cave-story-solaris/external/fltk/jpeg/jcomapi.c
Clownacy ac465d29b4 Mean CMake dependency overhaul
I'm taking a page from Dolphin's book, and including copies of each
dependency's source code. This combines the ease of use of including
pre-built libraries instead of needing to navigate a package manager
 - as is (or was) the case for MSVC - with the portability of using
packages. Granted, this method's more of a jack of all trades,
master of none, since it's *less* user-friendly than prebuilt
packages (compilation times), and you don't get the per-distro
compatibility fixes you'd get from a package manager.

You can still use system libs if you want. In fact, it's still the
default behaviour: compiling the libs manually is just a fallback.
I'll add an option to force-enable this soon, however, since it's a
nicer way to produce static MSYS2 builds than the hackish nightmare
that I was using before. Not to mention, having my own copy of the
sources means I can provide my own fixes and tweaks your package
manager may not. For example, I can combine MSYS2's FreeType
subpixel rendering with vcpkg's fix for SDL2 exporting its symbols
in static builds.
2019-04-26 01:52:02 +01:00

106 lines
3 KiB
C

/*
* jcomapi.c
*
* Copyright (C) 1994-1997, 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 application interface routines that are used for both
* compression and decompression.
*/
#define JPEG_INTERNALS
#include "jinclude.h"
#include "jpeglib.h"
/*
* Abort processing of a JPEG compression or decompression operation,
* but don't destroy the object itself.
*
* For this, we merely clean up all the nonpermanent memory pools.
* Note that temp files (virtual arrays) are not allowed to belong to
* the permanent pool, so we will be able to close all temp files here.
* Closing a data source or destination, if necessary, is the application's
* responsibility.
*/
GLOBAL(void)
jpeg_abort (j_common_ptr cinfo)
{
int pool;
/* Do nothing if called on a not-initialized or destroyed JPEG object. */
if (cinfo->mem == NULL)
return;
/* Releasing pools in reverse order might help avoid fragmentation
* with some (brain-damaged) malloc libraries.
*/
for (pool = JPOOL_NUMPOOLS-1; pool > JPOOL_PERMANENT; pool--) {
(*cinfo->mem->free_pool) (cinfo, pool);
}
/* Reset overall state for possible reuse of object */
if (cinfo->is_decompressor) {
cinfo->global_state = DSTATE_START;
/* Try to keep application from accessing now-deleted marker list.
* A bit kludgy to do it here, but this is the most central place.
*/
((j_decompress_ptr) cinfo)->marker_list = NULL;
} else {
cinfo->global_state = CSTATE_START;
}
}
/*
* Destruction of a JPEG object.
*
* Everything gets deallocated except the master jpeg_compress_struct itself
* and the error manager struct. Both of these are supplied by the application
* and must be freed, if necessary, by the application. (Often they are on
* the stack and so don't need to be freed anyway.)
* Closing a data source or destination, if necessary, is the application's
* responsibility.
*/
GLOBAL(void)
jpeg_destroy (j_common_ptr cinfo)
{
/* We need only tell the memory manager to release everything. */
/* NB: mem pointer is NULL if memory mgr failed to initialize. */
if (cinfo->mem != NULL)
(*cinfo->mem->self_destruct) (cinfo);
cinfo->mem = NULL; /* be safe if jpeg_destroy is called twice */
cinfo->global_state = 0; /* mark it destroyed */
}
/*
* Convenience routines for allocating quantization and Huffman tables.
* (Would jutils.c be a more reasonable place to put these?)
*/
GLOBAL(JQUANT_TBL *)
jpeg_alloc_quant_table (j_common_ptr cinfo)
{
JQUANT_TBL *tbl;
tbl = (JQUANT_TBL *)
(*cinfo->mem->alloc_small) (cinfo, JPOOL_PERMANENT, SIZEOF(JQUANT_TBL));
tbl->sent_table = FALSE; /* make sure this is false in any new table */
return tbl;
}
GLOBAL(JHUFF_TBL *)
jpeg_alloc_huff_table (j_common_ptr cinfo)
{
JHUFF_TBL *tbl;
tbl = (JHUFF_TBL *)
(*cinfo->mem->alloc_small) (cinfo, JPOOL_PERMANENT, SIZEOF(JHUFF_TBL));
tbl->sent_table = FALSE; /* make sure this is false in any new table */
return tbl;
}