png.c revision 3586ba4f3287ed6a9e6e15b01b717e2cf1bd8647
1
2/* png.c - location for general purpose libpng functions
3 *
4 * Last changed in libpng 1.6.26 [October 20, 2016]
5 * Copyright (c) 1998-2002,2004,2006-2016 Glenn Randers-Pehrson
6 * (Version 0.96 Copyright (c) 1996, 1997 Andreas Dilger)
7 * (Version 0.88 Copyright (c) 1995, 1996 Guy Eric Schalnat, Group 42, Inc.)
8 *
9 * This code is released under the libpng license.
10 * For conditions of distribution and use, see the disclaimer
11 * and license in png.h
12 */
13
14#include "pngpriv.h"
15
16/* Generate a compiler error if there is an old png.h in the search path. */
17typedef png_libpng_version_1_6_26 Your_png_h_is_not_version_1_6_26;
18
19/* Tells libpng that we have already handled the first "num_bytes" bytes
20 * of the PNG file signature.  If the PNG data is embedded into another
21 * stream we can set num_bytes = 8 so that libpng will not attempt to read
22 * or write any of the magic bytes before it starts on the IHDR.
23 */
24
25#ifdef PNG_READ_SUPPORTED
26void PNGAPI
27png_set_sig_bytes(png_structrp png_ptr, int num_bytes)
28{
29   unsigned int nb = (unsigned int)num_bytes;
30
31   png_debug(1, "in png_set_sig_bytes");
32
33   if (png_ptr == NULL)
34      return;
35
36   if (num_bytes < 0)
37      nb = 0;
38
39   if (nb > 8)
40      png_error(png_ptr, "Too many bytes for PNG signature");
41
42   png_ptr->sig_bytes = (png_byte)nb;
43}
44
45/* Checks whether the supplied bytes match the PNG signature.  We allow
46 * checking less than the full 8-byte signature so that those apps that
47 * already read the first few bytes of a file to determine the file type
48 * can simply check the remaining bytes for extra assurance.  Returns
49 * an integer less than, equal to, or greater than zero if sig is found,
50 * respectively, to be less than, to match, or be greater than the correct
51 * PNG signature (this is the same behavior as strcmp, memcmp, etc).
52 */
53int PNGAPI
54png_sig_cmp(png_const_bytep sig, png_size_t start, png_size_t num_to_check)
55{
56   png_byte png_signature[8] = {137, 80, 78, 71, 13, 10, 26, 10};
57
58   if (num_to_check > 8)
59      num_to_check = 8;
60
61   else if (num_to_check < 1)
62      return (-1);
63
64   if (start > 7)
65      return (-1);
66
67   if (start + num_to_check > 8)
68      num_to_check = 8 - start;
69
70   return ((int)(memcmp(&sig[start], &png_signature[start], num_to_check)));
71}
72
73#endif /* READ */
74
75#if defined(PNG_READ_SUPPORTED) || defined(PNG_WRITE_SUPPORTED)
76/* Function to allocate memory for zlib */
77PNG_FUNCTION(voidpf /* PRIVATE */,
78png_zalloc,(voidpf png_ptr, uInt items, uInt size),PNG_ALLOCATED)
79{
80   png_alloc_size_t num_bytes = size;
81
82   if (png_ptr == NULL)
83      return NULL;
84
85   if (items >= (~(png_alloc_size_t)0)/size)
86   {
87      png_warning (png_voidcast(png_structrp, png_ptr),
88          "Potential overflow in png_zalloc()");
89      return NULL;
90   }
91
92   num_bytes *= items;
93   return png_malloc_warn(png_voidcast(png_structrp, png_ptr), num_bytes);
94}
95
96/* Function to free memory for zlib */
97void /* PRIVATE */
98png_zfree(voidpf png_ptr, voidpf ptr)
99{
100   png_free(png_voidcast(png_const_structrp,png_ptr), ptr);
101}
102
103/* Reset the CRC variable to 32 bits of 1's.  Care must be taken
104 * in case CRC is > 32 bits to leave the top bits 0.
105 */
106void /* PRIVATE */
107png_reset_crc(png_structrp png_ptr)
108{
109   /* The cast is safe because the crc is a 32-bit value. */
110   png_ptr->crc = (png_uint_32)crc32(0, Z_NULL, 0);
111}
112
113/* Calculate the CRC over a section of data.  We can only pass as
114 * much data to this routine as the largest single buffer size.  We
115 * also check that this data will actually be used before going to the
116 * trouble of calculating it.
117 */
118void /* PRIVATE */
119png_calculate_crc(png_structrp png_ptr, png_const_bytep ptr, png_size_t length)
120{
121   int need_crc = 1;
122
123   if (PNG_CHUNK_ANCILLARY(png_ptr->chunk_name) != 0)
124   {
125      if ((png_ptr->flags & PNG_FLAG_CRC_ANCILLARY_MASK) ==
126          (PNG_FLAG_CRC_ANCILLARY_USE | PNG_FLAG_CRC_ANCILLARY_NOWARN))
127         need_crc = 0;
128   }
129
130   else /* critical */
131   {
132      if ((png_ptr->flags & PNG_FLAG_CRC_CRITICAL_IGNORE) != 0)
133         need_crc = 0;
134   }
135
136   /* 'uLong' is defined in zlib.h as unsigned long; this means that on some
137    * systems it is a 64-bit value.  crc32, however, returns 32 bits so the
138    * following cast is safe.  'uInt' may be no more than 16 bits, so it is
139    * necessary to perform a loop here.
140    */
141   if (need_crc != 0 && length > 0)
142   {
143      uLong crc = png_ptr->crc; /* Should never issue a warning */
144
145      do
146      {
147         uInt safe_length = (uInt)length;
148#ifndef __COVERITY__
149         if (safe_length == 0)
150            safe_length = (uInt)-1; /* evil, but safe */
151#endif
152
153         crc = crc32(crc, ptr, safe_length);
154
155         /* The following should never issue compiler warnings; if they do the
156          * target system has characteristics that will probably violate other
157          * assumptions within the libpng code.
158          */
159         ptr += safe_length;
160         length -= safe_length;
161      }
162      while (length > 0);
163
164      /* And the following is always safe because the crc is only 32 bits. */
165      png_ptr->crc = (png_uint_32)crc;
166   }
167}
168
169/* Check a user supplied version number, called from both read and write
170 * functions that create a png_struct.
171 */
172int
173png_user_version_check(png_structrp png_ptr, png_const_charp user_png_ver)
174{
175   /* Libpng versions 1.0.0 and later are binary compatible if the version
176    * string matches through the second '.'; we must recompile any
177    * applications that use any older library version.
178    */
179
180   if (user_png_ver != NULL)
181   {
182      int i = -1;
183      int found_dots = 0;
184
185      do
186      {
187         i++;
188         if (user_png_ver[i] != PNG_LIBPNG_VER_STRING[i])
189            png_ptr->flags |= PNG_FLAG_LIBRARY_MISMATCH;
190         if (user_png_ver[i] == '.')
191            found_dots++;
192      } while (found_dots < 2 && user_png_ver[i] != 0 &&
193            PNG_LIBPNG_VER_STRING[i] != 0);
194   }
195
196   else
197      png_ptr->flags |= PNG_FLAG_LIBRARY_MISMATCH;
198
199   if ((png_ptr->flags & PNG_FLAG_LIBRARY_MISMATCH) != 0)
200   {
201#ifdef PNG_WARNINGS_SUPPORTED
202      size_t pos = 0;
203      char m[128];
204
205      pos = png_safecat(m, (sizeof m), pos,
206          "Application built with libpng-");
207      pos = png_safecat(m, (sizeof m), pos, user_png_ver);
208      pos = png_safecat(m, (sizeof m), pos, " but running with ");
209      pos = png_safecat(m, (sizeof m), pos, PNG_LIBPNG_VER_STRING);
210      PNG_UNUSED(pos)
211
212      png_warning(png_ptr, m);
213#endif
214
215#ifdef PNG_ERROR_NUMBERS_SUPPORTED
216      png_ptr->flags = 0;
217#endif
218
219      return 0;
220   }
221
222   /* Success return. */
223   return 1;
224}
225
226/* Generic function to create a png_struct for either read or write - this
227 * contains the common initialization.
228 */
229PNG_FUNCTION(png_structp /* PRIVATE */,
230png_create_png_struct,(png_const_charp user_png_ver, png_voidp error_ptr,
231    png_error_ptr error_fn, png_error_ptr warn_fn, png_voidp mem_ptr,
232    png_malloc_ptr malloc_fn, png_free_ptr free_fn),PNG_ALLOCATED)
233{
234   png_struct create_struct;
235#  ifdef PNG_SETJMP_SUPPORTED
236      jmp_buf create_jmp_buf;
237#  endif
238
239   /* This temporary stack-allocated structure is used to provide a place to
240    * build enough context to allow the user provided memory allocator (if any)
241    * to be called.
242    */
243   memset(&create_struct, 0, (sizeof create_struct));
244
245   /* Added at libpng-1.2.6 */
246#  ifdef PNG_USER_LIMITS_SUPPORTED
247      create_struct.user_width_max = PNG_USER_WIDTH_MAX;
248      create_struct.user_height_max = PNG_USER_HEIGHT_MAX;
249
250#     ifdef PNG_USER_CHUNK_CACHE_MAX
251      /* Added at libpng-1.2.43 and 1.4.0 */
252      create_struct.user_chunk_cache_max = PNG_USER_CHUNK_CACHE_MAX;
253#     endif
254
255#     ifdef PNG_USER_CHUNK_MALLOC_MAX
256      /* Added at libpng-1.2.43 and 1.4.1, required only for read but exists
257       * in png_struct regardless.
258       */
259      create_struct.user_chunk_malloc_max = PNG_USER_CHUNK_MALLOC_MAX;
260#     endif
261#  endif
262
263   /* The following two API calls simply set fields in png_struct, so it is safe
264    * to do them now even though error handling is not yet set up.
265    */
266#  ifdef PNG_USER_MEM_SUPPORTED
267      png_set_mem_fn(&create_struct, mem_ptr, malloc_fn, free_fn);
268#  else
269      PNG_UNUSED(mem_ptr)
270      PNG_UNUSED(malloc_fn)
271      PNG_UNUSED(free_fn)
272#  endif
273
274   /* (*error_fn) can return control to the caller after the error_ptr is set,
275    * this will result in a memory leak unless the error_fn does something
276    * extremely sophisticated.  The design lacks merit but is implicit in the
277    * API.
278    */
279   png_set_error_fn(&create_struct, error_ptr, error_fn, warn_fn);
280
281#  ifdef PNG_SETJMP_SUPPORTED
282      if (!setjmp(create_jmp_buf))
283#  endif
284      {
285#  ifdef PNG_SETJMP_SUPPORTED
286         /* Temporarily fake out the longjmp information until we have
287          * successfully completed this function.  This only works if we have
288          * setjmp() support compiled in, but it is safe - this stuff should
289          * never happen.
290          */
291         create_struct.jmp_buf_ptr = &create_jmp_buf;
292         create_struct.jmp_buf_size = 0; /*stack allocation*/
293         create_struct.longjmp_fn = longjmp;
294#  endif
295         /* Call the general version checker (shared with read and write code):
296          */
297         if (png_user_version_check(&create_struct, user_png_ver) != 0)
298         {
299            png_structrp png_ptr = png_voidcast(png_structrp,
300                png_malloc_warn(&create_struct, (sizeof *png_ptr)));
301
302            if (png_ptr != NULL)
303            {
304               /* png_ptr->zstream holds a back-pointer to the png_struct, so
305                * this can only be done now:
306                */
307               create_struct.zstream.zalloc = png_zalloc;
308               create_struct.zstream.zfree = png_zfree;
309               create_struct.zstream.opaque = png_ptr;
310
311#              ifdef PNG_SETJMP_SUPPORTED
312               /* Eliminate the local error handling: */
313               create_struct.jmp_buf_ptr = NULL;
314               create_struct.jmp_buf_size = 0;
315               create_struct.longjmp_fn = 0;
316#              endif
317
318               *png_ptr = create_struct;
319
320               /* This is the successful return point */
321               return png_ptr;
322            }
323         }
324      }
325
326   /* A longjmp because of a bug in the application storage allocator or a
327    * simple failure to allocate the png_struct.
328    */
329   return NULL;
330}
331
332/* Allocate the memory for an info_struct for the application. */
333PNG_FUNCTION(png_infop,PNGAPI
334png_create_info_struct,(png_const_structrp png_ptr),PNG_ALLOCATED)
335{
336   png_inforp info_ptr;
337
338   png_debug(1, "in png_create_info_struct");
339
340   if (png_ptr == NULL)
341      return NULL;
342
343   /* Use the internal API that does not (or at least should not) error out, so
344    * that this call always returns ok.  The application typically sets up the
345    * error handling *after* creating the info_struct because this is the way it
346    * has always been done in 'example.c'.
347    */
348   info_ptr = png_voidcast(png_inforp, png_malloc_base(png_ptr,
349       (sizeof *info_ptr)));
350
351   if (info_ptr != NULL)
352      memset(info_ptr, 0, (sizeof *info_ptr));
353
354   return info_ptr;
355}
356
357/* This function frees the memory associated with a single info struct.
358 * Normally, one would use either png_destroy_read_struct() or
359 * png_destroy_write_struct() to free an info struct, but this may be
360 * useful for some applications.  From libpng 1.6.0 this function is also used
361 * internally to implement the png_info release part of the 'struct' destroy
362 * APIs.  This ensures that all possible approaches free the same data (all of
363 * it).
364 */
365void PNGAPI
366png_destroy_info_struct(png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_infopp info_ptr_ptr)
367{
368   png_inforp info_ptr = NULL;
369
370   png_debug(1, "in png_destroy_info_struct");
371
372   if (png_ptr == NULL)
373      return;
374
375   if (info_ptr_ptr != NULL)
376      info_ptr = *info_ptr_ptr;
377
378   if (info_ptr != NULL)
379   {
380      /* Do this first in case of an error below; if the app implements its own
381       * memory management this can lead to png_free calling png_error, which
382       * will abort this routine and return control to the app error handler.
383       * An infinite loop may result if it then tries to free the same info
384       * ptr.
385       */
386      *info_ptr_ptr = NULL;
387
388      png_free_data(png_ptr, info_ptr, PNG_FREE_ALL, -1);
389      memset(info_ptr, 0, (sizeof *info_ptr));
390      png_free(png_ptr, info_ptr);
391   }
392}
393
394/* Initialize the info structure.  This is now an internal function (0.89)
395 * and applications using it are urged to use png_create_info_struct()
396 * instead.  Use deprecated in 1.6.0, internal use removed (used internally it
397 * is just a memset).
398 *
399 * NOTE: it is almost inconceivable that this API is used because it bypasses
400 * the user-memory mechanism and the user error handling/warning mechanisms in
401 * those cases where it does anything other than a memset.
402 */
403PNG_FUNCTION(void,PNGAPI
404png_info_init_3,(png_infopp ptr_ptr, png_size_t png_info_struct_size),
405    PNG_DEPRECATED)
406{
407   png_inforp info_ptr = *ptr_ptr;
408
409   png_debug(1, "in png_info_init_3");
410
411   if (info_ptr == NULL)
412      return;
413
414   if ((sizeof (png_info)) > png_info_struct_size)
415   {
416      *ptr_ptr = NULL;
417      /* The following line is why this API should not be used: */
418      free(info_ptr);
419      info_ptr = png_voidcast(png_inforp, png_malloc_base(NULL,
420          (sizeof *info_ptr)));
421      if (info_ptr == NULL)
422         return;
423      *ptr_ptr = info_ptr;
424   }
425
426   /* Set everything to 0 */
427   memset(info_ptr, 0, (sizeof *info_ptr));
428}
429
430/* The following API is not called internally */
431void PNGAPI
432png_data_freer(png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_inforp info_ptr,
433    int freer, png_uint_32 mask)
434{
435   png_debug(1, "in png_data_freer");
436
437   if (png_ptr == NULL || info_ptr == NULL)
438      return;
439
440   if (freer == PNG_DESTROY_WILL_FREE_DATA)
441      info_ptr->free_me |= mask;
442
443   else if (freer == PNG_USER_WILL_FREE_DATA)
444      info_ptr->free_me &= ~mask;
445
446   else
447      png_error(png_ptr, "Unknown freer parameter in png_data_freer");
448}
449
450void PNGAPI
451png_free_data(png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_inforp info_ptr, png_uint_32 mask,
452    int num)
453{
454   png_debug(1, "in png_free_data");
455
456   if (png_ptr == NULL || info_ptr == NULL)
457      return;
458
459#ifdef PNG_TEXT_SUPPORTED
460   /* Free text item num or (if num == -1) all text items */
461   if (info_ptr->text != NULL &&
462       ((mask & PNG_FREE_TEXT) & info_ptr->free_me) != 0)
463   {
464      if (num != -1)
465      {
466         png_free(png_ptr, info_ptr->text[num].key);
467         info_ptr->text[num].key = NULL;
468      }
469
470      else
471      {
472         int i;
473
474         for (i = 0; i < info_ptr->num_text; i++)
475            png_free(png_ptr, info_ptr->text[i].key);
476
477         png_free(png_ptr, info_ptr->text);
478         info_ptr->text = NULL;
479         info_ptr->num_text = 0;
480      }
481   }
482#endif
483
484#ifdef PNG_tRNS_SUPPORTED
485   /* Free any tRNS entry */
486   if (((mask & PNG_FREE_TRNS) & info_ptr->free_me) != 0)
487   {
488      info_ptr->valid &= ~PNG_INFO_tRNS;
489      png_free(png_ptr, info_ptr->trans_alpha);
490      info_ptr->trans_alpha = NULL;
491      info_ptr->num_trans = 0;
492   }
493#endif
494
495#ifdef PNG_sCAL_SUPPORTED
496   /* Free any sCAL entry */
497   if (((mask & PNG_FREE_SCAL) & info_ptr->free_me) != 0)
498   {
499      png_free(png_ptr, info_ptr->scal_s_width);
500      png_free(png_ptr, info_ptr->scal_s_height);
501      info_ptr->scal_s_width = NULL;
502      info_ptr->scal_s_height = NULL;
503      info_ptr->valid &= ~PNG_INFO_sCAL;
504   }
505#endif
506
507#ifdef PNG_pCAL_SUPPORTED
508   /* Free any pCAL entry */
509   if (((mask & PNG_FREE_PCAL) & info_ptr->free_me) != 0)
510   {
511      png_free(png_ptr, info_ptr->pcal_purpose);
512      png_free(png_ptr, info_ptr->pcal_units);
513      info_ptr->pcal_purpose = NULL;
514      info_ptr->pcal_units = NULL;
515
516      if (info_ptr->pcal_params != NULL)
517         {
518            int i;
519
520            for (i = 0; i < info_ptr->pcal_nparams; i++)
521               png_free(png_ptr, info_ptr->pcal_params[i]);
522
523            png_free(png_ptr, info_ptr->pcal_params);
524            info_ptr->pcal_params = NULL;
525         }
526      info_ptr->valid &= ~PNG_INFO_pCAL;
527   }
528#endif
529
530#ifdef PNG_iCCP_SUPPORTED
531   /* Free any profile entry */
532   if (((mask & PNG_FREE_ICCP) & info_ptr->free_me) != 0)
533   {
534      png_free(png_ptr, info_ptr->iccp_name);
535      png_free(png_ptr, info_ptr->iccp_profile);
536      info_ptr->iccp_name = NULL;
537      info_ptr->iccp_profile = NULL;
538      info_ptr->valid &= ~PNG_INFO_iCCP;
539   }
540#endif
541
542#ifdef PNG_sPLT_SUPPORTED
543   /* Free a given sPLT entry, or (if num == -1) all sPLT entries */
544   if (info_ptr->splt_palettes != NULL &&
545       ((mask & PNG_FREE_SPLT) & info_ptr->free_me) != 0)
546   {
547      if (num != -1)
548      {
549         png_free(png_ptr, info_ptr->splt_palettes[num].name);
550         png_free(png_ptr, info_ptr->splt_palettes[num].entries);
551         info_ptr->splt_palettes[num].name = NULL;
552         info_ptr->splt_palettes[num].entries = NULL;
553      }
554
555      else
556      {
557         int i;
558
559         for (i = 0; i < info_ptr->splt_palettes_num; i++)
560         {
561            png_free(png_ptr, info_ptr->splt_palettes[i].name);
562            png_free(png_ptr, info_ptr->splt_palettes[i].entries);
563         }
564
565         png_free(png_ptr, info_ptr->splt_palettes);
566         info_ptr->splt_palettes = NULL;
567         info_ptr->splt_palettes_num = 0;
568         info_ptr->valid &= ~PNG_INFO_sPLT;
569      }
570   }
571#endif
572
573#ifdef PNG_STORE_UNKNOWN_CHUNKS_SUPPORTED
574   if (info_ptr->unknown_chunks != NULL &&
575       ((mask & PNG_FREE_UNKN) & info_ptr->free_me) != 0)
576   {
577      if (num != -1)
578      {
579          png_free(png_ptr, info_ptr->unknown_chunks[num].data);
580          info_ptr->unknown_chunks[num].data = NULL;
581      }
582
583      else
584      {
585         int i;
586
587         for (i = 0; i < info_ptr->unknown_chunks_num; i++)
588            png_free(png_ptr, info_ptr->unknown_chunks[i].data);
589
590         png_free(png_ptr, info_ptr->unknown_chunks);
591         info_ptr->unknown_chunks = NULL;
592         info_ptr->unknown_chunks_num = 0;
593      }
594   }
595#endif
596
597#ifdef PNG_hIST_SUPPORTED
598   /* Free any hIST entry */
599   if (((mask & PNG_FREE_HIST) & info_ptr->free_me) != 0)
600   {
601      png_free(png_ptr, info_ptr->hist);
602      info_ptr->hist = NULL;
603      info_ptr->valid &= ~PNG_INFO_hIST;
604   }
605#endif
606
607   /* Free any PLTE entry that was internally allocated */
608   if (((mask & PNG_FREE_PLTE) & info_ptr->free_me) != 0)
609   {
610      png_free(png_ptr, info_ptr->palette);
611      info_ptr->palette = NULL;
612      info_ptr->valid &= ~PNG_INFO_PLTE;
613      info_ptr->num_palette = 0;
614   }
615
616#ifdef PNG_INFO_IMAGE_SUPPORTED
617   /* Free any image bits attached to the info structure */
618   if (((mask & PNG_FREE_ROWS) & info_ptr->free_me) != 0)
619   {
620      if (info_ptr->row_pointers != NULL)
621      {
622         png_uint_32 row;
623         for (row = 0; row < info_ptr->height; row++)
624            png_free(png_ptr, info_ptr->row_pointers[row]);
625
626         png_free(png_ptr, info_ptr->row_pointers);
627         info_ptr->row_pointers = NULL;
628      }
629      info_ptr->valid &= ~PNG_INFO_IDAT;
630   }
631#endif
632
633   if (num != -1)
634      mask &= ~PNG_FREE_MUL;
635
636   info_ptr->free_me &= ~mask;
637}
638#endif /* READ || WRITE */
639
640/* This function returns a pointer to the io_ptr associated with the user
641 * functions.  The application should free any memory associated with this
642 * pointer before png_write_destroy() or png_read_destroy() are called.
