CVL lets you tinker with HDR images on your GPU


 
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Old 08-26-2008
CVL lets you tinker with HDR images on your GPU

08-26-2008 01:00 AM
If your desktop hardware includes a graphics processing unit (GPU), you can do some cool image processing with the CVL suite of tools, which includes in image viewer, an image tone mapper, and a command-line tool for non-interactive image processing.



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pfsoutjpeghdr(1)					      General Commands Manual						  pfsoutjpeghdr(1)

NAME
pfsoutjpeghdr - Write images or frames in JPEG-HDR format SYNOPSIS
pfsoutjpeghdr (<file> [--linear] [--quality <val>] [--correction <correct>] [--frames <range>]) [<file>...] DESCRIPTION
Use this command to write JPEG file with HDR extension. This software makes use of the High Dynamic Range Imaging Library from Sunnybrook Technologies Inc. (c) Sunnybrook Inc. 2005 OPTIONS
--quality <val>, -q <val> The --quality setting controls the overall compression/quality trade-off, with 100 being the maximum setting, producing the lowest losses and the largest output files. Quality settings below 70 may result in significant image degradation, and should be avoided in critical applications. Default: --quality=90 --correction <correct>, -c <correct> The --correction setting controls the algorithm used during downsampling of the HDR ratio image data. The default precorrect option compensates for resampling errors by adjusting the tone-mapped image to maximize the accuracy of the HDR result. This option may sometimes induce modest halo artifacts in the tone-mapped image at lower quality settings. If the tone-mapped (backwards compati- ble) image is more important than the HDR version, the postcorrect option may be used, instead. To avoid all artifacts from HDR resampling, specify the fullsamp option. This will result in slightly larger image files. Default: --correction=precorrect --alpha <a>, -a <a>; --beta <b>, -b <b> The --alpha and --beta settings control color desaturation during tone-mapping, which will also permits super-saturated colors to pass through safely. (See the appendix of the paper by Ward and Simmons cited below for details.) Use --alpha < 1 to desaturate colors and --beta > 1 to enhance color saturation contrast. Any input color space will be converted to the standard YCC color space of JPEG, based on the CCIR-709 (sRGB) primaries. Default: --alpha=1, --beta=1. EXAMPLES
pfsin memorial.hdr | pfsoutjpeghdr memorial.jpeg BUGS
Please report bugs and comments to Rafal Mantiuk <mantiuk@mpi-sb.mpg.de>. SEE ALSO
pfsinjpeghdr(1) Subband Encoding of High Dynamic Range ImagerybyWardandSimmons (www.anyhere.com/gward/papers/apgv04) pfsoutjpeghdr(1)