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  • Hash : 6530203f
    Author : DRC
    Date : 2016-12-09T10:21:29

    Build: More GNUInstallDirs improvements
    
    These improvements enable build systems to use GNUInstallDirs to define
    custom directory variables.
    
    - The set_dir() macro was renamed to GNUInstallDirs_set_install_dir(),
      in keeping with the module's established macro naming convention.
    
    - Rather than detecting whether the prefix has changed, the new
      GNUInstallDirs_set_install_dir() macro instead examines whether the
      default for the variable in question has changed.  This allows for
      more flexibility, since build systems may decide to change the
      defaults based on factors other than the prefix.  It also enables the
      macro to work properly outside of the module.
    
    - The module now performs directory variable substitution within the
      body of GNUInstallDirs_get_absolute_install_dir().
    
    - The JAVADIR variable is no longer included in GNUInstallDirs.  That
      directory is not part of the GNU spec, and it turns out that various
      operating systems use different conventions for the location of Java
      classes.  Instead, the variable is now implemented in our build
      system as a demonstration of the aforementioned GNUInstallDirs
      enhancements.
    

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  • Git HTTP https://git.kmx.io/kc3-lang/libjpeg-turbo.git
    Git SSH git@git.kmx.io:kc3-lang/libjpeg-turbo.git
    Public access ? public
    Description

    Fork of libjpeg with SIMD

    Users
    thodg_m kc3_lang_org thodg_w www_kmx_io thodg_l thodg
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  • README

  • TurboJPEG Java Wrapper
    ======================
    
    The TurboJPEG shared library can optionally be built with a Java Native
    Interface wrapper, which allows the library to be loaded and used directly from
    Java applications.  The Java front end for this is defined in several classes
    located under org/libjpegturbo/turbojpeg.  The source code for these Java
    classes is licensed under a BSD-style license, so the files can be incorporated
    directly into both open source and proprietary projects without restriction.  A
    Java archive (JAR) file containing these classes is also shipped with the
    "official" distribution packages of libjpeg-turbo.
    
    TJExample.java, which should also be located in the same directory as this
    README file, demonstrates how to use the TurboJPEG Java API to compress and
    decompress JPEG images in memory.
    
    
    Performance Pitfalls
    --------------------
    
    The TurboJPEG Java API defines several convenience methods that can allocate
    image buffers or instantiate classes to hold the result of compress,
    decompress, or transform operations.  However, if you use these methods, then
    be mindful of the amount of new data you are creating on the heap.  It may be
    necessary to manually invoke the garbage collector to prevent heap exhaustion
    or to prevent performance degradation.  Background garbage collection can kill
    performance, particularly in a multi-threaded environment (Java pauses all
    threads when the GC runs.)
    
    The TurboJPEG Java API always gives you the option of pre-allocating your own
    source and destination buffers, which allows you to re-use those buffers for
    compressing/decompressing multiple images.  If the image sequence you are
    compressing or decompressing consists of images of the same size, then
    pre-allocating the buffers is recommended.
    
    
    Installation Directory
    ----------------------
    
    The TurboJPEG Java Wrapper will look for the TurboJPEG JNI library
    (libturbojpeg.so, libturbojpeg.jnilib, or turbojpeg.dll) in the system library
    paths or in any paths specified in LD_LIBRARY_PATH (Un*x), DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH
    (Mac), or PATH (Windows.)  Failing this, on Un*x and Mac systems, the wrapper
    will look for the JNI library under the library directory configured when
    libjpeg-turbo was built.  If that library directory is
    /opt/libjpeg-turbo/lib32, then /opt/libjpeg-turbo/lib64 is also searched, and
    vice versa.
    
    If you installed the JNI library into another directory, then you will need
    to pass an argument of -Djava.library.path={path_to_JNI_library} to java, or
    manipulate LD_LIBRARY_PATH, DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH, or PATH to include the directory
    containing the JNI library.