643 */
644png_voidp PNGAPI
645png_get_io_ptr(png_const_structrp png_ptr)
646{
647   if (png_ptr == NULL)
648      return (NULL);
649
650   return (png_ptr->io_ptr);
651}
652
653#if defined(PNG_READ_SUPPORTED) || defined(PNG_WRITE_SUPPORTED)
654#  ifdef PNG_STDIO_SUPPORTED
655/* Initialize the default input/output functions for the PNG file.  If you
656 * use your own read or write routines, you can call either png_set_read_fn()
657 * or png_set_write_fn() instead of png_init_io().  If you have defined
658 * PNG_NO_STDIO or otherwise disabled PNG_STDIO_SUPPORTED, you must use a
659 * function of your own because "FILE *" isn't necessarily available.
660 */
661void PNGAPI
662png_init_io(png_structrp png_ptr, png_FILE_p fp)
663{
664   png_debug(1, "in png_init_io");
665
666   if (png_ptr == NULL)
667      return;
668
669   png_ptr->io_ptr = (png_voidp)fp;
670}
671#  endif
672
673#  ifdef PNG_SAVE_INT_32_SUPPORTED
674/* PNG signed integers are saved in 32-bit 2's complement format.  ANSI C-90
675 * defines a cast of a signed integer to an unsigned integer either to preserve
676 * the value, if it is positive, or to calculate:
677 *
678 *     (UNSIGNED_MAX+1) + integer
679 *
680 * Where UNSIGNED_MAX is the appropriate maximum unsigned value, so when the
681 * negative integral value is added the result will be an unsigned value
682 * correspnding to the 2's complement representation.
683 */
684void PNGAPI
685png_save_int_32(png_bytep buf, png_int_32 i)
686{
687   png_save_uint_32(buf, (png_uint_32)i);
688}
689#  endif
690
691#  ifdef PNG_TIME_RFC1123_SUPPORTED
692/* Convert the supplied time into an RFC 1123 string suitable for use in
693 * a "Creation Time" or other text-based time string.
694 */
695int PNGAPI
696png_convert_to_rfc1123_buffer(char out[29], png_const_timep ptime)
697{
698   static PNG_CONST char short_months[12][4] =
699        {"Jan", "Feb", "Mar", "Apr", "May", "Jun",
700         "Jul", "Aug", "Sep", "Oct", "Nov", "Dec"};
701
702   if (out == NULL)
703      return 0;
704
705   if (ptime->year > 9999 /* RFC1123 limitation */ ||
706       ptime->month == 0    ||  ptime->month > 12  ||
707       ptime->day   == 0    ||  ptime->day   > 31  ||
708       ptime->hour  > 23    ||  ptime->minute > 59 ||
709       ptime->second > 60)
710      return 0;
711
712   {
713      size_t pos = 0;
714      char number_buf[5]; /* enough for a four-digit year */
715
716#     define APPEND_STRING(string) pos = png_safecat(out, 29, pos, (string))
717#     define APPEND_NUMBER(format, value)\
718         APPEND_STRING(PNG_FORMAT_NUMBER(number_buf, format, (value)))
719#     define APPEND(ch) if (pos < 28) out[pos++] = (ch)
720
721      APPEND_NUMBER(PNG_NUMBER_FORMAT_u, (unsigned)ptime->day);
722      APPEND(' ');
723      APPEND_STRING(short_months[(ptime->month - 1)]);
724      APPEND(' ');
725      APPEND_NUMBER(PNG_NUMBER_FORMAT_u, ptime->year);
726      APPEND(' ');
727      APPEND_NUMBER(PNG_NUMBER_FORMAT_02u, (unsigned)ptime->hour);
728      APPEND(':');
729      APPEND_NUMBER(PNG_NUMBER_FORMAT_02u, (unsigned)ptime->minute);
730      APPEND(':');
731      APPEND_NUMBER(PNG_NUMBER_FORMAT_02u, (unsigned)ptime->second);
732      APPEND_STRING(" +0000"); /* This reliably terminates the buffer */
733      PNG_UNUSED (pos)
734
735#     undef APPEND
736#     undef APPEND_NUMBER
737#     undef APPEND_STRING
738   }
739
740   return 1;
741}
742
743#    if PNG_LIBPNG_VER < 10700
744/* To do: remove the following from libpng-1.7 */
745/* Original API that uses a private buffer in png_struct.
746 * Deprecated because it causes png_struct to carry a spurious temporary
747 * buffer (png_struct::time_buffer), better to have the caller pass this in.
748 */
749png_const_charp PNGAPI
750png_convert_to_rfc1123(png_structrp png_ptr, png_const_timep ptime)
751{
752   if (png_ptr != NULL)
753   {
754      /* The only failure above if png_ptr != NULL is from an invalid ptime */
755      if (png_convert_to_rfc1123_buffer(png_ptr->time_buffer, ptime) == 0)
756         png_warning(png_ptr, "Ignoring invalid time value");
757
758      else
759         return png_ptr->time_buffer;
760   }
761
762   return NULL;
763}
764#    endif /* LIBPNG_VER < 10700 */
765#  endif /* TIME_RFC1123 */
766
767#endif /* READ || WRITE */
768
769png_const_charp PNGAPI
770png_get_copyright(png_const_structrp png_ptr)
771{
772   PNG_UNUSED(png_ptr)  /* Silence compiler warning about unused png_ptr */
773#ifdef PNG_STRING_COPYRIGHT
774   return PNG_STRING_COPYRIGHT
775#else
776#  ifdef __STDC__
777   return PNG_STRING_NEWLINE \
778      "libpng version 1.6.26 - October 20, 2016" PNG_STRING_NEWLINE \
779      "Copyright (c) 1998-2002,2004,2006-2016 Glenn Randers-Pehrson" \
780      PNG_STRING_NEWLINE \
781      "Copyright (c) 1996-1997 Andreas Dilger" PNG_STRING_NEWLINE \
782      "Copyright (c) 1995-1996 Guy Eric Schalnat, Group 42, Inc." \
783      PNG_STRING_NEWLINE;
784#  else
785   return "libpng version 1.6.26 - October 20, 2016\
786      Copyright (c) 1998-2002,2004,2006-2016 Glenn Randers-Pehrson\
787      Copyright (c) 1996-1997 Andreas Dilger\
788      Copyright (c) 1995-1996 Guy Eric Schalnat, Group 42, Inc.";
789#  endif
790#endif
791}
792
793/* The following return the library version as a short string in the
794 * format 1.0.0 through 99.99.99zz.  To get the version of *.h files
795 * used with your application, print out PNG_LIBPNG_VER_STRING, which
796 * is defined in png.h.
797 * Note: now there is no difference between png_get_libpng_ver() and
798 * png_get_header_ver().  Due to the version_nn_nn_nn typedef guard,
799 * it is guaranteed that png.c uses the correct version of png.h.
800 */
801png_const_charp PNGAPI
802png_get_libpng_ver(png_const_structrp png_ptr)
803{
804   /* Version of *.c files used when building libpng */
805   return png_get_header_ver(png_ptr);
806}
807
808png_const_charp PNGAPI
809png_get_header_ver(png_const_structrp png_ptr)
810{
811   /* Version of *.h files used when building libpng */
812   PNG_UNUSED(png_ptr)  /* Silence compiler warning about unused png_ptr */
813   return PNG_LIBPNG_VER_STRING;
814}
815
816png_const_charp PNGAPI
817png_get_header_version(png_const_structrp png_ptr)
818{
819   /* Returns longer string containing both version and date */
820   PNG_UNUSED(png_ptr)  /* Silence compiler warning about unused png_ptr */
821#ifdef __STDC__
822   return PNG_HEADER_VERSION_STRING
823#  ifndef PNG_READ_SUPPORTED
824      " (NO READ SUPPORT)"
825#  endif
826      PNG_STRING_NEWLINE;
827#else
828   return PNG_HEADER_VERSION_STRING;
829#endif
830}
831
832#ifdef PNG_BUILD_GRAYSCALE_PALETTE_SUPPORTED
833/* NOTE: this routine is not used internally! */
834/* Build a grayscale palette.  Palette is assumed to be 1 << bit_depth
835 * large of png_color.  This lets grayscale images be treated as
836 * paletted.  Most useful for gamma correction and simplification
837 * of code.  This API is not used internally.
838 */
839void PNGAPI
840png_build_grayscale_palette(int bit_depth, png_colorp palette)
841{
842   int num_palette;
843   int color_inc;
844   int i;
845   int v;
846
847   png_debug(1, "in png_do_build_grayscale_palette");
848
849   if (palette == NULL)
850      return;
851
852   switch (bit_depth)
853   {
854      case 1:
855         num_palette = 2;
856         color_inc = 0xff;
857         break;
858
859      case 2:
860         num_palette = 4;
861         color_inc = 0x55;
862         break;
863
864      case 4:
865         num_palette = 16;
866         color_inc = 0x11;
867         break;
868
869      case 8:
870         num_palette = 256;
871         color_inc = 1;
872         break;
873
874      default:
875         num_palette = 0;
876         color_inc = 0;
877         break;
878   }
879
880   for (i = 0, v = 0; i < num_palette; i++, v += color_inc)
881   {
882      palette[i].red = (png_byte)(v & 0xff);
883      palette[i].green = (png_byte)(v & 0xff);
884      palette[i].blue = (png_byte)(v & 0xff);
885   }
886}
887#endif
888
889#ifdef PNG_SET_UNKNOWN_CHUNKS_SUPPORTED
890int PNGAPI
891png_handle_as_unknown(png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_const_bytep chunk_name)
892{
893   /* Check chunk_name and return "keep" value if it's on the list, else 0 */
894   png_const_bytep p, p_end;
895
896   if (png_ptr == NULL || chunk_name == NULL || png_ptr->num_chunk_list == 0)
897      return PNG_HANDLE_CHUNK_AS_DEFAULT;
898
899   p_end = png_ptr->chunk_list;
900   p = p_end + png_ptr->num_chunk_list*5; /* beyond end */
901
902   /* The code is the fifth byte after each four byte string.  Historically this
903    * code was always searched from the end of the list, this is no longer
904    * necessary because the 'set' routine handles duplicate entries correcty.
905    */
906   do /* num_chunk_list > 0, so at least one */
907   {
908      p -= 5;
909
910      if (memcmp(chunk_name, p, 4) == 0)
911         return p[4];
912   }
913   while (p > p_end);
914
915   /* This means that known chunks should be processed and unknown chunks should
916    * be handled according to the value of png_ptr->unknown_default; this can be
917    * confusing because, as a result, there are two levels of defaulting for
918    * unknown chunks.
919    */
920   return PNG_HANDLE_CHUNK_AS_DEFAULT;
921}
922
923#if defined(PNG_READ_UNKNOWN_CHUNKS_SUPPORTED) ||\
924   defined(PNG_HANDLE_AS_UNKNOWN_SUPPORTED)
925int /* PRIVATE */
926png_chunk_unknown_handling(png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_uint_32 chunk_name)
927{
928   png_byte chunk_string[5];
929
930   PNG_CSTRING_FROM_CHUNK(chunk_string, chunk_name);
931   return png_handle_as_unknown(png_ptr, chunk_string);
932}
933#endif /* READ_UNKNOWN_CHUNKS || HANDLE_AS_UNKNOWN */
934#endif /* SET_UNKNOWN_CHUNKS */
935
936#ifdef PNG_READ_SUPPORTED
937/* This function, added to libpng-1.0.6g, is untested. */
938int PNGAPI
939png_reset_zstream(png_structrp png_ptr)
940{
941   if (png_ptr == NULL)
942      return Z_STREAM_ERROR;
943
944   /* WARNING: this resets the window bits to the maximum! */
945   return (inflateReset(&png_ptr->zstream));
946}
947#endif /* READ */
948
949/* This function was added to libpng-1.0.7 */
950png_uint_32 PNGAPI
951png_access_version_number(void)
952{
953   /* Version of *.c files used when building libpng */
954   return((png_uint_32)PNG_LIBPNG_VER);
955}
956
957#if defined(PNG_READ_SUPPORTED) || defined(PNG_WRITE_SUPPORTED)
958/* Ensure that png_ptr->zstream.msg holds some appropriate error message string.
959 * If it doesn't 'ret' is used to set it to something appropriate, even in cases
960 * like Z_OK or Z_STREAM_END where the error code is apparently a success code.
961 */
962void /* PRIVATE */
963png_zstream_error(png_structrp png_ptr, int ret)
964{
965   /* Translate 'ret' into an appropriate error string, priority is given to the
966    * one in zstream if set.  This always returns a string, even in cases like
967    * Z_OK or Z_STREAM_END where the error code is a success code.
968    */
969   if (png_ptr->zstream.msg == NULL) switch (ret)
970   {
971      default:
972      case Z_OK:
973         png_ptr->zstream.msg = PNGZ_MSG_CAST("unexpected zlib return code");
974         break;
975
976      case Z_STREAM_END:
977         /* Normal exit */
978         png_ptr->zstream.msg = PNGZ_MSG_CAST("unexpected end of LZ stream");
979         break;
980
981      case Z_NEED_DICT:
982         /* This means the deflate stream did not have a dictionary; this
983          * indicates a bogus PNG.
984          */
985         png_ptr->zstream.msg = PNGZ_MSG_CAST("missing LZ dictionary");
986         break;
987
988      case Z_ERRNO:
989         /* gz APIs only: should not happen */
990         png_ptr->zstream.msg = PNGZ_MSG_CAST("zlib IO error");
991         break;
992
993      case Z_STREAM_ERROR:
994         /* internal libpng error */
995         png_ptr->zstream.msg = PNGZ_MSG_CAST("bad parameters to zlib");
996         break;
997
998      case Z_DATA_ERROR:
999         png_ptr->zstream.msg = PNGZ_MSG_CAST("damaged LZ stream");
1000         break;
1001
1002      case Z_MEM_ERROR:
1003         png_ptr->zstream.msg = PNGZ_MSG_CAST("insufficient memory");
1004         break;
1005
1006      case Z_BUF_ERROR:
1007         /* End of input or output; not a problem if the caller is doing
1008          * incremental read or write.
1009          */
1010         png_ptr->zstream.msg = PNGZ_MSG_CAST("truncated");
1011         break;
1012
1013      case Z_VERSION_ERROR:
1014         png_ptr->zstream.msg = PNGZ_MSG_CAST("unsupported zlib version");
1015         break;
1016
1017      case PNG_UNEXPECTED_ZLIB_RETURN:
1018         /* Compile errors here mean that zlib now uses the value co-opted in
1019          * pngpriv.h for PNG_UNEXPECTED_ZLIB_RETURN; update the switch above
1020          * and change pngpriv.h.  Note that this message is "... return",
1021          * whereas the default/Z_OK one is "... return code".
1022          */
1023         png_ptr->zstream.msg = PNGZ_MSG_CAST("unexpected zlib return");
1024         break;
1025   }
1026}
1027
1028/* png_convert_size: a PNGAPI but no longer in png.h, so deleted
1029 * at libpng 1.5.5!
1030 */
1031
1032/* Added at libpng version 1.2.34 and 1.4.0 (moved from pngset.c) */
1033#ifdef PNG_GAMMA_SUPPORTED /* always set if COLORSPACE */
1034static int
1035png_colorspace_check_gamma(png_const_structrp png_ptr,
1036    png_colorspacerp colorspace, png_fixed_point gAMA, int from)
1037   /* This is called to check a new gamma value against an existing one.  The
1038    * routine returns false if the new gamma value should not be written.
1039    *
1040    * 'from' says where the new gamma value comes from:
1041    *
1042    *    0: the new gamma value is the libpng estimate for an ICC profile
1043    *    1: the new gamma value comes from a gAMA chunk
1044    *    2: the new gamma value comes from an sRGB chunk
1045    */
1046{
1047   png_fixed_point gtest;
1048
1049   if ((colorspace->flags & PNG_COLORSPACE_HAVE_GAMMA) != 0 &&
1050       (png_muldiv(&gtest, colorspace->gamma, PNG_FP_1, gAMA) == 0  ||
1051      png_gamma_significant(gtest) != 0))
1052   {
1053      /* Either this is an sRGB image, in which case the calculated gamma
1054       * approximation should match, or this is an image with a profile and the
1055       * value libpng calculates for the gamma of the profile does not match the
1056       * value recorded in the file.  The former, sRGB, case is an error, the
1057       * latter is just a warning.
1058       */
1059      if ((colorspace->flags & PNG_COLORSPACE_FROM_sRGB) != 0 || from == 2)
1060      {
1061         png_chunk_report(png_ptr, "gamma value does not match sRGB",
1062             PNG_CHUNK_ERROR);
1063         /* Do not overwrite an sRGB value */
1064         return from == 2;
1065      }
1066
1067      else /* sRGB tag not involved */
1068      {
1069         png_chunk_report(png_ptr, "gamma value does not match libpng estimate",
1070             PNG_CHUNK_WARNING);
1071         return from == 1;
1072      }
1073   }
1074
1075   return 1;
1076}
1077
1078void /* PRIVATE */
1079png_colorspace_set_gamma(png_const_structrp png_ptr,
1080    png_colorspacerp colorspace, png_fixed_point gAMA)
1081{
1082   /* Changed in libpng-1.5.4 to limit the values to ensure overflow can't
1083    * occur.  Since the fixed point representation is asymetrical it is
1084    * possible for 1/gamma to overflow the limit of 21474 and this means the
1085    * gamma value must be at least 5/100000 and hence at most 20000.0.  For
1086    * safety the limits here are a little narrower.  The values are 0.00016 to
1087    * 6250.0, which are truly ridiculous gamma values (and will produce
1088    * displays that are all black or all white.)
1089    *
1090    * In 1.6.0 this test replaces the ones in pngrutil.c, in the gAMA chunk
1091    * handling code, which only required the value to be >0.
1092    */
1093   png_const_charp errmsg;
1094
1095   if (gAMA < 16 || gAMA > 625000000)
1096      errmsg = "gamma value out of range";
1097
1098#  ifdef PNG_READ_gAMA_SUPPORTED
1099   /* Allow the application to set the gamma value more than once */
1100   else if ((png_ptr->mode & PNG_IS_READ_STRUCT) != 0 &&
1101      (colorspace->flags & PNG_COLORSPACE_FROM_gAMA) != 0)
1102      errmsg = "duplicate";
1103#  endif
1104
1105   /* Do nothing if the colorspace is already invalid */
1106   else if ((colorspace->flags & PNG_COLORSPACE_INVALID) != 0)
1107      return;
1108
1109   else
1110   {
1111      if (png_colorspace_check_gamma(png_ptr, colorspace, gAMA,
1112          1/*from gAMA*/) != 0)
1113      {
1114         /* Store this gamma value. */
1115         colorspace->gamma = gAMA;
1116         colorspace->flags |=
1117            (PNG_COLORSPACE_HAVE_GAMMA | PNG_COLORSPACE_FROM_gAMA);
1118      }
1119
1120      /* At present if the check_gamma test fails the gamma of the colorspace is
1121       * not updated however the colorspace is not invalidated.  This
1122       * corresponds to the case where the existing gamma comes from an sRGB
1123       * chunk or profile.  An error message has already been output.
1124       */
1125      return;
1126   }
1127
1128   /* Error exit - errmsg has been set. */
1129   colorspace->flags |= PNG_COLORSPACE_INVALID;
1130   png_chunk_report(png_ptr, errmsg, PNG_CHUNK_WRITE_ERROR);
1131}
1132
1133void /* PRIVATE */
1134png_colorspace_sync_info(png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_inforp info_ptr)
1135{
1136   if ((info_ptr->colorspace.flags & PNG_COLORSPACE_INVALID) != 0)
1137   {
1138      /* Everything is invalid */
1139      info_ptr->valid &= ~(PNG_INFO_gAMA|PNG_INFO_cHRM|PNG_INFO_sRGB|
1140         PNG_INFO_iCCP);
1141
1142#     ifdef PNG_COLORSPACE_SUPPORTED
1143      /* Clean up the iCCP profile now if it won't be used. */
1144      png_free_data(png_ptr, info_ptr, PNG_FREE_ICCP, -1/*not used*/);
1145#     else
1146      PNG_UNUSED(png_ptr)
1147#     endif
1148   }
1149
1150   else
1151   {
1152#     ifdef PNG_COLORSPACE_SUPPORTED
1153      /* Leave the INFO_iCCP flag set if the pngset.c code has already set
1154       * it; this allows a PNG to contain a profile which matches sRGB and
1155       * yet still have that profile retrievable by the application.
