization? */ |
-#undef QUANT_2PASS_SUPPORTED /* 2-pass color quantization? */ |
- |
-/* more capability options later, no doubt */ |
- |
- |
-/* |
- * Ordering of RGB data in scanlines passed to or from the application. |
- * If your application wants to deal with data in the order B,G,R, just |
- * change these macros. You can also deal with formats such as R,G,B,X |
- * (one extra byte per pixel) by changing RGB_PIXELSIZE. Note that changing |
- * the offsets will also change the order in which colormap data is organized. |
- * RESTRICTIONS: |
- * 1. The sample applications cjpeg,djpeg do NOT support modified RGB formats. |
- * 2. These macros only affect RGB<=>YCbCr color conversion, so they are not |
- * useful if you are using JPEG color spaces other than YCbCr or grayscale. |
- * 3. The color quantizer modules will not behave desirably if RGB_PIXELSIZE |
- * is not 3 (they don't understand about dummy color components!). So you |
- * can't use color quantization if you change that value. |
- */ |
- |
-#define RGB_RED 0 /* Offset of Red in an RGB scanline element */ |
-#define RGB_GREEN 1 /* Offset of Green */ |
-#define RGB_BLUE 2 /* Offset of Blue */ |
-#define RGB_PIXELSIZE 3 /* JSAMPLEs per RGB scanline element */ |
- |
- |
-/* Definitions for speed-related optimizations. */ |
- |
- |
-/* If your compiler supports inline functions, define INLINE |
- * as the inline keyword; otherwise define it as empty. |
- */ |
- |
-/* Mozilla mods here: add more ways of defining INLINE */ |
- |
-#ifndef INLINE |
-#ifdef __GNUC__ /* for instance, GNU C knows about inline */ |
-#define INLINE __inline__ |
-#endif |
-#if defined( __IBMC__ ) || defined (__IBMCPP__) |
-#define INLINE _Inline |
-#endif |
-#ifndef INLINE |
-#ifdef __cplusplus |
-#define INLINE inline /* a C++ compiler should have it too */ |
-#else |
-#define INLINE /* default is to define it as empty */ |
-#endif |
-#endif |
-#endif |
- |
- |
-/* On some machines (notably 68000 series) "int" is 32 bits, but multiplying |
- * two 16-bit shorts is faster than multiplying two ints. Define MULTIPLIER |
- * as short on such a machine. MULTIPLIER must be at least 16 bits wide. |
- */ |
- |
-#ifndef MULTIPLIER |
-#define MULTIPLIER int /* type for fastest integer multiply */ |
-#endif |
- |
- |
-/* FAST_FLOAT should be either float or double, whichever is done faster |
- * by your compiler. (Note that this type is only used in the floating point |
- * DCT routines, so it only matters if you've defined DCT_FLOAT_SUPPORTED.) |
- * Typically, float is faster in ANSI C compilers, while double is faster in |
- * pre-ANSI compilers (because they insist on converting to double anyway). |
- * The code below therefore chooses float if we have ANSI-style prototypes. |
- */ |
- |
-#ifndef FAST_FLOAT |
-#ifdef HAVE_PROTOTYPES |
-#define FAST_FLOAT float |
-#else |
-#define FAST_FLOAT double |
-#endif |
-#endif |
- |
-#endif /* JPEG_INTERNAL_OPTIONS */ |