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NAMEImager::API - Imager's C API - introduction.SYNOPSIS#include "imext.h" #include "imperl.h" DEFINE_IMAGER_CALLBACKS; MODULE = Your::Module PACKAGE = Your::Module ... BOOT: /* any release with the API */ PERL_INITIALIZE_IMAGER_CALLBACKS; /* preferred from Imager 0.91 */ PERL_INITIALIZE_IMAGER_CALLBACKS_NAME("My::Module"); DESCRIPTIONThe API allows you to access Imager functions at the C level from XS and from "Inline::C".The intent is to allow users to:
See Imager::Inline for information on using Imager's Inline::C support. Beware
TypesThe API makes the following types visible:
At this point there is no consolidated font object type, and hence the font functions are not visible through Imager's API. i_imgThis contains the dimensions of the image ("xsize", "ysize", "channels"), image metadata ("ch_mask", "bits", "type", "virtual"), potentially image data ("idata") and a function table, with pointers to functions to perform various low level image operations.The only time you should directly write to any value in this type is if you're implementing your own image type. The typemap includes type names Imager and Imager::ImgRaw as typedefs for "i_img *". For incoming parameters the typemap will accept either Imager or Imager::ImgRaw objects. For return values the typemap will produce a full Imager object for an Imager return type and a raw image object for an Imager::ImgRaw return type. i_colorRepresents an 8-bit per sample color. This is a union containing several different structs for access to components of a color:
Use "Imager::Color" for parameter and return value types. i_fcolorSimilar to "i_color" except that each component is a double instead of an unsigned char.Use Imager::Color::Float for parameter and return value types. i_fill_tAbstract type containing pointers called to perform low level fill operations.Unless you're defining your own fill objects you should treat this as an opaque type. Use Imager::FillHandle for parameter and return value types. At the Perl level this is stored in the "fill" member of the Perl level Imager::Fill object. i_io_glue_t"i_io_glue_t" is Imager's I/O abstraction.Historically named "io_glue", and this name is available for backward compatibility. im_context_tThis new type is an opaque type that stores Imager's per-thread state, including the error message stack, the current log file state and image size file limits.While Imager's internal typemap provides a "T_PTROBJ" mapping and a DESTROY method for this type you must never return objects of this type back to perl. See "Context objects" for more information. i_polygon_tRepresents a single polygon supplied to i_poly_poly_aa() and i_poly_poly_aa_cfill().This is a structure with 3 members:
i_poly_fill_mode_tAn enumerated type of the possible fill modes for polygons:
Create an XS module using the Imager APIFoo.pmLoad Imager:use Imager 0.48; and bootstrap your XS code - see XSLoader or DynaLoader. "Foo.xs"You'll need the following in your XS source:
foo.cIn any other source files where you want to access the Imager API, you'll need to:
"Makefile.PL"If you're creating an XS module that depends on Imager's API your "Makefile.PL" will need to do the following:
Context objectsStarting with Imager 0.93, Imager keeps some state per-thread rather than storing it in global (or static) variables. The intent is to improve support for multi-threaded perl programs.For the typical XS or Inline::C module using Imager's API this won't matter - the changes are hidden behind macros and rebuilding your module should require no source code changes. Some operations will be slightly slower, these include:
You can avoid this fairly minor overhead by adding a "#define": #define IMAGER_NO_CONTEXT before including any Imager header files, but you will need to manage context objects yourself. Some functions and macros that are available without "IMAGER_NO_CONTEXT" are not available with it defined, these are:
"aIMCTX"With "IMAGER_NO_CONTEXT" defined, "aIMCTX" refers to the locally defined context object, either via one the of the "dIMCTX" macros or as a parameter with the "pIMCTX" macro.Without "IMAGER_NO_CONTEXT", "aIMCTX" is a call to "im_get_context()" which retrieves the context object for the current thread. There is no "aIMCTX_" macro, any Imager function that can accept a context parameter always accepts it. "pIMCTX"This macro declares a variable of type "im_context_t" that's accessible via the "aIMCTX" macro. This is intended for use as a parameter declaration for functions:void f(pIMCTX) { ... use aIMCTX here } void g(...) { ... f(aIMCTX); } "dIMCTX"Defines a local context variable and initializes it via im_get_context()."dIMCTXim"Defines a local context variable and initializes it from the context stored in an image object, eg:void f(i_img *im) { dIMCTXim(im); ... } "dIMCTXio"Defines a local context variable and initializes it from the context stored in an I/O object object.void f(i_io_glue_t *io) { dIMCTXio(io); ... } "dIMCTXctx"Defines a local context variable accessible via "aIMCTX" in terms of an expression you supply:void f(my_object *p) { dIMCTXctx(p->context); ... } This can be used to define your own local context macro: #define dIMCTXmine(mine) ((mine)->context) void f(my_object *p) { dIMCTXmine(p); ... } Mutex FunctionsSince some libraries are not thread safe, Imager's API includes some simple mutex functions.To create a mutex: i_mutex_t m = i_mutex_new(); To control or lock the mutex: i_mutex_lock(m); To release or unlock the mutex: i_mutex_unlock(m); To free any resources used by the mutex: i_mutex_destroy(m); I most cases where you'd use these functions, your code would create the mutex in your BOOT section, then lock and unlock the mutex as needed to control access to the library. Context slotsTo avoid abstracting the platform TLS and thread clean up handling, Imager provides simple APIs for storing per-context information.To allocate a slot: im_slot_t slot = im_context_slot_new(callback) where callback is a (possibly NULL) function pointer called when the context object is destroyed. By default, the stored value for a slot is NULL, whether for a new context or for a cloned context. To store a value: im_context_slot_set(aIMCTX, slot, somevalue); where "somevalue" can be represented as a "void *". To retrieve the value: value = im_context_slot_get(aIMCTX, slot); AUTHORTony Cook <tonyc@cpan.org>SEE ALSOImager, Imager::ExtUtils, Imager::APIRef, Imager::Inline
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