1156       */
1157      if ((info_ptr->colorspace.flags & PNG_COLORSPACE_MATCHES_sRGB) != 0)
1158         info_ptr->valid |= PNG_INFO_sRGB;
1159
1160      else
1161         info_ptr->valid &= ~PNG_INFO_sRGB;
1162
1163      if ((info_ptr->colorspace.flags & PNG_COLORSPACE_HAVE_ENDPOINTS) != 0)
1164         info_ptr->valid |= PNG_INFO_cHRM;
1165
1166      else
1167         info_ptr->valid &= ~PNG_INFO_cHRM;
1168#     endif
1169
1170      if ((info_ptr->colorspace.flags & PNG_COLORSPACE_HAVE_GAMMA) != 0)
1171         info_ptr->valid |= PNG_INFO_gAMA;
1172
1173      else
1174         info_ptr->valid &= ~PNG_INFO_gAMA;
1175   }
1176}
1177
1178#ifdef PNG_READ_SUPPORTED
1179void /* PRIVATE */
1180png_colorspace_sync(png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_inforp info_ptr)
1181{
1182   if (info_ptr == NULL) /* reduce code size; check here not in the caller */
1183      return;
1184
1185   info_ptr->colorspace = png_ptr->colorspace;
1186   png_colorspace_sync_info(png_ptr, info_ptr);
1187}
1188#endif
1189#endif /* GAMMA */
1190
1191#ifdef PNG_COLORSPACE_SUPPORTED
1192/* Added at libpng-1.5.5 to support read and write of true CIEXYZ values for
1193 * cHRM, as opposed to using chromaticities.  These internal APIs return
1194 * non-zero on a parameter error.  The X, Y and Z values are required to be
1195 * positive and less than 1.0.
1196 */
1197static int
1198png_xy_from_XYZ(png_xy *xy, const png_XYZ *XYZ)
1199{
1200   png_int_32 d, dwhite, whiteX, whiteY;
1201
1202   d = XYZ->red_X + XYZ->red_Y + XYZ->red_Z;
1203   if (png_muldiv(&xy->redx, XYZ->red_X, PNG_FP_1, d) == 0)
1204      return 1;
1205   if (png_muldiv(&xy->redy, XYZ->red_Y, PNG_FP_1, d) == 0)
1206      return 1;
1207   dwhite = d;
1208   whiteX = XYZ->red_X;
1209   whiteY = XYZ->red_Y;
1210
1211   d = XYZ->green_X + XYZ->green_Y + XYZ->green_Z;
1212   if (png_muldiv(&xy->greenx, XYZ->green_X, PNG_FP_1, d) == 0)
1213      return 1;
1214   if (png_muldiv(&xy->greeny, XYZ->green_Y, PNG_FP_1, d) == 0)
1215      return 1;
1216   dwhite += d;
1217   whiteX += XYZ->green_X;
1218   whiteY += XYZ->green_Y;
1219
1220   d = XYZ->blue_X + XYZ->blue_Y + XYZ->blue_Z;
1221   if (png_muldiv(&xy->bluex, XYZ->blue_X, PNG_FP_1, d) == 0)
1222      return 1;
1223   if (png_muldiv(&xy->bluey, XYZ->blue_Y, PNG_FP_1, d) == 0)
1224      return 1;
1225   dwhite += d;
1226   whiteX += XYZ->blue_X;
1227   whiteY += XYZ->blue_Y;
1228
1229   /* The reference white is simply the sum of the end-point (X,Y,Z) vectors,
1230    * thus:
1231    */
1232   if (png_muldiv(&xy->whitex, whiteX, PNG_FP_1, dwhite) == 0)
1233      return 1;
1234   if (png_muldiv(&xy->whitey, whiteY, PNG_FP_1, dwhite) == 0)
1235      return 1;
1236
1237   return 0;
1238}
1239
1240static int
1241png_XYZ_from_xy(png_XYZ *XYZ, const png_xy *xy)
1242{
1243   png_fixed_point red_inverse, green_inverse, blue_scale;
1244   png_fixed_point left, right, denominator;
1245
1246   /* Check xy and, implicitly, z.  Note that wide gamut color spaces typically
1247    * have end points with 0 tristimulus values (these are impossible end
1248    * points, but they are used to cover the possible colors).  We check
1249    * xy->whitey against 5, not 0, to avoid a possible integer overflow.
1250    */
1251   if (xy->redx   < 0 || xy->redx > PNG_FP_1) return 1;
1252   if (xy->redy   < 0 || xy->redy > PNG_FP_1-xy->redx) return 1;
1253   if (xy->greenx < 0 || xy->greenx > PNG_FP_1) return 1;
1254   if (xy->greeny < 0 || xy->greeny > PNG_FP_1-xy->greenx) return 1;
1255   if (xy->bluex  < 0 || xy->bluex > PNG_FP_1) return 1;
1256   if (xy->bluey  < 0 || xy->bluey > PNG_FP_1-xy->bluex) return 1;
1257   if (xy->whitex < 0 || xy->whitex > PNG_FP_1) return 1;
1258   if (xy->whitey < 5 || xy->whitey > PNG_FP_1-xy->whitex) return 1;
1259
1260   /* The reverse calculation is more difficult because the original tristimulus
1261    * value had 9 independent values (red,green,blue)x(X,Y,Z) however only 8
1262    * derived values were recorded in the cHRM chunk;
1263    * (red,green,blue,white)x(x,y).  This loses one degree of freedom and
1264    * therefore an arbitrary ninth value has to be introduced to undo the
1265    * original transformations.
1266    *
1267    * Think of the original end-points as points in (X,Y,Z) space.  The
1268    * chromaticity values (c) have the property:
1269    *
1270    *           C
1271    *   c = ---------
1272    *       X + Y + Z
1273    *
1274    * For each c (x,y,z) from the corresponding original C (X,Y,Z).  Thus the
1275    * three chromaticity values (x,y,z) for each end-point obey the
1276    * relationship:
1277    *
1278    *   x + y + z = 1
1279    *
1280    * This describes the plane in (X,Y,Z) space that intersects each axis at the
1281    * value 1.0; call this the chromaticity plane.  Thus the chromaticity
1282    * calculation has scaled each end-point so that it is on the x+y+z=1 plane
1283    * and chromaticity is the intersection of the vector from the origin to the
1284    * (X,Y,Z) value with the chromaticity plane.
1285    *
1286    * To fully invert the chromaticity calculation we would need the three
1287    * end-point scale factors, (red-scale, green-scale, blue-scale), but these
1288    * were not recorded.  Instead we calculated the reference white (X,Y,Z) and
1289    * recorded the chromaticity of this.  The reference white (X,Y,Z) would have
1290    * given all three of the scale factors since:
1291    *
1292    *    color-C = color-c * color-scale
1293    *    white-C = red-C + green-C + blue-C
1294    *            = red-c*red-scale + green-c*green-scale + blue-c*blue-scale
1295    *
1296    * But cHRM records only white-x and white-y, so we have lost the white scale
1297    * factor:
1298    *
1299    *    white-C = white-c*white-scale
1300    *
1301    * To handle this the inverse transformation makes an arbitrary assumption
1302    * about white-scale:
1303    *
1304    *    Assume: white-Y = 1.0
1305    *    Hence:  white-scale = 1/white-y
1306    *    Or:     red-Y + green-Y + blue-Y = 1.0
1307    *
1308    * Notice the last statement of the assumption gives an equation in three of
1309    * the nine values we want to calculate.  8 more equations come from the
1310    * above routine as summarised at the top above (the chromaticity
1311    * calculation):
1312    *
1313    *    Given: color-x = color-X / (color-X + color-Y + color-Z)
1314    *    Hence: (color-x - 1)*color-X + color.x*color-Y + color.x*color-Z = 0
1315    *
1316    * This is 9 simultaneous equations in the 9 variables "color-C" and can be
1317    * solved by Cramer's rule.  Cramer's rule requires calculating 10 9x9 matrix
1318    * determinants, however this is not as bad as it seems because only 28 of
1319    * the total of 90 terms in the various matrices are non-zero.  Nevertheless
1320    * Cramer's rule is notoriously numerically unstable because the determinant
1321    * calculation involves the difference of large, but similar, numbers.  It is
1322    * difficult to be sure that the calculation is stable for real world values
1323    * and it is certain that it becomes unstable where the end points are close
1324    * together.
1325    *
1326    * So this code uses the perhaps slightly less optimal but more
1327    * understandable and totally obvious approach of calculating color-scale.
1328    *
1329    * This algorithm depends on the precision in white-scale and that is
1330    * (1/white-y), so we can immediately see that as white-y approaches 0 the
1331    * accuracy inherent in the cHRM chunk drops off substantially.
1332    *
1333    * libpng arithmetic: a simple inversion of the above equations
1334    * ------------------------------------------------------------
1335    *
1336    *    white_scale = 1/white-y
1337    *    white-X = white-x * white-scale
1338    *    white-Y = 1.0
1339    *    white-Z = (1 - white-x - white-y) * white_scale
1340    *
1341    *    white-C = red-C + green-C + blue-C
1342    *            = red-c*red-scale + green-c*green-scale + blue-c*blue-scale
1343    *
1344    * This gives us three equations in (red-scale,green-scale,blue-scale) where
1345    * all the coefficients are now known:
1346    *
1347    *    red-x*red-scale + green-x*green-scale + blue-x*blue-scale
1348    *       = white-x/white-y
1349    *    red-y*red-scale + green-y*green-scale + blue-y*blue-scale = 1
1350    *    red-z*red-scale + green-z*green-scale + blue-z*blue-scale
1351    *       = (1 - white-x - white-y)/white-y
1352    *
1353    * In the last equation color-z is (1 - color-x - color-y) so we can add all
1354    * three equations together to get an alternative third:
1355    *
1356    *    red-scale + green-scale + blue-scale = 1/white-y = white-scale
1357    *
1358    * So now we have a Cramer's rule solution where the determinants are just
1359    * 3x3 - far more tractible.  Unfortunately 3x3 determinants still involve
1360    * multiplication of three coefficients so we can't guarantee to avoid
1361    * overflow in the libpng fixed point representation.  Using Cramer's rule in
1362    * floating point is probably a good choice here, but it's not an option for
1363    * fixed point.  Instead proceed to simplify the first two equations by
1364    * eliminating what is likely to be the largest value, blue-scale:
1365    *
1366    *    blue-scale = white-scale - red-scale - green-scale
1367    *
1368    * Hence:
1369    *
1370    *    (red-x - blue-x)*red-scale + (green-x - blue-x)*green-scale =
1371    *                (white-x - blue-x)*white-scale
1372    *
1373    *    (red-y - blue-y)*red-scale + (green-y - blue-y)*green-scale =
1374    *                1 - blue-y*white-scale
1375    *
1376    * And now we can trivially solve for (red-scale,green-scale):
1377    *
1378    *    green-scale =
1379    *                (white-x - blue-x)*white-scale - (red-x - blue-x)*red-scale
1380    *                -----------------------------------------------------------
1381    *                                  green-x - blue-x
1382    *
1383    *    red-scale =
1384    *                1 - blue-y*white-scale - (green-y - blue-y) * green-scale
1385    *                ---------------------------------------------------------
1386    *                                  red-y - blue-y
1387    *
1388    * Hence:
1389    *
1390    *    red-scale =
1391    *          ( (green-x - blue-x) * (white-y - blue-y) -
1392    *            (green-y - blue-y) * (white-x - blue-x) ) / white-y
1393    * -------------------------------------------------------------------------
1394    *  (green-x - blue-x)*(red-y - blue-y)-(green-y - blue-y)*(red-x - blue-x)
1395    *
1396    *    green-scale =
1397    *          ( (red-y - blue-y) * (white-x - blue-x) -
1398    *            (red-x - blue-x) * (white-y - blue-y) ) / white-y
1399    * -------------------------------------------------------------------------
1400    *  (green-x - blue-x)*(red-y - blue-y)-(green-y - blue-y)*(red-x - blue-x)
1401    *
1402    * Accuracy:
1403    * The input values have 5 decimal digits of accuracy.  The values are all in
1404    * the range 0 < value < 1, so simple products are in the same range but may
1405    * need up to 10 decimal digits to preserve the original precision and avoid
1406    * underflow.  Because we are using a 32-bit signed representation we cannot
1407    * match this; the best is a little over 9 decimal digits, less than 10.
1408    *
1409    * The approach used here is to preserve the maximum precision within the
1410    * signed representation.  Because the red-scale calculation above uses the
1411    * difference between two products of values that must be in the range -1..+1
1412    * it is sufficient to divide the product by 7; ceil(100,000/32767*2).  The
1413    * factor is irrelevant in the calculation because it is applied to both
1414    * numerator and denominator.
1415    *
1416    * Note that the values of the differences of the products of the
1417    * chromaticities in the above equations tend to be small, for example for
1418    * the sRGB chromaticities they are:
1419    *
1420    * red numerator:    -0.04751
1421    * green numerator:  -0.08788
1422    * denominator:      -0.2241 (without white-y multiplication)
1423    *
1424    *  The resultant Y coefficients from the chromaticities of some widely used
1425    *  color space definitions are (to 15 decimal places):
1426    *
1427    *  sRGB
1428    *    0.212639005871510 0.715168678767756 0.072192315360734
1429    *  Kodak ProPhoto
1430    *    0.288071128229293 0.711843217810102 0.000085653960605
1431    *  Adobe RGB
1432    *    0.297344975250536 0.627363566255466 0.075291458493998
1433    *  Adobe Wide Gamut RGB
1434    *    0.258728243040113 0.724682314948566 0.016589442011321
1435    */
1436   /* By the argument, above overflow should be impossible here. The return
1437    * value of 2 indicates an internal error to the caller.
1438    */
1439   if (png_muldiv(&left, xy->greenx-xy->bluex, xy->redy - xy->bluey, 7) == 0)
1440      return 2;
1441   if (png_muldiv(&right, xy->greeny-xy->bluey, xy->redx - xy->bluex, 7) == 0)
1442      return 2;
1443   denominator = left - right;
1444
1445   /* Now find the red numerator. */
1446   if (png_muldiv(&left, xy->greenx-xy->bluex, xy->whitey-xy->bluey, 7) == 0)
1447      return 2;
1448   if (png_muldiv(&right, xy->greeny-xy->bluey, xy->whitex-xy->bluex, 7) == 0)
1449      return 2;
1450
1451   /* Overflow is possible here and it indicates an extreme set of PNG cHRM
1452    * chunk values.  This calculation actually returns the reciprocal of the
1453    * scale value because this allows us to delay the multiplication of white-y
1454    * into the denominator, which tends to produce a small number.
1455    */
1456   if (png_muldiv(&red_inverse, xy->whitey, denominator, left-right) == 0 ||
1457       red_inverse <= xy->whitey /* r+g+b scales = white scale */)
1458      return 1;
1459
1460   /* Similarly for green_inverse: */
1461   if (png_muldiv(&left, xy->redy-xy->bluey, xy->whitex-xy->bluex, 7) == 0)
1462      return 2;
1463   if (png_muldiv(&right, xy->redx-xy->bluex, xy->whitey-xy->bluey, 7) == 0)
1464      return 2;
1465   if (png_muldiv(&green_inverse, xy->whitey, denominator, left-right) == 0 ||
1466       green_inverse <= xy->whitey)
1467      return 1;
1468
1469   /* And the blue scale, the checks above guarantee this can't overflow but it
1470    * can still produce 0 for extreme cHRM values.
1471    */
1472   blue_scale = png_reciprocal(xy->whitey) - png_reciprocal(red_inverse) -
1473       png_reciprocal(green_inverse);
1474   if (blue_scale <= 0)
1475      return 1;
1476
1477
1478   /* And fill in the png_XYZ: */
1479   if (png_muldiv(&XYZ->red_X, xy->redx, PNG_FP_1, red_inverse) == 0)
1480      return 1;
1481   if (png_muldiv(&XYZ->red_Y, xy->redy, PNG_FP_1, red_inverse) == 0)
1482      return 1;
1483   if (png_muldiv(&XYZ->red_Z, PNG_FP_1 - xy->redx - xy->redy, PNG_FP_1,
1484       red_inverse) == 0)
1485      return 1;
1486
1487   if (png_muldiv(&XYZ->green_X, xy->greenx, PNG_FP_1, green_inverse) == 0)
1488      return 1;
1489   if (png_muldiv(&XYZ->green_Y, xy->greeny, PNG_FP_1, green_inverse) == 0)
1490      return 1;
1491   if (png_muldiv(&XYZ->green_Z, PNG_FP_1 - xy->greenx - xy->greeny, PNG_FP_1,
1492       green_inverse) == 0)
1493      return 1;
1494
1495   if (png_muldiv(&XYZ->blue_X, xy->bluex, blue_scale, PNG_FP_1) == 0)
1496      return 1;
1497   if (png_muldiv(&XYZ->blue_Y, xy->bluey, blue_scale, PNG_FP_1) == 0)
1498      return 1;
1499   if (png_muldiv(&XYZ->blue_Z, PNG_FP_1 - xy->bluex - xy->bluey, blue_scale,
1500       PNG_FP_1) == 0)
1501      return 1;
1502
1503   return 0; /*success*/
1504}
1505
1506static int
1507png_XYZ_normalize(png_XYZ *XYZ)
1508{
1509   png_int_32 Y;
1510
1511   if (XYZ->red_Y < 0 || XYZ->green_Y < 0 || XYZ->blue_Y < 0 ||
1512      XYZ->red_X < 0 || XYZ->green_X < 0 || XYZ->blue_X < 0 ||
1513      XYZ->red_Z < 0 || XYZ->green_Z < 0 || XYZ->blue_Z < 0)
1514      return 1;
1515
1516   /* Normalize by scaling so the sum of the end-point Y values is PNG_FP_1.
1517    * IMPLEMENTATION NOTE: ANSI requires signed overflow not to occur, therefore
1518    * relying on addition of two positive values producing a negative one is not
1519    * safe.
1520    */
1521   Y = XYZ->red_Y;
1522   if (0x7fffffff - Y < XYZ->green_X)
1523      return 1;
1524   Y += XYZ->green_Y;
1525   if (0x7fffffff - Y < XYZ->blue_X)
1526      return 1;
1527   Y += XYZ->blue_Y;
1528
1529   if (Y != PNG_FP_1)
1530   {
1531      if (png_muldiv(&XYZ->red_X, XYZ->red_X, PNG_FP_1, Y) == 0)
1532         return 1;
1533      if (png_muldiv(&XYZ->red_Y, XYZ->red_Y, PNG_FP_1, Y) == 0)
1534         return 1;
1535      if (png_muldiv(&XYZ->red_Z, XYZ->red_Z, PNG_FP_1, Y) == 0)
1536         return 1;
1537
1538      if (png_muldiv(&XYZ->green_X, XYZ->green_X, PNG_FP_1, Y) == 0)
1539         return 1;
1540      if (png_muldiv(&XYZ->green_Y, XYZ->green_Y, PNG_FP_1, Y) == 0)
1541         return 1;
1542      if (png_muldiv(&XYZ->green_Z, XYZ->green_Z, PNG_FP_1, Y) == 0)
1543         return 1;
1544
1545      if (png_muldiv(&XYZ->blue_X, XYZ->blue_X, PNG_FP_1, Y) == 0)
1546         return 1;
1547      if (png_muldiv(&XYZ->blue_Y, XYZ->blue_Y, PNG_FP_1, Y) == 0)
1548         return 1;
1549      if (png_muldiv(&XYZ->blue_Z, XYZ->blue_Z, PNG_FP_1, Y) == 0)
1550         return 1;
1551   }
1552
1553   return 0;
1554}
1555
1556static int
1557png_colorspace_endpoints_match(const png_xy *xy1, const png_xy *xy2, int delta)
1558{
1559   /* Allow an error of +/-0.01 (absolute value) on each chromaticity */
1560   if (PNG_OUT_OF_RANGE(xy1->whitex, xy2->whitex,delta) ||
1561       PNG_OUT_OF_RANGE(xy1->whitey, xy2->whitey,delta) ||
1562       PNG_OUT_OF_RANGE(xy1->redx,   xy2->redx,  delta) ||
1563       PNG_OUT_OF_RANGE(xy1->redy,   xy2->redy,  delta) ||
1564       PNG_OUT_OF_RANGE(xy1->greenx, xy2->greenx,delta) ||
1565       PNG_OUT_OF_RANGE(xy1->greeny, xy2->greeny,delta) ||
1566       PNG_OUT_OF_RANGE(xy1->bluex,  xy2->bluex, delta) ||
1567       PNG_OUT_OF_RANGE(xy1->bluey,  xy2->bluey, delta))
1568      return 0;
1569   return 1;
1570}
1571
1572/* Added in libpng-1.6.0, a different check for the validity of a set of cHRM
1573 * chunk chromaticities.  Earlier checks used to simply look for the overflow
1574 * condition (where the determinant of the matrix to solve for XYZ ends up zero
1575 * because the chromaticity values are not all distinct.)  Despite this it is
1576 * theoretically possible to produce chromaticities that are apparently valid
1577 * but that rapidly degrade to invalid, potentially crashing, sets because of
1578 * arithmetic inaccuracies when calculations are performed on them.  The new
1579 * check is to round-trip xy -> XYZ -> xy and then check that the result is
1580 * within a small percentage of the original.
1581 */
1582static int
1583png_colorspace_check_xy(png_XYZ *XYZ, const png_xy *xy)
1584{
1585   int result;
1586   png_xy xy_test;
1587
1588   /* As a side-effect this routine also returns the XYZ endpoints. */
1589   result = png_XYZ_from_xy(XYZ, xy);
1590   if (result != 0)
1591      return result;
1592
1593   result = png_xy_from_XYZ(&xy_test, XYZ);
1594   if (result != 0)
1595      return result;
1596
1597   if (png_colorspace_endpoints_match(xy, &xy_test,
1598       5/*actually, the math is pretty accurate*/) != 0)
1599      return 0;
1600
1601   /* Too much slip */
1602   return 1;
1603}
1604
1605/* This is the check going the other way.  The XYZ is modified to normalize it
1606 * (another side-effect) and the xy chromaticities are returned.
1607 */
1608static int
1609png_colorspace_check_XYZ(png_xy *xy, png_XYZ *XYZ)
1610{
1611   int result;
1612   png_XYZ XYZtemp;
1613
1614   result = png_XYZ_normalize(XYZ);
1615   if (result != 0)
1616      return result;
1617
1618   result = png_xy_from_XYZ(xy, XYZ);
1619   if (result != 0)
1620      return result;
1621
1622   XYZtemp = *XYZ;
1623   return png_colorspace_check_xy(&XYZtemp, xy);
1624}
1625
1626/* Used to check for an endpoint match against sRGB */
1627static const png_xy sRGB_xy = /* From ITU-R BT.709-3 */
1628{
1629   /* color      x       y */
1630   /* red   */ 64000, 33000,
1631   /* green */ 30000, 60000,
1632   /* blue  */ 15000,  6000,
1633   /* white */ 31270, 32900
1634};
1635
1636static int
1637png_colorspace_set_xy_and_XYZ(png_const_structrp png_ptr,
1638    png_colorspacerp colorspace, const png_xy *xy, const png_XYZ *XYZ,
1639    int preferred)
1640{
1641   if ((colorspace->flags & PNG_COLORSPACE_INVALID) != 0)
1642      return 0;
1643
1644   /* The consistency check is performed on the chromaticities; this factors out
1645    * variations because of the normalization (or not) of the end point Y
1646    * values.
1647    */
1648   if (preferred < 2 &&
1649       (colorspace->flags & PNG_COLORSPACE_HAVE_ENDPOINTS) != 0)
1650   {
1651      /* The end points must be reasonably close to any we already have.  The
1652       * following allows an error of up to +/-.001
1653       */
1654      if (png_colorspace_endpoints_match(xy, &colorspace->end_points_xy,
1655          100) == 0)
1656      {
1657         colorspace->flags |= PNG_COLORSPACE_INVALID;
1658         png_benign_error(png_ptr, "inconsistent chromaticities");
1659         return 0; /* failed */
1660      }
1661
1662      /* Only overwrite with preferred values */
1663      if (preferred == 0)
1664         return 1; /* ok, but no change */
1665   }
1666
1667   colorspace->end_points_xy = *xy;
1668   colorspace->end_points_XYZ = *XYZ;
1669   colorspace->flags |= PNG_COLORSPACE_HAVE_ENDPOINTS;
1670
1671   /* The end points are normally quoted to two decimal digits, so allow +/-0.01
1672    * on this test.
1673    */
1674   if (png_colorspace_endpoints_match(xy, &sRGB_xy, 1000) != 0)
1675      colorspace->flags |= PNG_COLORSPACE_ENDPOINTS_MATCH_sRGB;
1676
1677   else
1678      colorspace->flags &= PNG_COLORSPACE_CANCEL(
1679         PNG_COLORSPACE_ENDPOINTS_MATCH_sRGB);
1680
1681   return 2; /* ok and changed */
1682}
1683
1684int /* PRIVATE */
1685png_colorspace_set_chromaticities(png_const_structrp png_ptr,
1686    png_colorspacerp colorspace, const png_xy *xy, int preferred)
1687{
1688   /* We must check the end points to ensure they are reasonable - in the past
1689    * color management systems have crashed as a result of getting bogus
1690    * colorant values, while this isn't the fault of libpng it is the
1691    * responsibility of libpng because PNG carries the bomb and libpng is in a
1692    * position to protect against it.
1693    */
1694   png_XYZ XYZ;
1695
1696   switch (png_colorspace_check_xy(&XYZ, xy))
1697   {
1698      case 0: /* success */
1699         return png_colorspace_set_xy_and_XYZ(png_ptr, colorspace, xy, &XYZ,
1700             preferred);
1701
1702      case 1:
1703         /* We can't invert the chromaticities so we can't produce value XYZ
1704          * values.  Likely as not a color management system will fail too.
1705          */
1706         colorspace->flags |= PNG_COLORSPACE_INVALID;
1707         png_benign_error(png_ptr, "invalid chromaticities");
1708         break;
1709
1710      default:
1711         /* libpng is broken; this should be a warning but if it happens we
1712          * want error reports so for the moment it is an error.
1713          */
1714         colorspace->flags |= PNG_COLORSPACE_INVALID;
1715         png_error(png_ptr, "internal error checking chromaticities");
1716   }
1717
1718   return 0; /* failed */
1719}
1720
1721int /* PRIVATE */
1722png_colorspace_set_endpoints(png_const_structrp png_ptr,
1723    png_colorspacerp colorspace, const png_XYZ *XYZ_in, int preferred)
1724{
1725   png_XYZ XYZ = *XYZ_in;
1726   png_xy xy;
1727
1728   switch (png_colorspace_check_XYZ(&xy, &XYZ))
1729   {
1730      case 0:
1731         return png_colorspace_set_xy_and_XYZ(png_ptr, colorspace, &xy, &XYZ,
1732             preferred);
1733
1734      case 1:
1735         /* End points are invalid. */
1736         colorspace->flags |= PNG_COLORSPACE_INVALID;
1737         png_benign_error(png_ptr, "invalid end points");
1738         break;
1739
1740      default:
1741         colorspace->flags |= PNG_COLORSPACE_INVALID;
1742         png_error(png_ptr, "internal error checking chromaticities");
1743   }
1744
1745   return 0; /* failed */
1746}
1747
1748#if defined(PNG_sRGB_SUPPORTED) || defined(PNG_iCCP_SUPPORTED)
1749/* Error message generation */
1750static char
1751png_icc_tag_char(png_uint_32 byte)
1752{
1753   byte &= 0xff;
1754   if (byte >= 32 && byte <= 126)
1755      return (char)byte;
1756   else
1757      return '?';
1758}
1759
1760static void
1761png_icc_tag_name(char *name, png_uint_32 tag)
1762{
1763   name[0] = '\'';
1764   name[1] = png_icc_tag_char(tag >> 24);
1765   name[2] = png_icc_tag_char(tag >> 16);
1766   name[3] = png_icc_tag_char(tag >>  8);
1767   name[4] = png_icc_tag_char(tag      );
1768   name[5] = '\'';
1769}
1770
1771static int
1772is_ICC_signature_char(png_alloc_size_t it)
1773{
1774   return it == 32 || (it >= 48 && it <= 57) || (it >= 65 && it <= 90) ||
1775      (it >= 97 && it <= 122);
1776}
1777
1778static int
1779is_ICC_signature(png_alloc_size_t it)
1780{
1781   return is_ICC_signature_char(it >> 24) /* checks all the top bits */ &&
1782      is_ICC_signature_char((it >> 16) & 0xff) &&
1783      is_ICC_signature_char((it >> 8) & 0xff) &&
1784      is_ICC_signature_char(it & 0xff);
1785}
1786
1787static int
1788png_icc_profile_error(png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_colorspacerp colorspace,
1789    png_const_charp name, png_alloc_size_t value, png_const_charp reason)
1790{
1791   size_t pos;
1792   char message[196]; /* see below for calculation */
1793
1794   if (colorspace != NULL)
1795      colorspace->flags |= PNG_COLORSPACE_INVALID;
1796
1797   pos = png_safecat(message, (sizeof message), 0, "profile '"); /* 9 chars */
1798   pos = png_safecat(message, pos+79, pos, name); /* Truncate to 79 chars */
1799   pos = png_safecat(message, (sizeof message), pos, "': "); /* +2 = 90 */
1800   if (is_ICC_signature(value) != 0)
1801   {
1802      /* So 'value' is at most 4 bytes and the following cast is safe */
1803      png_icc_tag_name(message+pos, (png_uint_32)value);
1804      pos += 6; /* total +8; less than the else clause */
1805      message[pos++] = ':';
1806      message[pos++] = ' ';
1807   }
1808#  ifdef PNG_WARNINGS_SUPPORTED
1809   else
1810      {
1811         char number[PNG_NUMBER_BUFFER_SIZE]; /* +24 = 114*/
1812
1813         pos = png_safecat(message, (sizeof message), pos,
1814             png_format_number(number, number+(sizeof number),
1815             PNG_NUMBER_FORMAT_x, value));
1816         pos = png_safecat(message, (sizeof message), pos, "h: "); /*+2 = 116*/
1817      }
1818#  endif
1819   /* The 'reason' is an arbitrary message, allow +79 maximum 195 */
1820   pos = png_safecat(message, (sizeof message), pos, reason);
1821   PNG_UNUSED(pos)
1822
1823   /* This is recoverable, but make it unconditionally an app_error on write to
1824    * avoid writing invalid ICC profiles into PNG files (i.e., we handle them
1825    * on read, with a warning, but on write unless the app turns off
1826    * application errors the PNG won't be written.)
1827    */
1828   png_chunk_report(png_ptr, message,
1829       (colorspace != NULL) ? PNG_CHUNK_ERROR : PNG_CHUNK_WRITE_ERROR);
1830
1831   return 0;
1832}
1833#endif /* sRGB || iCCP */
1834
1835#ifdef PNG_sRGB_SUPPORTED
1836int /* PRIVATE */
1837png_colorspace_set_sRGB(png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_colorspacerp colorspace,
1838    int intent)
1839{
1840   /* sRGB sets known gamma, end points and (from the chunk) intent. */
1841   /* IMPORTANT: these are not necessarily the values found in an ICC profile
1842    * because ICC profiles store values adapted to a D50 environment; it is
1843    * expected that the ICC profile mediaWhitePointTag will be D50; see the
1844    * checks and code elsewhere to understand this better.
1845    *
1846    * These XYZ values, which are accurate to 5dp, produce rgb to gray
1847    * coefficients of (6968,23435,2366), which are reduced (because they add up
1848    * to 32769 not 32768) to (6968,23434,2366).  These are the values that
1849    * libpng has traditionally used (and are the best values given the 15bit
1850    * algorithm used by the rgb to gray code.)
1851    */
1852   static const png_XYZ sRGB_XYZ = /* D65 XYZ (*not* the D50 adapted values!) */
1853   {
1854      /* color      X      Y      Z */
1855      /* red   */ 41239, 21264,  1933,
1856      /* green */ 35758, 71517, 11919,
1857      /* blue  */ 18048,  7219, 95053
1858   };
1859
1860   /* Do nothing if the colorspace is already invalidated. */
1861   if ((colorspace->flags & PNG_COLORSPACE_INVALID) != 0)
1862      return 0;
1863
1864   /* Check the intent, then check for existing settings.  It is valid for the
1865    * PNG file to have cHRM or gAMA chunks along with sRGB, but the values must
1866    * be consistent with the correct values.  If, however, this function is
1867    * called below because an iCCP chunk matches sRGB then it is quite
1868    * conceivable that an older app recorded incorrect gAMA and cHRM because of
1869    * an incorrect calculation based on the values in the profile - this does
1870    * *not* invalidate the profile (though it still produces an error, which can
1871    * be ignored.)
1872    */
1873   if (intent < 0 || intent >= PNG_sRGB_INTENT_LAST)
1874      return png_icc_profile_error(png_ptr, colorspace, "sRGB",
1875          (unsigned)intent, "invalid sRGB rendering intent");
1876
1877   if ((colorspace->flags & PNG_COLORSPACE_HAVE_INTENT) != 0 &&
1878       colorspace->rendering_intent != intent)
1879      return png_icc_profile_error(png_ptr, colorspace, "sRGB",
1880         (unsigned)intent, "inconsistent rendering intents");
1881
1882   if ((colorspace->flags & PNG_COLORSPACE_FROM_sRGB) != 0)
1883   {
1884      png_benign_error(png_ptr, "duplicate sRGB information ignored");
1885      return 0;
1886   }
1887
1888   /* If the standard sRGB cHRM chunk does not match the one from the PNG file
1889    * warn but overwrite the value with the correct one.
1890    */
1891   if ((colorspace->flags & PNG_COLORSPACE_HAVE_ENDPOINTS) != 0 &&
1892       !png_colorspace_endpoints_match(&sRGB_xy, &colorspace->end_points_xy,
1893       100))
1894      png_chunk_report(png_ptr, "cHRM chunk does not match sRGB",
1895         PNG_CHUNK_ERROR);
1896
1897   /* This check is just done for the error reporting - the routine always
1898    * returns true when the 'from' argument corresponds to sRGB (2).
1899    */
1900   (void)png_colorspace_check_gamma(png_ptr, colorspace, PNG_GAMMA_sRGB_INVERSE,
1901       2/*from sRGB*/);
1902
1903   /* intent: bugs in GCC force 'int' to be used as the parameter type. */
1904   colorspace->rendering_intent = (png_uint_16)intent;
1905   colorspace->flags |= PNG_COLORSPACE_HAVE_INTENT;
1906
1907   /* endpoints */
1908   colorspace->end_points_xy = sRGB_xy;
1909   colorspace->end_points_XYZ = sRGB_XYZ;
1910   colorspace->flags |=
1911      (PNG_COLORSPACE_HAVE_ENDPOINTS|PNG_COLORSPACE_ENDPOINTS_MATCH_sRGB);
1912
1913   /* gamma */
1914   colorspace->gamma = PNG_GAMMA_sRGB_INVERSE;
1915   colorspace->flags |= PNG_COLORSPACE_HAVE_GAMMA;
1916
1917   /* Finally record that we have an sRGB profile */
1918   colorspace->flags |=
1919      (PNG_COLORSPACE_MATCHES_sRGB|PNG_COLORSPACE_FROM_sRGB);
1920
1921   return 1; /* set */
1922}
1923#endif /* sRGB */
1924
1925#ifdef PNG_iCCP_SUPPORTED
1926/* Encoded value of D50 as an ICC XYZNumber.  From the ICC 2010 spec the value
1927 * is XYZ(0.9642,1.0,0.8249), which scales to:
1928 *
1929 *    (63189.8112, 65536, 54060.6464)
1930 */
1931static const png_byte D50_nCIEXYZ[12] =
1932   { 0x00, 0x00, 0xf6, 0xd6, 0x00, 0x01, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0xd3, 0x2d };
1933
1934static int /* bool */
1935icc_check_length(png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_colorspacerp colorspace,
1936    png_const_charp name, png_uint_32 profile_length)
1937{
1938   if (profile_length < 132)
1939      return png_icc_profile_error(png_ptr, colorspace, name, profile_length,
1940          "too short");
1941
1942   return 1;
1943}
1944
1945#ifdef PNG_READ_iCCP_SUPPORTED
1946int /* PRIVATE */
1947png_icc_check_length(png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_colorspacerp colorspace,
1948    png_const_charp name, png_uint_32 profile_length)
1949{
1950   if (!icc_check_length(png_ptr, colorspace, name, profile_length))
1951      return 0;
1952
1953   /* This needs to be here because the 'normal' check is in
1954    * png_decompress_chunk, yet this happens after the attempt to
1955    * png_malloc_base the required data.  We only need this on read; on write
1956    * the caller supplies the profile buffer so libpng doesn't allocate it.  See
1957    * the call to icc_check_length below (the write case).
1958    */
1959#  ifdef PNG_SET_USER_LIMITS_SUPPORTED
1960      else if (png_ptr->user_chunk_malloc_max > 0 &&
1961               png_ptr->user_chunk_malloc_max < profile_length)
1962         return png_icc_profile_error(png_ptr, colorspace, name, profile_length,
1963             "exceeds application limits");
1964#  elif PNG_USER_CHUNK_MALLOC_MAX > 0
1965      else if (PNG_USER_CHUNK_MALLOC_MAX < profile_length)
1966         return png_icc_profile_error(png_ptr, colorspace, name, profile_length,
1967             "exceeds libpng limits");
1968#  else /* !SET_USER_LIMITS */
1969      /* This will get compiled out on all 32-bit and better systems. */
1970      else if (PNG_SIZE_MAX < profile_length)
1971         return png_icc_profile_error(png_ptr, colorspace, name, profile_length,
1972             "exceeds system limits");
1973#  endif /* !SET_USER_LIMITS */
1974
1975   return 1;
1976}
1977#endif /* READ_iCCP */
1978
1979int /* PRIVATE */
1980png_icc_check_header(png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_colorspacerp colorspace,
1981    png_const_charp name, png_uint_32 profile_length,
1982    png_const_bytep profile/* first 132 bytes only */, int color_type)
1983{
1984   png_uint_32 temp;
1985
1986   /* Length check; this cannot be ignored in this code because profile_length
1987    * is used later to check the tag table, so even if the profile seems over
1988    * long profile_length from the caller must be correct.  The caller can fix
1989    * this up on read or write by just passing in the profile header length.
1990    */
1991   temp = png_get_uint_32(profile);
1992   if (temp != profile_length)
1993      return png_icc_profile_error(png_ptr, colorspace, name, temp,
1994          "length does not match profile");
1995
1996   temp = (png_uint_32) (*(profile+8));
1997   if (temp > 3 && (profile_length & 3))
1998      return png_icc_profile_error(png_ptr, colorspace, name, profile_length,
1999          "invalid length");
2000
2001   temp = png_get_uint_32(profile+128); /* tag count: 12 bytes/tag */
2002   if (temp > 357913930 || /* (2^32-4-132)/12: maximum possible tag count */
2003      profile_length < 132+12*temp) /* truncated tag table */
2004      return png_icc_profile_error(png_ptr, colorspace, name, temp,
2005          "tag count too large");
2006
2007   /* The 'intent' must be valid or we can't store it, ICC limits the intent to
2008    * 16 bits.
2009    */
2010   temp = png_get_uint_32(profile+64);
2011   if (temp >= 0xffff) /* The ICC limit */
2012      return png_icc_profile_error(png_ptr, colorspace, name, temp,
2013          "invalid rendering intent");
2014
2015   /* This is just a warning because the profile may be valid in future
2016    * versions.
2017    */
2018   if (temp >= PNG_sRGB_INTENT_LAST)
2019      (void)png_icc_profile_error(png_ptr, NULL, name, temp,
2020          "intent outside defined range");
2021
2022   /* At this point the tag table can't be checked because it hasn't necessarily
2023    * been loaded; however, various header fields can be checked.  These checks
2024    * are for values permitted by the PNG spec in an ICC profile; the PNG spec
2025    * restricts the profiles that can be passed in an iCCP chunk (they must be
2026    * appropriate to processing PNG data!)
2027    */
2028
2029   /* Data checks (could be skipped).  These checks must be independent of the
2030    * version number; however, the version number doesn't accomodate changes in
2031    * the header fields (just the known tags and the interpretation of the
2032    * data.)
2033    */
2034   temp = png_get_uint_32(profile+36); /* signature 'ascp' */
2035   if (temp != 0x61637370)
2036      return png_icc_profile_error(png_ptr, colorspace, name, temp,
2037          "invalid signature");
2038
2039   /* Currently the PCS illuminant/adopted white point (the computational
2040    * white point) are required to be D50,
2041    * however the profile contains a record of the illuminant so perhaps ICC
2042    * expects to be able to change this in the future (despite the rationale in
2043    * the introduction for using a fixed PCS adopted white.)  Consequently the
2044    * following is just a warning.
2045    */
2046   if (memcmp(profile+68, D50_nCIEXYZ, 12) != 0)
2047      (void)png_icc_profile_error(png_ptr, NULL, name, 0/*no tag value*/,
2048          "PCS illuminant is not D50");
2049
2050   /* The PNG spec requires this:
2051    * "If the iCCP chunk is present, the image samples conform to the colour
2052    * space represented by the embedded ICC profile as defined by the
2053    * International Color Consortium [ICC]. The colour space of the ICC profile
2054    * shall be an RGB colour space for colour images (PNG colour types 2, 3, and
2055    * 6), or a greyscale colour space for greyscale images (PNG colour types 0
2056    * and 4)."
2057    *
2058    * This checking code ensures the embedded profile (on either read or write)
2059    * conforms to the specification requirements.  Notice that an ICC 'gray'
2060    * color-space profile contains the information to transform the monochrome
2061    * data to XYZ or L*a*b (according to which PCS the profile uses) and this
2062    * should be used in preference to the standard libpng K channel replication
2063    * into R, G and B channels.
2064    *
2065    * Previously it was suggested that an RGB profile on grayscale data could be
2066    * handled.  However it it is clear that using an RGB profile in this context
2067    * must be an error - there is no specification of what it means.  Thus it is
2068    * almost certainly more correct to ignore the profile.
2069    */
2070   temp = png_get_uint_32(profile+16); /* data colour space field */
2071   switch (temp)
2072   {
2073      case 0x52474220: /* 'RGB ' */
2074         if ((color_type & PNG_COLOR_MASK_COLOR) == 0)
2075            return png_icc_profile_error(png_ptr, colorspace, name, temp,
2076                "RGB color space not permitted on grayscale PNG");
2077         break;
2078
2079      case 0x47524159: /* 'GRAY' */
2080         if ((color_type & PNG_COLOR_MASK_COLOR) != 0)
2081            return png_icc_profile_error(png_ptr, colorspace, name, temp,
2082                "Gray color space not permitted on RGB PNG");
2083         break;
2084
2085      default:
2086         return png_icc_profile_error(png_ptr, colorspace, name, temp,
2087             "invalid ICC profile color space");
2088   }
2089
2090   /* It is up to the application to check that the profile class matches the
2091    * application requirements; the spec provides no guidance, but it's pretty
2092    * weird if the profile is not scanner ('scnr'), monitor ('mntr'), printer
2093    * ('prtr') or 'spac' (for generic color spaces).  Issue a warning in these
2094    * cases.  Issue an error for device link or abstract profiles - these don't
2095    * contain the records necessary to transform the color-space to anything
2096    * other than the target device (and not even that for an abstract profile).
2097    * Profiles of these classes may not be embedded in images.
2098    */
2099   temp = png_get_uint_32(profile+12); /* profile/device class */
2100   switch (temp)
2101   {
2102      case 0x73636e72: /* 'scnr' */
2103      case 0x6d6e7472: /* 'mntr' */
2104      case 0x70727472: /* 'prtr' */
2105      case 0x73706163: /* 'spac' */
2106         /* All supported */
2107         break;
2108
2109      case 0x61627374: /* 'abst' */
2110         /* May not be embedded in an image */
2111         return png_icc_profile_error(png_ptr, colorspace, name, temp,
2112             "invalid embedded Abstract ICC profile");
2113
2114      case 0x6c696e6b: /* 'link' */
2115         /* DeviceLink profiles cannot be interpreted in a non-device specific
2116          * fashion, if an app uses the AToB0Tag in the profile the results are
2117          * undefined unless the result is sent to the intended device,
2118          * therefore a DeviceLink profile should not be found embedded in a
2119          * PNG.
2120          */
2121         return png_icc_profile_error(png_ptr, colorspace, name, temp,
2122             "unexpected DeviceLink ICC profile class");
2123
2124      case 0x6e6d636c: /* 'nmcl' */
2125         /* A NamedColor profile is also device specific, however it doesn't
2126          * contain an AToB0 tag that is open to misinterpretation.  Almost
2127          * certainly it will fail the tests below.
2128          */
2129         (void)png_icc_profile_error(png_ptr, NULL, name, temp,
2130             "unexpected NamedColor ICC profile class");
2131         break;
2132
2133      default:
2134         /* To allow for future enhancements to the profile accept unrecognized
2135          * profile classes with a warning, these then hit the test below on the
2136          * tag content to ensure they are backward compatible with one of the
2137          * understood profiles.
2138          */
2139         (void)png_icc_profile_error(png_ptr, NULL, name, temp,
2140             "unrecognized ICC profile class");
2141         break;
2142   }
2143
2144   /* For any profile other than a device link one the PCS must be encoded
2145    * either in XYZ or Lab.
2146    */
2147   temp = png_get_uint_32(profile+20);
2148   switch (temp)
2149   {
2150      case 0x58595a20: /* 'XYZ ' */
2151      case 0x4c616220: /* 'Lab ' */
2152         break;
2153
2154      default:
2155         return png_icc_profile_error(png_ptr, colorspace, name, temp,
2156             "unexpected ICC PCS encoding");
2157   }
2158
2159   return 1;
2160}
2161
2162int /* PRIVATE */
2163png_icc_check_tag_table(png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_colorspacerp colorspace,
2164    png_const_charp name, png_uint_32 profile_length,
2165    png_const_bytep profile /* header plus whole tag table */)
2166{
2167   png_uint_32 tag_count = png_get_uint_32(profile+128);
2168   png_uint_32 itag;
2169   png_const_bytep tag = profile+132; /* The first tag */
2170
2171   /* First scan all the tags in the table and add bits to the icc_info value
2172    * (temporarily in 'tags').
2173    */
2174   for (itag=0; itag < tag_count; ++itag, tag += 12)
2175   {
2176      png_uint_32 tag_id = png_get_uint_32(tag+0);
2177      png_uint_32 tag_start = png_get_uint_32(tag+4); /* must be aligned */
2178      png_uint_32 tag_length = png_get_uint_32(tag+8);/* not padded */
2179
2180      /* The ICC specification does not exclude zero length tags, therefore the
2181       * start might actually be anywhere if there is no data, but this would be
2182       * a clear abuse of the intent of the standard so the start is checked for
2183       * being in range.  All defined tag types have an 8 byte header - a 4 byte
2184       * type signature then 0.
2185       */
2186      if ((tag_start & 3) != 0)
2187      {
2188         /* CNHP730S.icc shipped with Microsoft Windows 64 violates this, it is
2189          * only a warning here because libpng does not care about the
2190          * alignment.
2191          */
2192         (void)png_icc_profile_error(png_ptr, NULL, name, tag_id,
2193             "ICC profile tag start not a multiple of 4");
2194      }
2195
2196      /* This is a hard error; potentially it can cause read outside the
2197       * profile.
2198       */
2199      if (tag_start > profile_length || tag_length > profile_length - tag_start)
2200         return png_icc_profile_error(png_ptr, colorspace, name, tag_id,
2201             "ICC profile tag outside profile");
2202   }
2203
2204   return 1; /* success, maybe with warnings */
2205}
2206
2207#ifdef PNG_sRGB_SUPPORTED
2208#if PNG_sRGB_PROFILE_CHECKS >= 0
2209/* Information about the known ICC sRGB profiles */
2210static const struct
2211{
2212   png_uint_32 adler, crc, length;
2213   png_uint_32 md5[4];
2214   png_byte    have_md5;
2215   png_byte    is_broken;
2216   png_uint_16 intent;
2217
2218#  define PNG_MD5(a,b,c,d) { a, b, c, d }, (a!=0)||(b!=0)||(c!=0)||(d!=0)
2219#  define PNG_ICC_CHECKSUM(adler, crc, md5, intent, broke, date, length, fname)\
2220      { adler, crc, length, md5, broke, intent },
2221
2222} png_sRGB_checks[] =
2223{
2224   /* This data comes from contrib/tools/checksum-icc run on downloads of
2225    * all four ICC sRGB profiles from www.color.org.
2226    */
2227   /* adler32, crc32, MD5[4], intent, date, length, file-name */
2228   PNG_ICC_CHECKSUM(0x0a3fd9f6, 0x3b8772b9,
2229       PNG_MD5(0x29f83dde, 0xaff255ae, 0x7842fae4, 0xca83390d), 0, 0,
2230       "2009/03/27 21:36:31", 3048, "sRGB_IEC61966-2-1_black_scaled.icc")
2231
2232   /* ICC sRGB v2 perceptual no black-compensation: */
2233   PNG_ICC_CHECKSUM(0x4909e5e1, 0x427ebb21,
2234       PNG_MD5(0xc95bd637, 0xe95d8a3b, 0x0df38f99, 0xc1320389), 1, 0,
2235       "2009/03/27 21:37:45", 3052, "sRGB_IEC61966-2-1_no_black_scaling.icc")
2236
2237   PNG_ICC_CHECKSUM(0xfd2144a1, 0x306fd8ae,
2238       PNG_MD5(0xfc663378, 0x37e2886b, 0xfd72e983, 0x8228f1b8), 0, 0,
2239       "2009/08/10 17:28:01", 60988, "sRGB_v4_ICC_preference_displayclass.icc")
2240
2241   /* ICC sRGB v4 perceptual */
2242   PNG_ICC_CHECKSUM(0x209c35d2, 0xbbef7812,
2243       PNG_MD5(0x34562abf, 0x994ccd06, 0x6d2c5721, 0xd0d68c5d), 0, 0,
2244       "2007/07/25 00:05:37", 60960, "sRGB_v4_ICC_preference.icc")
2245
2246   /* The following profiles have no known MD5 checksum. If there is a match
2247    * on the (empty) MD5 the other fields are used to attempt a match and
2248    * a warning is produced.  The first two of these profiles have a 'cprt' tag
2249    * which suggests that they were also made by Hewlett Packard.
2250    */
2251   PNG_ICC_CHECKSUM(0xa054d762, 0x5d5129ce,
2252       PNG_MD5(0x00000000, 0x00000000, 0x00000000, 0x00000000), 1, 0,
2253       "2004/07/21 18:57:42", 3024, "sRGB_IEC61966-2-1_noBPC.icc")
2254
2255   /* This is a 'mntr' (display) profile with a mediaWhitePointTag that does not
2256    * match the D50 PCS illuminant in the header (it is in fact the D65 values,
2257    * so the white point is recorded as the un-adapted value.)  The profiles
2258    * below only differ in one byte - the intent - and are basically the same as
2259    * the previous profile except for the mediaWhitePointTag error and a missing
2260    * chromaticAdaptationTag.
2261    */
2262   PNG_ICC_CHECKSUM(0xf784f3fb, 0x182ea552,
2263       PNG_MD5(0x00000000, 0x00000000, 0x00000000, 0x00000000), 0, 1/*broken*/,
2264       "1998/02/09 06:49:00", 3144, "HP-Microsoft sRGB v2 perceptual")
2265
2266   PNG_ICC_CHECKSUM(0x0398f3fc, 0xf29e526d,
2267       PNG_MD5(0x00000000, 0x00000000, 0x00000000, 0x00000000), 1, 1/*broken*/,
2268       "1998/02/09 06:49:00", 3144, "HP-Microsoft sRGB v2 media-relative")
2269};
2270
2271static int
2272png_compare_ICC_profile_with_sRGB(png_const_structrp png_ptr,
2273    png_const_bytep profile, uLong adler)
2274{
2275   /* The quick check is to verify just the MD5 signature and trust the
2276    * rest of the data.  Because the profile has already been verified for
2277    * correctness this is safe.  png_colorspace_set_sRGB will check the 'intent'
2278    * field too, so if the profile has been edited with an intent not defined
2279    * by sRGB (but maybe defined by a later ICC specification) the read of
2280    * the profile will fail at that point.
2281    */
2282
2283   png_uint_32 length = 0;
2284   png_uint_32 intent = 0x10000; /* invalid */
2285#if PNG_sRGB_PROFILE_CHECKS > 1
2286   uLong crc = 0; /* the value for 0 length data */
2287#endif
2288   unsigned int i;
2289
2290#ifdef PNG_SET_OPTION_SUPPORTED
2291   /* First see if PNG_SKIP_sRGB_CHECK_PROFILE has been set to "on" */
2292   if (((png_ptr->options >> PNG_SKIP_sRGB_CHECK_PROFILE) & 3) ==
2293               PNG_OPTION_ON)
2294      return 0;
2295#endif
2296
2297   for (i=0; i < (sizeof png_sRGB_checks) / (sizeof png_sRGB_checks[0]); ++i)
2298   {
2299      if (png_get_uint_32(profile+84) == png_sRGB_checks[i].md5[0] &&
2300         png_get_uint_32(profile+88) == png_sRGB_checks[i].md5[1] &&
2301         png_get_uint_32(profile+92) == png_sRGB_checks[i].md5[2] &&
2302         png_get_uint_32(profile+96) == png_sRGB_checks[i].md5[3])
2303      {
2304         /* This may be one of the old HP profiles without an MD5, in that
2305          * case we can only use the length and Adler32 (note that these
2306          * are not used by default if there is an MD5!)
2307          */
2308#        if PNG_sRGB_PROFILE_CHECKS == 0
2309            if (png_sRGB_checks[i].have_md5 != 0)
2310               return 1+png_sRGB_checks[i].is_broken;
2311#        endif
2312
2313         /* Profile is unsigned or more checks have been configured in. */
2314         if (length == 0)
2315         {
2316            length = png_get_uint_32(profile);
2317            intent = png_get_uint_32(profile+64);
2318         }
2319
2320         /* Length *and* intent must match */
2321         if (length == (png_uint_32) png_sRGB_checks[i].length &&
2322            intent == (png_uint_32) png_sRGB_checks[i].intent)
2323         {
2324            /* Now calculate the adler32 if not done already. */
2325            if (adler == 0)
2326            {
2327               adler = adler32(0, NULL, 0);
2328               adler = adler32(adler, profile, length);
2329            }
2330
2331            if (adler == png_sRGB_checks[i].adler)
2332            {
2333               /* These basic checks suggest that the data has not been
2334                * modified, but if the check level is more than 1 perform
2335                * our own crc32 checksum on the data.
2336                */
2337#              if PNG_sRGB_PROFILE_CHECKS > 1
2338                  if (crc == 0)
2339                  {
2340                     crc = crc32(0, NULL, 0);
2341                     crc = crc32(crc, profile, length);
2342                  }
2343
2344                  /* So this check must pass for the 'return' below to happen.
2345                   */
2346                  if (crc == png_sRGB_checks[i].crc)
2347#              endif
2348               {
2349                  if (png_sRGB_checks[i].is_broken != 0)
2350                  {
2351                     /* These profiles are known to have bad data that may cause
2352                      * problems if they are used, therefore attempt to
2353                      * discourage their use, skip the 'have_md5' warning below,
2354                      * which is made irrelevant by this error.
2355                      */
2356                     png_chunk_report(png_ptr, "known incorrect sRGB profile",
2357                         PNG_CHUNK_ERROR);
2358                  }
2359
2360                  /* Warn that this being done; this isn't even an error since
2361                   * the profile is perfectly valid, but it would be nice if
2362                   * people used the up-to-date ones.
2363                   */
2364                  else if (png_sRGB_checks[i].have_md5 == 0)
2365                  {
2366                     png_chunk_report(png_ptr,
2367                         "out-of-date sRGB profile with no signature",
2368                         PNG_CHUNK_WARNING);
2369                  }
2370
2371                  return 1+png_sRGB_checks[i].is_broken;
2372               }
2373            }
2374
2375# if PNG_sRGB_PROFILE_CHECKS > 0
2376         /* The signature matched, but the profile had been changed in some
2377          * way.  This probably indicates a data error or uninformed hacking.
2378          * Fall through to "no match".
2379          */
2380         png_chunk_report(png_ptr,
2381             "Not recognizing known sRGB profile that has been edited",
2382             PNG_CHUNK_WARNING);
2383         break;
2384# endif
2385         }
2386      }
2387   }
2388
2389   return 0; /* no match */
2390}
2391
2392void /* PRIVATE */
2393png_icc_set_sRGB(png_const_structrp png_ptr,
2394    png_colorspacerp colorspace, png_const_bytep profile, uLong adler)
2395{
2396   /* Is this profile one of the known ICC sRGB profiles?  If it is, just set
2397    * the sRGB information.
2398    */
2399   if (png_compare_ICC_profile_with_sRGB(png_ptr, profile, adler) != 0)
2400      (void)png_colorspace_set_sRGB(png_ptr, colorspace,
2401         (int)/*already checked*/png_get_uint_32(profile+64));
2402}
2403#endif /* PNG_sRGB_PROFILE_CHECKS >= 0 */
2404#endif /* sRGB */
2405
2406int /* PRIVATE */
2407png_colorspace_set_ICC(png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_colorspacerp colorspace,
2408    png_const_charp name, png_uint_32 profile_length, png_const_bytep profile,
2409    int color_type)
2410{
2411   if ((colorspace->flags & PNG_COLORSPACE_INVALID) != 0)
2412      return 0;
2413
2414   if (icc_check_length(png_ptr, colorspace, name, profile_length) != 0 &&
2415       png_icc_check_header(png_ptr, colorspace, name, profile_length, profile,
2416           color_type) != 0 &&
2417       png_icc_check_tag_table(png_ptr, colorspace, name, profile_length,
2418           profile) != 0)
2419   {
2420#     if defined(PNG_sRGB_SUPPORTED) && PNG_sRGB_PROFILE_CHECKS >= 0
2421         /* If no sRGB support, don't try storing sRGB information */
2422         png_icc_set_sRGB(png_ptr, colorspace, profile, 0);
2423#     endif
2424      return 1;
2425   }
2426
2427   /* Failure case */
2428   return 0;
2429}
2430#endif /* iCCP */
2431
2432#ifdef PNG_READ_RGB_TO_GRAY_SUPPORTED
2433void /* PRIVATE */
2434png_colorspace_set_rgb_coefficients(png_structrp png_ptr)
2435{
2436   /* Set the rgb_to_gray coefficients from the colorspace. */
2437   if (png_ptr->rgb_to_gray_coefficients_set == 0 &&
2438      (png_ptr->colorspace.flags & PNG_COLORSPACE_HAVE_ENDPOINTS) != 0)
2439   {
2440      /* png_set_background has not been called, get the coefficients from the Y
2441       * values of the colorspace colorants.
2442       */
2443      png_fixed_point r = png_ptr->colorspace.end_points_XYZ.red_Y;
2444      png_fixed_point g = png_ptr->colorspace.end_points_XYZ.green_Y;
2445      png_fixed_point b = png_ptr->colorspace.end_points_XYZ.blue_Y;
2446      png_fixed_point total = r+g+b;
2447
2448      if (total > 0 &&
2449         r >= 0 && png_muldiv(&r, r, 32768, total) && r >= 0 && r <= 32768 &&
2450         g >= 0 && png_muldiv(&g, g, 32768, total) && g >= 0 && g <= 32768 &&
2451         b >= 0 && png_muldiv(&b, b, 32768, total) && b >= 0 && b <= 32768 &&
2452         r+g+b <= 32769)
2453      {
2454         /* We allow 0 coefficients here.  r+g+b may be 32769 if two or
2455          * all of the coefficients were rounded up.  Handle this by
2456          * reducing the *largest* coefficient by 1; this matches the
2457          * approach used for the default coefficients in pngrtran.c
2458          */
2459         int add = 0;
2460
2461         if (r+g+b > 32768)
2462            add = -1;
2463         else if (r+g+b < 32768)
2464            add = 1;
2465
2466         if (add != 0)
2467         {
2468            if (g >= r && g >= b)
2469               g += add;
2470            else if (r >= g && r >= b)
2471               r += add;
2472            else
2473               b += add;
2474         }
2475
2476         /* Check for an internal error. */
2477         if (r+g+b != 32768)
2478            png_error(png_ptr,
2479                "internal error handling cHRM coefficients");
2480
2481         else
2482         {
2483            png_ptr->rgb_to_gray_red_coeff   = (png_uint_16)r;
2484            png_ptr->rgb_to_gray_green_coeff = (png_uint_16)g;
2485         }
2486      }
2487
2488      /* This is a png_error at present even though it could be ignored -
2489       * it should never happen, but it is important that if it does, the
2490       * bug is fixed.
2491       */
2492      else
2493         png_error(png_ptr, "internal error handling cHRM->XYZ");
2494   }
2495}
2496#endif /* READ_RGB_TO_GRAY */
2497
2498#endif /* COLORSPACE */
2499
2500#ifdef __GNUC__
2501/* This exists solely to work round a warning from GNU C. */
2502static int /* PRIVATE */
2503png_gt(size_t a, size_t b)
2504{
2505   return a > b;
2506}
2507#else
2508#   define png_gt(a,b) ((a) > (b))
2509#endif
2510
2511void /* PRIVATE */
2512png_check_IHDR(png_const_structrp png_ptr,
2513    png_uint_32 width, png_uint_32 height, int bit_depth,
2514    int color_type, int interlace_type, int compression_type,
2515    int filter_type)
2516{
2517   int error = 0;
2518
2519   /* Check for width and height valid values */
2520   if (width == 0)
2521   {
2522      png_warning(png_ptr, "Image width is zero in IHDR");
2523      error = 1;
2524   }
2525
2526   if (width > PNG_UINT_31_MAX)
2527   {
2528      png_warning(png_ptr, "Invalid image width in IHDR");
2529      error = 1;
2530   }
2531
2532   if (png_gt(((width + 7) & (~7U)),
2533       ((PNG_SIZE_MAX
2534           - 48        /* big_row_buf hack */
2535           - 1)        /* filter byte */
2536           / 8)        /* 8-byte RGBA pixels */
2537           - 1))       /* extra max_pixel_depth pad */
2538   {
2539      /* The size of the row must be within the limits of this architecture.
2540       * Because the read code can perform arbitrary transformations the
2541       * maximum size is checked here.  Because the code in png_read_start_row
2542       * adds extra space "for safety's sake" in several places a conservative
2543       * limit is used here.
2544       *
2545       * NOTE: it would be far better to check the size that is actually used,
2546       * but the effect in the real world is minor and the changes are more
2547       * extensive, therefore much more dangerous and much more difficult to
2548       * write in a way that avoids compiler warnings.
2549       */
2550      png_warning(png_ptr, "Image width is too large for this architecture");
2551      error = 1;
2552   }
2553
2554#ifdef PNG_SET_USER_LIMITS_SUPPORTED
2555   if (width > png_ptr->user_width_max)
2556#else
2557   if (width > PNG_USER_WIDTH_MAX)
2558#endif
2559   {
2560      png_warning(png_ptr, "Image width exceeds user limit in IHDR");
2561      error = 1;
2562   }
2563
2564   if (height == 0)
2565   {
2566      png_warning(png_ptr, "Image height is zero in IHDR");
2567      error = 1;
2568   }
2569
2570   if (height > PNG_UINT_31_MAX)
2571   {
2572      png_warning(png_ptr, "Invalid image height in IHDR");
2573      error = 1;
2574   }
2575
2576#ifdef PNG_SET_USER_LIMITS_SUPPORTED
2577   if (height > png_ptr->user_height_max)
2578#else
2579   if (height > PNG_USER_HEIGHT_MAX)
2580#endif
2581   {
2582      png_warning(png_ptr, "Image height exceeds user limit in IHDR");
2583      error = 1;
2584   }
2585
2586   /* Check other values */
2587   if (bit_depth != 1 && bit_depth != 2 && bit_depth != 4 &&
2588       bit_depth != 8 && bit_depth != 16)
2589   {
2590      png_warning(png_ptr, "Invalid bit depth in IHDR");
2591      error = 1;
2592   }
2593
2594   if (color_type < 0 || color_type == 1 ||
2595       color_type == 5 || color_type > 6)
2596   {
2597      png_warning(png_ptr, "Invalid color type in IHDR");
2598      error = 1;
2599   }
2600
2601   if (((color_type == PNG_COLOR_TYPE_PALETTE) && bit_depth > 8) ||
2602       ((color_type == PNG_COLOR_TYPE_RGB ||
2603         color_type == PNG_COLOR_TYPE_GRAY_ALPHA ||
2604         color_type == PNG_COLOR_TYPE_RGB_ALPHA) && bit_depth < 8))
2605   {
2606      png_warning(png_ptr, "Invalid color type/bit depth combination in IHDR");
2607      error = 1;
2608   }
2609
2610   if (interlace_type >= PNG_INTERLACE_LAST)
2611   {
2612      png_warning(png_ptr, "Unknown interlace method in IHDR");
2613      error = 1;
2614   }
2615
2616   if (compression_type != PNG_COMPRESSION_TYPE_BASE)
2617   {
2618      png_warning(png_ptr, "Unknown compression method in IHDR");
2619      error = 1;
2620   }
2621
2622#ifdef PNG_MNG_FEATURES_SUPPORTED
2623   /* Accept filter_method 64 (intrapixel differencing) only if
2624    * 1. Libpng was compiled with PNG_MNG_FEATURES_SUPPORTED and
2625    * 2. Libpng did not read a PNG signature (this filter_method is only
2626    *    used in PNG datastreams that are embedded in MNG datastreams) and
2627    * 3. The application called png_permit_mng_features with a mask that
2628    *    included PNG_FLAG_MNG_FILTER_64 and
2629    * 4. The filter_method is 64 and
2630    * 5. The color_type is RGB or RGBA
2631    */
2632   if ((png_ptr->mode & PNG_HAVE_PNG_SIGNATURE) != 0 &&
2633       png_ptr->mng_features_permitted != 0)
2634      png_warning(png_ptr, "MNG features are not allowed in a PNG datastream");
2635
2636   if (filter_type != PNG_FILTER_TYPE_BASE)
2637   {
2638      if (!((png_ptr->mng_features_permitted & PNG_FLAG_MNG_FILTER_64) != 0 &&
2639          (filter_type == PNG_INTRAPIXEL_DIFFERENCING) &&
2640          ((png_ptr->mode & PNG_HAVE_PNG_SIGNATURE) == 0) &&
2641          (color_type == PNG_COLOR_TYPE_RGB ||
2642          color_type == PNG_COLOR_TYPE_RGB_ALPHA)))
2643      {
2644         png_warning(png_ptr, "Unknown filter method in IHDR");
2645         error = 1;
2646      }
2647
2648      if ((png_ptr->mode & PNG_HAVE_PNG_SIGNATURE) != 0)
2649      {
2650         png_warning(png_ptr, "Invalid filter method in IHDR");
2651         error = 1;
2652      }
2653   }
2654
2655#else
2656   if (filter_type != PNG_FILTER_TYPE_BASE)
2657   {
2658      png_warning(png_ptr, "Unknown filter method in IHDR");
2659      error = 1;
2660   }
2661#endif
2662
2663   if (error == 1)
2664      png_error(png_ptr, "Invalid IHDR data");
2665}
2666
2667#if defined(PNG_sCAL_SUPPORTED) || defined(PNG_pCAL_SUPPORTED)
2668/* ASCII to fp functions */
2669/* Check an ASCII formated floating point value, see the more detailed
2670 * comments in pngpriv.h
2671 */
2672/* The following is used internally to preserve the sticky flags */
2673#define png_fp_add(state, flags) ((state) |= (flags))
2674#define png_fp_set(state, value) ((state) = (value) | ((state) & PNG_FP_STICKY))
2675
2676int /* PRIVATE */
2677png_check_fp_number(png_const_charp string, png_size_t size, int *statep,
2678    png_size_tp whereami)
2679{
2680   int state = *statep;
2681   png_size_t i = *whereami;
2682
2683   while (i < size)
2684   {
2685      int type;
2686      /* First find the type of the next character */
2687      switch (string[i])
2688      {
2689      case 43:  type = PNG_FP_SAW_SIGN;                   break;
2690      case 45:  type = PNG_FP_SAW_SIGN + PNG_FP_NEGATIVE; break;
2691      case 46:  type = PNG_FP_SAW_DOT;                    break;
2692      case 48:  type = PNG_FP_SAW_DIGIT;                  break;
2693      case 49: case 50: case 51: case 52:
2694      case 53: case 54: case 55: case 56:
2695      case 57:  type = PNG_FP_SAW_DIGIT + PNG_FP_NONZERO; break;
2696      case 69:
2697      case 101: type = PNG_FP_SAW_E;                      break;
2698      default:  goto PNG_FP_End;
2699      }
2700
2701      /* Now deal with this type according to the current
2702       * state, the type is arranged to not overlap the
2703       * bits of the PNG_FP_STATE.
2704       */
2705      switch ((state & PNG_FP_STATE) + (type & PNG_FP_SAW_ANY))
2706      {
2707      case PNG_FP_INTEGER + PNG_FP_SAW_SIGN:
2708         if ((state & PNG_FP_SAW_ANY) != 0)
2709            goto PNG_FP_End; /* not a part of the number */
2710
2711         png_fp_add(state, type);
2712         break;
2713
2714      case PNG_FP_INTEGER + PNG_FP_SAW_DOT:
2715         /* Ok as trailer, ok as lead of fraction. */
2716         if ((state & PNG_FP_SAW_DOT) != 0) /* two dots */
2717            goto PNG_FP_End;
2718
2719         else if ((state & PNG_FP_SAW_DIGIT) != 0) /* trailing dot? */
2720            png_fp_add(state, type);
2721
2722         else
2723            png_fp_set(state, PNG_FP_FRACTION | type);
2724
2725         break;
2726
2727      case PNG_FP_INTEGER + PNG_FP_SAW_DIGIT:
2728         if ((state & PNG_FP_SAW_DOT) != 0) /* delayed fraction */
2729            png_fp_set(state, PNG_FP_FRACTION | PNG_FP_SAW_DOT);
2730
2731         png_fp_add(state, type | PNG_FP_WAS_VALID);
2732
2733         break;
2734
2735      case PNG_FP_INTEGER + PNG_FP_SAW_E:
2736         if ((state & PNG_FP_SAW_DIGIT) == 0)
2737            goto PNG_FP_End;
2738
2739         png_fp_set(state, PNG_FP_EXPONENT);
2740
2741         break;
2742
2743   /* case PNG_FP_FRACTION + PNG_FP_SAW_SIGN:
2744         goto PNG_FP_End; ** no sign in fraction */
2745
2746   /* case PNG_FP_FRACTION + PNG_FP_SAW_DOT:
2747         goto PNG_FP_End; ** Because SAW_DOT is always set */
2748
2749      case PNG_FP_FRACTION + PNG_FP_SAW_DIGIT:
2750         png_fp_add(state, type | PNG_FP_WAS_VALID);
2751         break;
2752
2753      case PNG_FP_FRACTION + PNG_FP_SAW_E:
2754         /* This is correct because the trailing '.' on an
2755          * integer is handled above - so we can only get here
2756          * with the sequence ".E" (with no preceding digits).
2757          */
2758         if ((state & PNG_FP_SAW_DIGIT) == 0)
2759            goto PNG_FP_End;
2760
2761         png_fp_set(state, PNG_FP_EXPONENT);
2762
2763         break;
2764
2765      case PNG_FP_EXPONENT + PNG_FP_SAW_SIGN:
2766         if ((state & PNG_FP_SAW_ANY) != 0)
2767            goto PNG_FP_End; /* not a part of the number */
2768
2769         png_fp_add(state, PNG_FP_SAW_SIGN);
2770
2771         break;
2772
2773   /* case PNG_FP_EXPONENT + PNG_FP_SAW_DOT:
2774         goto PNG_FP_End; */
2775
2776      case PNG_FP_EXPONENT + PNG_FP_SAW_DIGIT:
2777         png_fp_add(state, PNG_FP_SAW_DIGIT | PNG_FP_WAS_VALID);
2778
2779         break;
2780
2781   /* case PNG_FP_EXPONEXT + PNG_FP_SAW_E:
2782         goto PNG_FP_End; */
2783
2784      default: goto PNG_FP_End; /* I.e. break 2 */
2785      }
2786
2787      /* The character seems ok, continue. */
2788      ++i;
2789   }
2790
2791PNG_FP_End:
2792   /* Here at the end, update the state and return the correct
2793    * return code.
2794    */
2795   *statep = state;
2796   *whereami = i;
2797
2798   return (state & PNG_FP_SAW_DIGIT) != 0;
2799}
2800
2801
2802/* The same but for a complete string. */
2803int
2804png_check_fp_string(png_const_charp string, png_size_t size)
2805{
2806   int        state=0;
2807   png_size_t char_index=0;
2808
2809   if (png_check_fp_number(string, size, &state, &char_index) != 0 &&
2810      (char_index == size || string[char_index] == 0))
2811      return state /* must be non-zero - see above */;
2812
2813   return 0; /* i.e. fail */
2814}
2815#endif /* pCAL || sCAL */
2816
2817#ifdef PNG_sCAL_SUPPORTED
2818#  ifdef PNG_FLOATING_POINT_SUPPORTED
2819/* Utility used below - a simple accurate power of ten from an integral
2820 * exponent.
2821 */
2822static double
2823png_pow10(int power)
2824{
2825   int recip = 0;
2826   double d = 1;
2827
2828   /* Handle negative exponent with a reciprocal at the end because
2829    * 10 is exact whereas .1 is inexact in base 2
2830    */
2831   if (power < 0)
2832   {
2833      if (power < DBL_MIN_10_EXP) return 0;
2834      recip = 1, power = -power;
2835   }
2836
2837   if (power > 0)
2838   {
2839      /* Decompose power bitwise. */
2840      double mult = 10;
2841      do
2842      {
2843         if (power & 1) d *= mult;
2844         mult *= mult;
2845         power >>= 1;
2846      }
2847      while (power > 0);
2848
2849      if (recip != 0) d = 1/d;
2850   }
2851   /* else power is 0 and d is 1 */
2852
2853   return d;
2854}
2855
2856/* Function to format a floating point value in ASCII with a given
2857 * precision.
2858 */
2859void /* PRIVATE */
2860png_ascii_from_fp(png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_charp ascii, png_size_t size,
2861    double fp, unsigned int precision)
2862{
2863   /* We use standard functions from math.h, but not printf because
2864    * that would require stdio.  The caller must supply a buffer of
2865    * sufficient size or we will png_error.  The tests on size and
2866    * the space in ascii[] consumed are indicated below.
2867    */
2868   if (precision < 1)
2869      precision = DBL_DIG;
2870
2871   /* Enforce the limit of the implementation precision too. */
2872   if (precision > DBL_DIG+1)
2873      precision = DBL_DIG+1;
2874
2875   /* Basic sanity checks */
2876   if (size >= precision+5) /* See the requirements below. */
2877   {
2878      if (fp < 0)
2879      {
2880         fp = -fp;
2881         *ascii++ = 45; /* '-'  PLUS 1 TOTAL 1 */
2882         --size;
2883      }
2884
2885      if (fp >= DBL_MIN && fp <= DBL_MAX)
2886      {
2887         int exp_b10;   /* A base 10 exponent */
2888         double base;   /* 10^exp_b10 */
2889
2890         /* First extract a base 10 exponent of the number,
2891          * the calculation below rounds down when converting
2892          * from base 2 to base 10 (multiply by log10(2) -
2893          * 0.3010, but 77/256 is 0.3008, so exp_b10 needs to
2894          * be increased.  Note that the arithmetic shift
2895          * performs a floor() unlike C arithmetic - using a
2896          * C multiply would break the following for negative
2897          * exponents.
2898          */
2899         (void)frexp(fp, &exp_b10); /* exponent to base 2 */
2900
2901         exp_b10 = (exp_b10 * 77) >> 8; /* <= exponent to base 10 */
2902
2903         /* Avoid underflow here. */
2904         base = png_pow10(exp_b10); /* May underflow */
2905
2906         while (base < DBL_MIN || base < fp)
2907         {
2908            /* And this may overflow. */
2909            double test = png_pow10(exp_b10+1);
2910
2911            if (test <= DBL_MAX)
2912               ++exp_b10, base = test;
2913
2914            else
2915               break;
2916         }
2917
2918         /* Normalize fp and correct exp_b10, after this fp is in the
2919          * range [.1,1) and exp_b10 is both the exponent and the digit
2920          * *before* which the decimal point should be inserted
2921          * (starting with 0 for the first digit).  Note that this
2922          * works even if 10^exp_b10 is out of range because of the
2923          * test on DBL_MAX above.
2924          */
2925         fp /= base;
2926         while (fp >= 1) fp /= 10, ++exp_b10;
2927
2928         /* Because of the code above fp may, at this point, be
2929          * less than .1, this is ok because the code below can
2930          * handle the leading zeros this generates, so no attempt
2931          * is made to correct that here.
2932          */
2933
2934         {
2935            unsigned int czero, clead, cdigits;
2936            char exponent[10];
2937
2938            /* Allow up to two leading zeros - this will not lengthen
2939             * the number compared to using E-n.
2940             */
2941            if (exp_b10 < 0 && exp_b10 > -3) /* PLUS 3 TOTAL 4 */
2942            {
2943               czero = (unsigned int)(-exp_b10); /* PLUS 2 digits: TOTAL 3 */
2944               exp_b10 = 0;      /* Dot added below before first output. */
2945            }
2946            else
2947               czero = 0;    /* No zeros to add */
2948
2949            /* Generate the digit list, stripping trailing zeros and
2950             * inserting a '.' before a digit if the exponent is 0.
2951             */
2952            clead = czero; /* Count of leading zeros */
2953            cdigits = 0;   /* Count of digits in list. */
2954
2955            do
2956            {
2957               double d;
2958
2959               fp *= 10;
2960               /* Use modf here, not floor and subtract, so that
2961                * the separation is done in one step.  At the end
2962                * of the loop don't break the number into parts so
2963                * that the final digit is rounded.
2964                */
2965               if (cdigits+czero+1 < precision+clead)
2966                  fp = modf(fp, &d);
2967
2968               else
2969               {
2970                  d = floor(fp + .5);
2971
2972                  if (d > 9)
2973                  {
2974                     /* Rounding up to 10, handle that here. */
2975                     if (czero > 0)
2976                     {
2977                        --czero, d = 1;
2978                        if (cdigits == 0) --clead;
2979                     }
2980                     else
2981                     {
2982                        while (cdigits > 0 && d > 9)
2983                        {
2984                           int ch = *--ascii;
2985
2986                           if (exp_b10 != (-1))
2987                              ++exp_b10;
2988
2989                           else if (ch == 46)
2990                           {
2991                              ch = *--ascii, ++size;
2992                              /* Advance exp_b10 to '1', so that the
2993                               * decimal point happens after the
2994                               * previous digit.
2995                               */
2996                              exp_b10 = 1;
2997                           }
2998
2999                           --cdigits;
3000                           d = ch - 47;  /* I.e. 1+(ch-48) */
3001                        }
3002
3003                        /* Did we reach the beginning? If so adjust the
3004                         * exponent but take into account the leading
3005                         * decimal point.
3006                         */
3007                        if (d > 9)  /* cdigits == 0 */
3008                        {
3009                           if (exp_b10 == (-1))
3010                           {
3011                              /* Leading decimal point (plus zeros?), if
3012                               * we lose the decimal point here it must
3013                               * be reentered below.
3014                               */
3015                              int ch = *--ascii;
3016
3017                              if (ch == 46)
3018                                 ++size, exp_b10 = 1;
3019
3020                              /* Else lost a leading zero, so 'exp_b10' is
3021                               * still ok at (-1)
3022                               */
3023                           }
3024                           else
3025                              ++exp_b10;
3026
3027                           /* In all cases we output a '1' */
3028                           d = 1;
3029                        }
3030                     }
3031                  }
3032                  fp = 0; /* Guarantees termination below. */
3033               }
3034
3035               if (d == 0)
3036               {
3037                  ++czero;
3038                  if (cdigits == 0) ++clead;
3039               }
3040               else
3041               {
3042                  /* Included embedded zeros in the digit count. */
3043                  cdigits += czero - clead;
3044                  clead = 0;
3045
3046                  while (czero > 0)
3047                  {
3048                     /* exp_b10 == (-1) means we just output the decimal
3049                      * place - after the DP don't adjust 'exp_b10' any
3050                      * more!
3051                      */
3052                     if (exp_b10 != (-1))
3053                     {
3054                        if (exp_b10 == 0) *ascii++ = 46, --size;
3055                        /* PLUS 1: TOTAL 4 */
3056                        --exp_b10;
3057                     }
3058                     *ascii++ = 48, --czero;
3059                  }
3060
3061                  if (exp_b10 != (-1))
3062                  {
3063                     if (exp_b10 == 0)
3064                        *ascii++ = 46, --size; /* counted above */
3065
3066                     --exp_b10;
3067                  }
3068                  *ascii++ = (char)(48 + (int)d), ++cdigits;
3069               }
3070            }
3071            while (cdigits+czero < precision+clead && fp > DBL_MIN);
3072
3073            /* The total output count (max) is now 4+precision */
3074
3075            /* Check for an exponent, if we don't need one we are
3076             * done and just need to terminate the string.  At
3077             * this point exp_b10==(-1) is effectively if flag - it got
3078             * to '-1' because of the decrement after outputting
3079             * the decimal point above (the exponent required is
3080             * *not* -1!)
3081             */
3082            if (exp_b10 >= (-1) && exp_b10 <= 2)
3083            {
3084               /* The following only happens if we didn't output the
3085                * leading zeros above for negative exponent, so this
3086                * doesn't add to the digit requirement.  Note that the
3087                * two zeros here can only be output if the two leading
3088                * zeros were *not* output, so this doesn't increase
3089                * the output count.
3090                */
3091               while (--exp_b10 >= 0) *ascii++ = 48;
3092
3093               *ascii = 0;
3094
3095               /* Total buffer requirement (including the '\0') is
3096                * 5+precision - see check at the start.
3097                */
3098               return;
3099            }
3100
3101            /* Here if an exponent is required, adjust size for
3102             * the digits we output but did not count.  The total
3103             * digit output here so far is at most 1+precision - no
3104             * decimal point and no leading or trailing zeros have
3105             * been output.
3106             */
3107            size -= cdigits;
3108
3109            *ascii++ = 69, --size;    /* 'E': PLUS 1 TOTAL 2+precision */
3110
3111            /* The following use of an unsigned temporary avoids ambiguities in
3112             * the signed arithmetic on exp_b10 and permits GCC at least to do
3113             * better optimization.
3114             */
3115            {
3116               unsigned int uexp_b10;
3117
3118               if (exp_b10 < 0)
3119               {
3120                  *ascii++ = 45, --size; /* '-': PLUS 1 TOTAL 3+precision */
3121                  uexp_b10 = (unsigned int)(-exp_b10);
3122               }
3123
3124               else
3125                  uexp_b10 = (unsigned int)exp_b10;
3126
3127               cdigits = 0;
3128
3129               while (uexp_b10 > 0)
3130               {
3131                  exponent[cdigits++] = (char)(48 + uexp_b10 % 10);
3132                  uexp_b10 /= 10;
3133               }
3134            }
3135
3136            /* Need another size check here for the exponent digits, so
3137             * this need not be considered above.
3138             */
3139            if (size > cdigits)
3140            {
3141               while (cdigits > 0) *ascii++ = exponent[--cdigits];
3142
3143               *ascii = 0;
3144
3145               return;
3146            }
3147         }
3148      }
3149      else if (!(fp >= DBL_MIN))
3150      {
3151         *ascii++ = 48; /* '0' */
3152         *ascii = 0;
3153         return;
3154      }
3155      else
3156      {
3157         *ascii++ = 105; /* 'i' */
3158         *ascii++ = 110; /* 'n' */
3159         *ascii++ = 102; /* 'f' */
3160         *ascii = 0;
3161         return;
3162      }
3163   }
3164
3165   /* Here on buffer too small. */
3166   png_error(png_ptr, "ASCII conversion buffer too small");
3167}
3168
3169#  endif /* FLOATING_POINT */
3170
3171#  ifdef PNG_FIXED_POINT_SUPPORTED
3172/* Function to format a fixed point value in ASCII.
3173 */
3174void /* PRIVATE */
3175png_ascii_from_fixed(png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_charp ascii,
3176    png_size_t size, png_fixed_point fp)
3177{
3178   /* Require space for 10 decimal digits, a decimal point, a minus sign and a
3179    * trailing \0, 13 characters:
3180    */
3181   if (size > 12)
3182   {
3183      png_uint_32 num;
3184
3185      /* Avoid overflow here on the minimum integer. */
3186      if (fp < 0)
3187         *ascii++ = 45, num = (png_uint_32)(-fp);
3188      else
3189         num = (png_uint_32)fp;
3190
3191      if (num <= 0x80000000) /* else overflowed */
3192      {
3193         unsigned int ndigits = 0, first = 16 /* flag value */;
3194         char digits[10];
3195
3196         while (num)
3197         {
3198            /* Split the low digit off num: */
3199            unsigned int tmp = num/10;
3200            num -= tmp*10;
3201            digits[ndigits++] = (char)(48 + num);
3202            /* Record the first non-zero digit, note that this is a number
3203             * starting at 1, it's not actually the array index.
3204             */
3205            if (first == 16 && num > 0)
3206               first = ndigits;
3207            num = tmp;
3208         }
3209
3210         if (ndigits > 0)
3211         {
3212            while (ndigits > 5) *ascii++ = digits[--ndigits];
3213            /* The remaining digits are fractional digits, ndigits is '5' or
3214             * smaller at this point.  It is certainly not zero.  Check for a
3215             * non-zero fractional digit:
3216             */
3217            if (first <= 5)
3218            {
3219               unsigned int i;
3220               *ascii++ = 46; /* decimal point */
3221               /* ndigits may be <5 for small numbers, output leading zeros
3222                * then ndigits digits to first:
3223                */
3224               i = 5;
3225               while (ndigits < i) *ascii++ = 48, --i;
3226               while (ndigits >= first) *ascii++ = digits[--ndigits];
3227               /* Don't output the trailing zeros! */
3228            }
3229         }
3230         else
3231            *ascii++ = 48;
3232
3233         /* And null terminate the string: */
3234         *ascii = 0;
3235         return;
3236      }
3237   }
3238
3239   /* Here on buffer too small. */
3240   png_error(png_ptr, "ASCII conversion buffer too small");
3241}
3242#   endif /* FIXED_POINT */
3243#endif /* SCAL */
3244
3245#if defined(PNG_FLOATING_POINT_SUPPORTED) && \
3246   !defined(PNG_FIXED_POINT_MACRO_SUPPORTED) && \
3247   (defined(PNG_gAMA_SUPPORTED) || defined(PNG_cHRM_SUPPORTED) || \
3248   defined(PNG_sCAL_SUPPORTED) || defined(PNG_READ_BACKGROUND_SUPPORTED) || \
3249   defined(PNG_READ_RGB_TO_GRAY_SUPPORTED)) || \
3250   (defined(PNG_sCAL_SUPPORTED) && \
3251   defined(PNG_FLOATING_ARITHMETIC_SUPPORTED))
3252png_fixed_point
3253png_fixed(png_const_structrp png_ptr, double fp, png_const_charp text)
3254{
3255   double r = floor(100000 * fp + .5);
3256
3257   if (r > 2147483647. || r < -2147483648.)
3258      png_fixed_error(png_ptr, text);
3259
3260#  ifndef PNG_ERROR_TEXT_SUPPORTED
3261   PNG_UNUSED(text)
3262#  endif
3263
3264   return (png_fixed_point)r;
3265}
3266#endif
3267
3268#if defined(PNG_GAMMA_SUPPORTED) || defined(PNG_COLORSPACE_SUPPORTED) ||\
3269    defined(PNG_INCH_CONVERSIONS_SUPPORTED) || defined(PNG_READ_pHYs_SUPPORTED)
3270/* muldiv functions */
3271/* This API takes signed arguments and rounds the result to the nearest
3272 * integer (or, for a fixed point number - the standard argument - to
3273 * the nearest .00001).  Overflow and divide by zero are signalled in
3274 * the result, a boolean - true on success, false on overflow.
3275 */
3276int
3277png_muldiv(png_fixed_point_p res, png_fixed_point a, png_int_32 times,
3278    png_int_32 divisor)
3279{
3280   /* Return a * times / divisor, rounded. */
3281   if (divisor != 0)
3282   {
3283      if (a == 0 || times == 0)
3284      {
3285         *res = 0;
3286         return 1;
3287      }
3288      else
3289      {
3290#ifdef PNG_FLOATING_ARITHMETIC_SUPPORTED
3291         double r = a;
3292         r *= times;
3293         r /= divisor;
3294         r = floor(r+.5);
3295
3296         /* A png_fixed_point is a 32-bit integer. */
3297         if (r <= 2147483647. && r >= -2147483648.)
3298         {
3299            *res = (png_fixed_point)r;
3300            return 1;
3301         }
3302#else
3303         int negative = 0;
3304         png_uint_32 A, T, D;
3305         png_uint_32 s16, s32, s00;
3306
3307         if (a < 0)
3308            negative = 1, A = -a;
3309         else
3310            A = a;
3311
3312         if (times < 0)
3313            negative = !negative, T = -times;
3314         else
3315            T = times;
3316
3317         if (divisor < 0)
3318            negative = !negative, D = -divisor;
3319         else
3320            D = divisor;
3321
3322         /* Following can't overflow because the arguments only
3323          * have 31 bits each, however the result may be 32 bits.
3324          */
3325         s16 = (A >> 16) * (T & 0xffff) +
3326                           (A & 0xffff) * (T >> 16);
3327         /* Can't overflow because the a*times bit is only 30
3328          * bits at most.
3329          */
3330         s32 = (A >> 16) * (T >> 16) + (s16 >> 16);
3331         s00 = (A & 0xffff) * (T & 0xffff);
3332
3333         s16 = (s16 & 0xffff) << 16;
3334         s00 += s16;
3335
3336         if (s00 < s16)
3337            ++s32; /* carry */
3338
3339         if (s32 < D) /* else overflow */
3340         {
3341            /* s32.s00 is now the 64-bit product, do a standard
3342             * division, we know that s32 < D, so the maximum
3343             * required shift is 31.
3344             */
3345            int bitshift = 32;
3346            png_fixed_point result = 0; /* NOTE: signed */
3347
3348            while (--bitshift >= 0)
3349            {
3350               png_uint_32 d32, d00;
3351
3352               if (bitshift > 0)
3353                  d32 = D >> (32-bitshift), d00 = D << bitshift;
3354
3355               else
3356                  d32 = 0, d00 = D;
3357
3358               if (s32 > d32)
3359               {
3360                  if (s00 < d00) --s32; /* carry */
3361                  s32 -= d32, s00 -= d00, result += 1<<bitshift;
3362               }
3363
3364               else
3365                  if (s32 == d32 && s00 >= d00)
3366                     s32 = 0, s00 -= d00, result += 1<<bitshift;
3367            }
3368
3369            /* Handle the rounding. */
3370            if (s00 >= (D >> 1))
3371               ++result;
3372
3373            if (negative != 0)
3374               result = -result;
3375
3376            /* Check for overflow. */
3377            if ((negative != 0 && result <= 0) ||
3378                (negative == 0 && result >= 0))
3379            {
3380               *res = result;
3381               return 1;
3382            }
3383         }
3384#endif
3385      }
3386   }
3387
3388   return 0;
3389}
3390#endif /* READ_GAMMA || INCH_CONVERSIONS */
3391
3392#if defined(PNG_READ_GAMMA_SUPPORTED) || defined(PNG_INCH_CONVERSIONS_SUPPORTED)
3393/* The following is for when the caller doesn't much care about the
3394 * result.
3395 */
3396png_fixed_point
3397png_muldiv_warn(png_const_structrp png_ptr, png_fixed_point a, png_int_32 times,
3398    png_int_32 divisor)
3399{
3400   png_fixed_point result;
3401
3402   if (png_muldiv(&result, a, times, divisor) != 0)
3403      return result;
3404
3405   png_warning(png_ptr, "fixed point overflow ignored");
3406   return 0;
3407}
3408#endif
3409
3410#ifdef PNG_GAMMA_SUPPORTED /* more fixed point functions for gamma */
3411/* Calculate a reciprocal, return 0 on div-by-zero or overflow. */
3412png_fixed_point
3413png_reciprocal(png_fixed_point a)
3414{
3415#ifdef PNG_FLOATING_ARITHMETIC_SUPPORTED
3416   double r = floor(1E10/a+.5);
3417
3418   if (r <= 2147483647. && r >= -2147483648.)
3419      return (png_fixed_point)r;
3420#else
3421   png_fixed_point res;
3422
3423   if (png_muldiv(&res, 100000, 100000, a) != 0)
3424      return res;
3425#endif
3426
3427   return 0; /* error/overflow */
3428}
3429
3430/* This is the shared test on whether a gamma value is 'significant' - whether
3431 * it is worth doing gamma correction.
3432 */
3433int /* PRIVATE */
3434png_gamma_significant(png_fixed_point gamma_val)
3435{
3436   return gamma_val < PNG_FP_1 - PNG_GAMMA_THRESHOLD_FIXED ||
3437       gamma_val > PNG_FP_1 + PNG_GAMMA_THRESHOLD_FIXED;
3438}
3439#endif
3440
3441#ifdef PNG_READ_GAMMA_SUPPORTED
3442#ifdef PNG_16BIT_SUPPORTED
3443/* A local convenience routine. */
3444static png_fixed_point
3445png_product2(png_fixed_point a, png_fixed_point b)
3446{
3447   /* The required result is 1/a * 1/b; the following preserves accuracy. */
3448#ifdef PNG_FLOATING_ARITHMETIC_SUPPORTED
3449   double r = a * 1E-5;
3450   r *= b;
3451   r = floor(r+.5);
3452
3453   if (r <= 2147483647. && r >= -2147483648.)
3454      return (png_fixed_point)r;
3455#else
3456   png_fixed_point res;
3457
3458   if (png_muldiv(&res, a, b, 100000) != 0)
3459      return res;
3460#endif
3461
3462   return 0; /* overflow */
3463}
3464#endif /* 16BIT */
3465
3466/* The inverse of the above. */
3467png_fixed_point
3468png_reciprocal2(png_fixed_point a, png_fixed_point b)
3469{
3470   /* The required result is 1/a * 1/b; the following preserves accuracy. */
3471#ifdef PNG_FLOATING_ARITHMETIC_SUPPORTED
3472   if (a != 0 && b != 0)
3473   {
3474      double r = 1E15/a;
3475      r /= b;
3476      r = floor(r+.5);
3477
3478      if (r <= 2147483647. && r >= -2147483648.)
3479         return (png_fixed_point)r;
3480   }
3481#else
3482   /* This may overflow because the range of png_fixed_point isn't symmetric,
3483    * but this API is only used for the product of file and screen gamma so it
3484    * doesn't matter that the smallest number it can produce is 1/21474, not
3485    * 1/100000
3486    */
3487   png_fixed_point res = png_product2(a, b);
3488
3489   if (res != 0)
3490      return png_reciprocal(res);
3491#endif
3492
3493   return 0; /* overflow */
3494}
3495#endif /* READ_GAMMA */
3496
3497#ifdef PNG_READ_GAMMA_SUPPORTED /* gamma table code */
3498#ifndef PNG_FLOATING_ARITHMETIC_SUPPORTED
3499/* Fixed point gamma.
3500 *
3501 * The code to calculate the tables used below can be found in the shell script
3502 * contrib/tools/intgamma.sh
3503 *
3504 * To calculate gamma this code implements fast log() and exp() calls using only
3505 * fixed point arithmetic.  This code has sufficient precision for either 8-bit
3506 * or 16-bit sample values.
3507 *
3508 * The tables used here were calculated using simple 'bc' programs, but C double
3509 * precision floating point arithmetic would work fine.
3510 *
3511 * 8-bit log table
3512 *   This is a table of -log(value/255)/log(2) for 'value' in the range 128 to
3513 *   255, so it's the base 2 logarithm of a normalized 8-bit floating point
3514 *   mantissa.  The numbers are 32-bit fractions.
3515 */
3516static const png_uint_32
3517png_8bit_l2[128] =
3518{
3519   4270715492U, 4222494797U, 4174646467U, 4127164793U, 4080044201U, 4033279239U,
3520   3986864580U, 3940795015U, 3895065449U, 3849670902U, 3804606499U, 3759867474U,
3521   3715449162U, 3671346997U, 3627556511U, 3584073329U, 3540893168U, 3498011834U,
3522   3455425220U, 3413129301U, 3371120137U, 3329393864U, 3287946700U, 3246774933U,
3523   3205874930U, 3165243125U, 3124876025U, 3084770202U, 3044922296U, 3005329011U,
3524   2965987113U, 2926893432U, 2888044853U, 2849438323U, 2811070844U, 2772939474U,
3525   2735041326U, 2697373562U, 2659933400U, 2622718104U, 2585724991U, 2548951424U,
3526   2512394810U, 2476052606U, 2439922311U, 2404001468U, 2368287663U, 2332778523U,
3527   2297471715U, 2262364947U, 2227455964U, 2192742551U, 2158222529U, 2123893754U,
3528   2089754119U, 2055801552U, 2022034013U, 1988449497U, 1955046031U, 1921821672U,
3529   1888774511U, 1855902668U, 1823204291U, 1790677560U, 1758320682U, 1726131893U,
3530   1694109454U, 1662251657U, 1630556815U, 1599023271U, 1567649391U, 1536433567U,
3531   1505374214U, 1474469770U, 1443718700U, 1413119487U, 1382670639U, 1352370686U,
3532   1322218179U, 1292211689U, 1262349810U, 1232631153U, 1203054352U, 1173618059U,
3533   1144320946U, 1115161701U, 1086139034U, 1057251672U, 1028498358U, 999877854U,
3534   971388940U, 943030410U, 914801076U, 886699767U, 858725327U, 830876614U,
3535   803152505U, 775551890U, 748073672U, 720716771U, 693480120U, 666362667U,
3536   639363374U, 612481215U, 585715177U, 559064263U, 532527486U, 506103872U,
3537   479792461U, 453592303U, 427502463U, 401522014U, 375650043U, 349885648U,
3538   324227938U, 298676034U, 273229066U, 247886176U, 222646516U, 197509248U,
3539   172473545U, 147538590U, 122703574U, 97967701U, 73330182U, 48790236U,
3540   24347096U, 0U
3541
3542#if 0
3543   /* The following are the values for 16-bit tables - these work fine for the
3544    * 8-bit conversions but produce very slightly larger errors in the 16-bit
3545    * log (about 1.2 as opposed to 0.7 absolute error in the final value).  To
3546    * use these all the shifts below must be adjusted appropriately.
3547    */
3548   65166, 64430, 63700, 62976, 62257, 61543, 60835, 60132, 59434, 58741, 58054,
3549   57371, 56693, 56020, 55352, 54689, 54030, 53375, 52726, 52080, 51439, 50803,
3550   50170, 49542, 48918, 48298, 47682, 47070, 46462, 45858, 45257, 44661, 44068,
3551   43479, 42894, 42312, 41733, 41159, 40587, 40020, 39455, 38894, 38336, 37782,
3552   37230, 36682, 36137, 35595, 35057, 34521, 33988, 33459, 32932, 32408, 31887,
3553   31369, 30854, 30341, 29832, 29325, 28820, 28319, 27820, 27324, 26830, 26339,
3554   25850, 25364, 24880, 24399, 23920, 23444, 22970, 22499, 22029, 21562, 21098,
3555   20636, 20175, 19718, 19262, 18808, 18357, 17908, 17461, 17016, 16573, 16132,
3556   15694, 15257, 14822, 14390, 13959, 13530, 13103, 12678, 12255, 11834, 11415,
3557   10997, 10582, 10168, 9756, 9346, 8937, 8531, 8126, 7723, 7321, 6921, 6523,
3558   6127, 5732, 5339, 4947, 4557, 4169, 3782, 3397, 3014, 2632, 2251, 1872, 1495,
3559   1119, 744, 372
3560#endif
3561};
3562
3563static png_int_32
3564png_log8bit(unsigned int x)
3565{
3566   unsigned int lg2 = 0;
3567   /* Each time 'x' is multiplied by 2, 1 must be subtracted off the final log,
3568    * because the log is actually negate that means adding 1.  The final
3569    * returned value thus has the range 0 (for 255 input) to 7.994 (for 1
3570    * input), return -1 for the overflow (log 0) case, - so the result is
3571    * always at most 19 bits.
3572    */
3573   if ((x &= 0xff) == 0)
3574      return -1;
3575
3576   if ((x & 0xf0) == 0)
3577      lg2  = 4, x <<= 4;
3578
3579   if ((x & 0xc0) == 0)
3580      lg2 += 2, x <<= 2;
3581
3582   if ((x & 0x80) == 0)
3583      lg2 += 1, x <<= 1;
3584
3585   /* result is at most 19 bits, so this cast is safe: */
3586   return (png_int_32)((lg2 << 16) + ((png_8bit_l2[x-128]+32768)>>16));
3587}
3588
3589/* The above gives exact (to 16 binary places) log2 values for 8-bit images,
3590 * for 16-bit images we use the most significant 8 bits of the 16-bit value to
3591 * get an approximation then multiply the approximation by a correction factor
3592 * determined by the remaining up to 8 bits.  This requires an additional step
3593 * in the 16-bit case.
3594 *
3595 * We want log2(value/65535), we have log2(v'/255), where:
3596 *
3597 *    value = v' * 256 + v''
3598 *          = v' * f
3599 *
3600 * So f is value/v', which is equal to (256+v''/v') since v' is in the range 128
3601 * to 255 and v'' is in the range 0 to 255 f will be in the range 256 to less
3602 * than 258.  The final factor also needs to correct for the fact that our 8-bit
3603 * value is scaled by 255, whereas the 16-bit values must be scaled by 65535.
3604 *
3605 * This gives a final formula using a calculated value 'x' which is value/v' and
3606 * scaling by 65536 to match the above table:
3607 *
3608 *   log2(x/257) * 65536
3609 *
3610 * Since these numbers are so close to '1' we can use simple linear
3611 * interpolation between the two end values 256/257 (result -368.61) and 258/257
3612 * (result 367.179).  The values used below are scaled by a further 64 to give
3613 * 16-bit precision in the interpolation:
3614 *
3615 * Start (256): -23591
3616 * Zero  (257):      0
3617 * End   (258):  23499
3618 */
3619#ifdef PNG_16BIT_SUPPORTED
3620static png_int_32
3621png_log16bit(png_uint_32 x)
3622{
3623   unsigned int lg2 = 0;
3624
3625   /* As above, but now the input has 16 bits. */
3626   if ((x &= 0xffff) == 0)
3627      return -1;
3628
3629   if ((x & 0xff00) == 0)
3630      lg2  = 8, x <<= 8;
3631
3632   if ((x & 0xf000) == 0)
3633      lg2 += 4, x <<= 4;
3634
3635   if ((x & 0xc000) == 0)
3636      lg2 += 2, x <<= 2;
3637
3638   if ((x & 0x8000) == 0)
3639      lg2 += 1, x <<= 1;
3640
3641   /* Calculate the base logarithm from the top 8 bits as a 28-bit fractional
3642    * value.
3643    */
3644   lg2 <<= 28;
3645   lg2 += (png_8bit_l2[(x>>8)-128]+8) >> 4;
3646
3647   /* Now we need to interpolate the factor, this requires a division by the top
3648    * 8 bits.  Do this with maximum precision.
3649    */
3650   x = ((x << 16) + (x >> 9)) / (x >> 8);
3651
3652   /* Since we divided by the top 8 bits of 'x' there will be a '1' at 1<<24,
3653    * the value at 1<<16 (ignoring this) will be 0 or 1; this gives us exactly
3654    * 16 bits to interpolate to get the low bits of the result.  Round the
3655    * answer.  Note that the end point values are scaled by 64 to retain overall
3656    * precision and that 'lg2' is current scaled by an extra 12 bits, so adjust
3657    * the overall scaling by 6-12.  Round at every step.
3658    */
3659   x -= 1U << 24;
3660
3661   if (x <= 65536U) /* <= '257' */
3662      lg2 += ((23591U * (65536U-x)) + (1U << (16+6-12-1))) >> (16+6-12);
3663
3664   else
3665      lg2 -= ((23499U * (x-65536U)) + (1U << (16+6-12-1))) >> (16+6-12);
3666
3667   /* Safe, because the result can't have more than 20 bits: */
3668   return (png_int_32)((lg2 + 2048) >> 12);
3669}
3670#endif /* 16BIT */
3671
3672/* The 'exp()' case must invert the above, taking a 20-bit fixed point
3673 * logarithmic value and returning a 16 or 8-bit number as appropriate.  In
3674 * each case only the low 16 bits are relevant - the fraction - since the
3675 * integer bits (the top 4) simply determine a shift.
3676 *
3677 * The worst case is the 16-bit distinction between 65535 and 65534. This
3678 * requires perhaps spurious accuracy in the decoding of the logarithm to
3679 * distinguish log2(65535/65534.5) - 10^-5 or 17 bits.  There is little chance
3680 * of getting this accuracy in practice.
3681 *
3682 * To deal with this the following exp() function works out the exponent of the
3683 * frational part of the logarithm by using an accurate 32-bit value from the
3684 * top four fractional bits then multiplying in the remaining bits.
3685 */
3686static const png_uint_32
3687png_32bit_exp[16] =
3688{
3689   /* NOTE: the first entry is deliberately set to the maximum 32-bit value. */
3690   4294967295U, 4112874773U, 3938502376U, 3771522796U, 3611622603U, 3458501653U,
3691   3311872529U, 3171459999U, 3037000500U, 2908241642U, 2784941738U, 2666869345U,
3692   2553802834U, 2445529972U, 2341847524U, 2242560872U
3693};
3694
3695/* Adjustment table; provided to explain the numbers in the code below. */
3696#if 0
3697for (i=11;i>=0;--i){ print i, " ", (1 - e(-(2^i)/65536*l(2))) * 2^(32-i), "\n"}
3698   11 44937.64284865548751208448
3699   10 45180.98734845585101160448
3700    9 45303.31936980687359311872
3701    8 45364.65110595323018870784
3702    7 45395.35850361789624614912
3703    6 45410.72259715102037508096
3704    5 45418.40724413220722311168
3705    4 45422.25021786898173001728
3706    3 45424.17186732298419044352
3707    2 45425.13273269940811464704
3708    1 45425.61317555035558641664
3709    0 45425.85339951654943850496
3710#endif
3711
3712static png_uint_32
3713png_exp(png_fixed_point x)
3714{
3715   if (x > 0 && x <= 0xfffff) /* Else overflow or zero (underflow) */
3716   {
3717      /* Obtain a 4-bit approximation */
3718      png_uint_32 e = png_32bit_exp[(x >> 12) & 0x0f];
3719
3720      /* Incorporate the low 12 bits - these decrease the returned value by
3721       * multiplying by a number less than 1 if the bit is set.  The multiplier
3722       * is determined by the above table and the shift. Notice that the values
3723       * converge on 45426 and this is used to allow linear interpolation of the
3724       * low bits.
3725       */
3726      if (x & 0x800)
3727         e -= (((e >> 16) * 44938U) +  16U) >> 5;
3728
3729      if (x & 0x400)
3730         e -= (((e >> 16) * 45181U) +  32U) >> 6;
3731
3732      if (x & 0x200)
3733         e -= (((e >> 16) * 45303U) +  64U) >> 7;
3734
3735      if (x & 0x100)
3736         e -= (((e >> 16) * 45365U) + 128U) >> 8;
3737
3738      if (x & 0x080)
3739         e -= (((e >> 16) * 45395U) + 256U) >> 9;
3740
3741      if (x & 0x040)
3742         e -= (((e >> 16) * 45410U) + 512U) >> 10;
3743
3744      /* And handle the low 6 bits in a single block. */
3745      e -= (((e >> 16) * 355U * (x & 0x3fU)) + 256U) >> 9;
3746
3747      /* Handle the upper bits of x. */
3748      e >>= x >> 16;
3749      return e;
3750   }
3751
3752   /* Check for overflow */
3753   if (x <= 0)
3754      return png_32bit_exp[0];
3755
3756   /* Else underflow */
3757   return 0;
3758}
3759
3760static png_byte
3761png_exp8bit(png_fixed_point lg2)
3762{
3763   /* Get a 32-bit value: */
3764   png_uint_32 x = png_exp(lg2);
3765
3766   /* Convert the 32-bit value to 0..255 by multiplying by 256-1. Note that the
3767    * second, rounding, step can't overflow because of the first, subtraction,
3768    * step.
3769    */
3770   x -= x >> 8;
3771   return (png_byte)(((x + 0x7fffffU) >> 24) & 0xff);
3772}
3773
3774#ifdef PNG_16BIT_SUPPORTED
3775static png_uint_16
3776png_exp16bit(png_fixed_point lg2)
3777{
3778   /* Get a 32-bit value: */
3779   png_uint_32 x = png_exp(lg2);
3780
3781   /* Convert the 32-bit value to 0..65535 by multiplying by 65536-1: */
3782   x -= x >> 16;
3783   return (png_uint_16)((x + 32767U) >> 16);
3784}
3785#endif /* 16BIT */
3786#endif /* FLOATING_ARITHMETIC */
3787
3788png_byte
3789png_gamma_8bit_correct(unsigned int value, png_fixed_point gamma_val)
3790{
3791   if (value > 0 && value < 255)
3792   {
3793#     ifdef PNG_FLOATING_ARITHMETIC_SUPPORTED
3794         /* 'value' is unsigned, ANSI-C90 requires the compiler to correctly
3795          * convert this to a floating point value.  This includes values that
3796          * would overflow if 'value' were to be converted to 'int'.
3797          *
3798          * Apparently GCC, however, does an intermediate conversion to (int)
3799          * on some (ARM) but not all (x86) platforms, possibly because of
3800          * hardware FP limitations.  (E.g. if the hardware conversion always
3801          * assumes the integer register contains a signed value.)  This results
3802          * in ANSI-C undefined behavior for large values.
3803          *
3804          * Other implementations on the same machine might actually be ANSI-C90
3805          * conformant and therefore compile spurious extra code for the large
3806          * values.
3807          *
3808          * We can be reasonably sure that an unsigned to float conversion
3809          * won't be faster than an int to float one.  Therefore this code
3810          * assumes responsibility for the undefined behavior, which it knows
3811          * can't happen because of the check above.
3812          *
3813          * Note the argument to this routine is an (unsigned int) because, on
3814          * 16-bit platforms, it is assigned a value which might be out of
3815          * range for an (int); that would result in undefined behavior in the
3816          * caller if the *argument* ('value') were to be declared (int).
3817          */
3818         double r = floor(255*pow((int)/*SAFE*/value/255.,gamma_val*.00001)+.5);
3819         return (png_byte)r;
3820#     else
3821         png_int_32 lg2 = png_log8bit(value);
3822         png_fixed_point res;
3823
3824         if (png_muldiv(&res, gamma_val, lg2, PNG_FP_1) != 0)
3825            return png_exp8bit(res);
3826
3827         /* Overflow. */
3828         value = 0;
3829#     endif
3830   }
3831
3832   return (png_byte)(value & 0xff);
3833}
3834
3835#ifdef PNG_16BIT_SUPPORTED
3836png_uint_16
3837png_gamma_16bit_correct(unsigned int value, png_fixed_point gamma_val)
3838{
3839   if (value > 0 && value < 65535)
3840   {
3841# ifdef PNG_FLOATING_ARITHMETIC_SUPPORTED
3842      /* The same (unsigned int)->(double) constraints apply here as above,
3843       * however in this case the (unsigned int) to (int) conversion can
3844       * overflow on an ANSI-C90 compliant system so the cast needs to ensure
3845       * that this is not possible.
3846       */
3847      double r = floor(65535*pow((png_int_32)value/65535.,
3848          gamma_val*.00001)+.5);
3849      return (png_uint_16)r;
3850# else
3851      png_int_32 lg2 = png_log16bit(value);
3852      png_fixed_point res;
3853
3854      if (png_muldiv(&res, gamma_val, lg2, PNG_FP_1) != 0)
3855         return png_exp16bit(res);
3856
3857      /* Overflow. */
3858      value = 0;
3859# endif
3860   }
3861
3862   return (png_uint_16)value;
3863}
3864#endif /* 16BIT */
3865
3866/* This does the right thing based on the bit_depth field of the
3867 * png_struct, interpreting values as 8-bit or 16-bit.  While the result
3868 * is nominally a 16-bit value if bit depth is 8 then the result is
3869 * 8-bit (as are the arguments.)
3870 */
3871png_uint_16 /* PRIVATE */
3872png_gamma_correct(png_structrp png_ptr, unsigned int value,
3873    png_fixed_point gamma_val)
3874{
3875   if (png_ptr->bit_depth == 8)
3876      return png_gamma_8bit_correct(value, gamma_val);
3877
3878#ifdef PNG_16BIT_SUPPORTED
3879   else
3880      return png_gamma_16bit_correct(value, gamma_val);
3881#else
3882      /* should not reach this */
3883      return 0;
3884#endif /* 16BIT */
3885}
3886
3887#ifdef PNG_16BIT_SUPPORTED
3888/* Internal function to build a single 16-bit table - the table consists of
3889 * 'num' 256 entry subtables, where 'num' is determined by 'shift' - the amount
3890 * to shift the input values right (or 16-number_of_signifiant_bits).
3891 *
3892 * The caller is responsible for ensuring that the table gets cleaned up on
3893 * png_error (i.e. if one of the mallocs below fails) - i.e. the *table argument
3894 * should be somewhere that will be cleaned.
3895 */
3896static void
3897png_build_16bit_table(png_structrp png_ptr, png_uint_16pp *ptable,
3898    PNG_CONST unsigned int shift, PNG_CONST png_fixed_point gamma_val)
3899{
3900   /* Various values derived from 'shift': */
3901   PNG_CONST unsigned int num = 1U << (8U - shift);
3902#ifdef PNG_FLOATING_ARITHMETIC_SUPPORTED
3903   /* CSE the division and work round wacky GCC warnings (see the comments
3904    * in png_gamma_8bit_correct for where these come from.)
3905    */
3906   PNG_CONST double fmax = 1./(((png_int_32)1 << (16U - shift))-1);
3907#endif
3908   PNG_CONST unsigned int max = (1U << (16U - shift))-1U;
3909   PNG_CONST unsigned int max_by_2 = 1U << (15U-shift);
3910   unsigned int i;
3911
3912   png_uint_16pp table = *ptable =
3913       (png_uint_16pp)png_calloc(png_ptr, num * (sizeof (png_uint_16p)));
3914
3915   for (i = 0; i < num; i++)
3916   {
3917      png_uint_16p sub_table = table[i] =
3918          (png_uint_16p)png_malloc(png_ptr, 256 * (sizeof (png_uint_16)));
3919
3920      /* The 'threshold' test is repeated here because it can arise for one of
3921       * the 16-bit tables even if the others don't hit it.
3922       */
3923      if (png_gamma_significant(gamma_val) != 0)
3924      {
3925         /* The old code would overflow at the end and this would cause the
3926          * 'pow' function to return a result >1, resulting in an
3927          * arithmetic error.  This code follows the spec exactly; ig is
3928          * the recovered input sample, it always has 8-16 bits.
3929          *
3930          * We want input * 65535/max, rounded, the arithmetic fits in 32
3931          * bits (unsigned) so long as max <= 32767.
3932          */
3933         unsigned int j;
3934         for (j = 0; j < 256; j++)
3935         {
3936            png_uint_32 ig = (j << (8-shift)) + i;
3937#           ifdef PNG_FLOATING_ARITHMETIC_SUPPORTED
3938               /* Inline the 'max' scaling operation: */
3939               /* See png_gamma_8bit_correct for why the cast to (int) is
3940                * required here.
3941                */
3942               double d = floor(65535.*pow(ig*fmax, gamma_val*.00001)+.5);
3943               sub_table[j] = (png_uint_16)d;
3944#           else
3945               if (shift != 0)
3946                  ig = (ig * 65535U + max_by_2)/max;
3947
3948               sub_table[j] = png_gamma_16bit_correct(ig, gamma_val);
3949#           endif
3950         }
3951      }
3952      else
3953      {
3954         /* We must still build a table, but do it the fast way. */
3955         unsigned int j;
3956
3957         for (j = 0; j < 256; j++)
3958         {
3959            png_uint_32 ig = (j << (8-shift)) + i;
3960
3961            if (shift != 0)
3962               ig = (ig * 65535U + max_by_2)/max;
3963
3964            sub_table[j] = (png_uint_16)ig;
3965         }
3966      }
3967   }
3968}
3969
3970/* NOTE: this function expects the *inverse* of the overall gamma transformation
3971 * required.
3972 */
3973static void
3974png_build_16to8_table(png_structrp png_ptr, png_uint_16pp *ptable,
3975    PNG_CONST unsigned int shift, PNG_CONST png_fixed_point gamma_val)
3976{
3977   PNG_CONST unsigned int num = 1U << (8U - shift);
3978   PNG_CONST unsigned int max = (1U << (16U - shift))-1U;
3979   unsigned int i;
3980   png_uint_32 last;
3981
3982   png_uint_16pp table = *ptable =
3983       (png_uint_16pp)png_calloc(png_ptr, num * (sizeof (png_uint_16p)));
3984
3985   /* 'num' is the number of tables and also the number of low bits of low
3986    * bits of the input 16-bit value used to select a table.  Each table is
3987    * itself indexed by the high 8 bits of the value.
3988    */
3989   for (i = 0; i < num; i++)
3990      table[i] = (png_uint_16p)png_malloc(png_ptr,
3991          256 * (sizeof (png_uint_16)));
3992
3993   /* 'gamma_val' is set to the reciprocal of the value calculated above, so
3994    * pow(out,g) is an *input* value.  'last' is the last input value set.
3995    *
3996    * In the loop 'i' is used to find output values.  Since the output is
3997    * 8-bit there are only 256 possible values.  The tables are set up to
3998    * select the closest possible output value for each input by finding
3999    * the input value at the boundary between each pair of output values
4000    * and filling the table up to that boundary with the lower output
4001    * value.
4002    *
4003    * The boundary values are 0.5,1.5..253.5,254.5.  Since these are 9-bit
4004    * values the code below uses a 16-bit value in i; the values start at
4005    * 128.5 (for 0.5) and step by 257, for a total of 254 values (the last
4006    * entries are filled with 255).  Start i at 128 and fill all 'last'
4007    * table entries <= 'max'
4008    */
4009   last = 0;
4010   for (i = 0; i < 255; ++i) /* 8-bit output value */
4011   {
4012      /* Find the corresponding maximum input value */
4013      png_uint_16 out = (png_uint_16)(i * 257U); /* 16-bit output value */
4014
4015      /* Find the boundary value in 16 bits: */
4016      png_uint_32 bound = png_gamma_16bit_correct(out+128U, gamma_val);
4017
4018      /* Adjust (round) to (16-shift) bits: */
4019      bound = (bound * max + 32768U)/65535U + 1U;
4020
4021      while (last < bound)
4022      {
4023         table[last & (0xffU >> shift)][last >> (8U - shift)] = out;
4024         last++;
4025      }
4026   }
4027
4028   /* And fill in the final entries. */
4029   while (last < (num << 8))
4030   {
4031      table[last & (0xff >> shift)][last >> (8U - shift)] = 65535U;
4032      last++;
4033   }
4034}
4035#endif /* 16BIT */
4036
4037/* Build a single 8-bit table: same as the 16-bit case but much simpler (and
4038 * typically much faster).  Note that libpng currently does no sBIT processing
4039 * (apparently contrary to the spec) so a 256-entry table is always generated.
4040 */
4041static void
4042png_build_8bit_table(png_structrp png_ptr, png_bytepp ptable,
4043    PNG_CONST png_fixed_point gamma_val)
4044{
4045   unsigned int i;
4046   png_bytep table = *ptable = (png_bytep)png_malloc(png_ptr, 256);
4047
4048   if (png_gamma_significant(gamma_val) != 0)
4049      for (i=0; i<256; i++)
4050         table[i] = png_gamma_8bit_correct(i, gamma_val);
4051
4052   else
4053      for (i=0; i<256; ++i)
4054         table[i] = (png_byte)(i & 0xff);
4055}
4056
4057/* Used from png_read_destroy and below to release the memory used by the gamma
4058 * tables.
4059 */
4060void /* PRIVATE */
4061png_destroy_gamma_table(png_structrp png_ptr)
4062{
4063   png_free(png_ptr, png_ptr->gamma_table);
4064   png_ptr->gamma_table = NULL;
4065
4066#ifdef PNG_16BIT_SUPPORTED
4067   if (png_ptr->gamma_16_table != NULL)
4068   {
4069      int i;
4070      int istop = (1 << (8 - png_ptr->gamma_shift));
4071      for (i = 0; i < istop; i++)
4072      {
4073         png_free(png_ptr, png_ptr->gamma_16_table[i]);
4074      }
4075   png_free(png_ptr, png_ptr->gamma_16_table);
4076   png_ptr->gamma_16_table = NULL;
4077   }
4078#endif /* 16BIT */
4079
4080#if defined(PNG_READ_BACKGROUND_SUPPORTED) || \
4081   defined(PNG_READ_ALPHA_MODE_SUPPORTED) || \
4082   defined(PNG_READ_RGB_TO_GRAY_SUPPORTED)
4083   png_free(png_ptr, png_ptr->gamma_from_1);
4084   png_ptr->gamma_from_1 = NULL;
4085   png_free(png_ptr, png_ptr->gamma_to_1);
4086   png_ptr->gamma_to_1 = NULL;
4087
4088#ifdef PNG_16BIT_SUPPORTED
4089   if (png_ptr->gamma_16_from_1 != NULL)
4090   {
4091      int i;
4092      int istop = (1 << (8 - png_ptr->gamma_shift));
4093      for (i = 0; i < istop; i++)
4094      {
4095         png_free(png_ptr, png_ptr->gamma_16_from_1[i]);
4096      }
4097   png_free(png_ptr, png_ptr->gamma_16_from_1);
4098   png_ptr->gamma_16_from_1 = NULL;
4099   }
4100   if (png_ptr->gamma_16_to_1 != NULL)
4101   {
4102      int i;
4103      int istop = (1 << (8 - png_ptr->gamma_shift));
4104      for (i = 0; i < istop; i++)
4105      {
4106         png_free(png_ptr, png_ptr->gamma_16_to_1[i]);
4107      }
4108   png_free(png_ptr, png_ptr->gamma_16_to_1);
4109   png_ptr->gamma_16_to_1 = NULL;
4110   }
4111#endif /* 16BIT */
4112#endif /* READ_BACKGROUND || READ_ALPHA_MODE || RGB_TO_GRAY */
4113}
4114
4115/* We build the 8- or 16-bit gamma tables here.  Note that for 16-bit
4116 * tables, we don't make a full table if we are reducing to 8-bit in
4117 * the future.  Note also how the gamma_16 tables are segmented so that
4118 * we don't need to allocate > 64K chunks for a full 16-bit table.
4119 */
4120void /* PRIVATE */
4121png_build_gamma_table(png_structrp png_ptr, int bit_depth)
4122{
4123   png_debug(1, "in png_build_gamma_table");
4124
4125   /* Remove any existing table; this copes with multiple calls to
4126    * png_read_update_info. The warning is because building the gamma tables
4127    * multiple times is a performance hit - it's harmless but the ability to
4128    * call png_read_update_info() multiple times is new in 1.5.6 so it seems
4129    * sensible to warn if the app introduces such a hit.
4130    */
4131   if (png_ptr->gamma_table != NULL || png_ptr->gamma_16_table != NULL)
4132   {
4133      png_warning(png_ptr, "gamma table being rebuilt");
4134      png_destroy_gamma_table(png_ptr);
4135   }
4136
4137   if (bit_depth <= 8)
4138   {
4139      png_build_8bit_table(png_ptr, &png_ptr->gamma_table,
4140          png_ptr->screen_gamma > 0 ?
4141          png_reciprocal2(png_ptr->colorspace.gamma,
4142          png_ptr->screen_gamma) : PNG_FP_1);
4143
4144#if defined(PNG_READ_BACKGROUND_SUPPORTED) || \
4145   defined(PNG_READ_ALPHA_MODE_SUPPORTED) || \
4146   defined(PNG_READ_RGB_TO_GRAY_SUPPORTED)
4147      if ((png_ptr->transformations & (PNG_COMPOSE | PNG_RGB_TO_GRAY)) != 0)
4148      {
4149         png_build_8bit_table(png_ptr, &png_ptr->gamma_to_1,
4150             png_reciprocal(png_ptr->colorspace.gamma));
4151
4152         png_build_8bit_table(png_ptr, &png_ptr->gamma_from_1,
4153             png_ptr->screen_gamma > 0 ?
4154             png_reciprocal(png_ptr->screen_gamma) :
4155             png_ptr->colorspace.gamma/* Probably doing rgb_to_gray */);
4156      }
4157#endif /* READ_BACKGROUND || READ_ALPHA_MODE || RGB_TO_GRAY */
4158   }
4159#ifdef PNG_16BIT_SUPPORTED
4160   else
4161   {
4162      png_byte shift, sig_bit;
4163
4164      if ((png_ptr->color_type & PNG_COLOR_MASK_COLOR) != 0)
4165      {
4166         sig_bit = png_ptr->sig_bit.red;
4167
4168         if (png_ptr->sig_bit.green > sig_bit)
4169            sig_bit = png_ptr->sig_bit.green;
4170
4171         if (png_ptr->sig_bit.blue > sig_bit)
4172            sig_bit = png_ptr->sig_bit.blue;
4173      }
4174      else
4175         sig_bit = png_ptr->sig_bit.gray;
4176
4177      /* 16-bit gamma code uses this equation:
4178       *
4179       *   ov = table[(iv & 0xff) >> gamma_shift][iv >> 8]
4180       *
4181       * Where 'iv' is the input color value and 'ov' is the output value -
4182       * pow(iv, gamma).
4183       *
4184       * Thus the gamma table consists of up to 256 256-entry tables.  The table
4185       * is selected by the (8-gamma_shift) most significant of the low 8 bits
4186       * of the color value then indexed by the upper 8 bits:
4187       *
4188       *   table[low bits][high 8 bits]
4189       *
4190       * So the table 'n' corresponds to all those 'iv' of:
4191       *
4192       *   <all high 8-bit values><n << gamma_shift>..<(n+1 << gamma_shift)-1>
4193       *
4194       */
4195      if (sig_bit > 0 && sig_bit < 16U)
4196         /* shift == insignificant bits */
4197         shift = (png_byte)((16U - sig_bit) & 0xff);
4198
4199      else
4200         shift = 0; /* keep all 16 bits */
4201
4202      if ((png_ptr->transformations & (PNG_16_TO_8 | PNG_SCALE_16_TO_8)) != 0)
4203      {
4204         /* PNG_MAX_GAMMA_8 is the number of bits to keep - effectively
4205          * the significant bits in the *input* when the output will
4206          * eventually be 8 bits.  By default it is 11.
4207          */
4208         if (shift < (16U - PNG_MAX_GAMMA_8))
4209            shift = (16U - PNG_MAX_GAMMA_8);
4210      }
4211
4212      if (shift > 8U)
4213         shift = 8U; /* Guarantees at least one table! */
4214
4215      png_ptr->gamma_shift = shift;
4216
4217      /* NOTE: prior to 1.5.4 this test used to include PNG_BACKGROUND (now
4218       * PNG_COMPOSE).  This effectively smashed the background calculation for
4219       * 16-bit output because the 8-bit table assumes the result will be
4220       * reduced to 8 bits.
4221       */
4222      if ((png_ptr->transformations & (PNG_16_TO_8 | PNG_SCALE_16_TO_8)) != 0)
4223          png_build_16to8_table(png_ptr, &png_ptr->gamma_16_table, shift,
4224          png_ptr->screen_gamma > 0 ? png_product2(png_ptr->colorspace.gamma,
4225          png_ptr->screen_gamma) : PNG_FP_1);
4226
4227      else
4228          png_build_16bit_table(png_ptr, &png_ptr->gamma_16_table, shift,
4229          png_ptr->screen_gamma > 0 ? png_reciprocal2(png_ptr->colorspace.gamma,
4230          png_ptr->screen_gamma) : PNG_FP_1);
4231
4232#if defined(PNG_READ_BACKGROUND_SUPPORTED) || \
4233   defined(PNG_READ_ALPHA_MODE_SUPPORTED) || \
4234   defined(PNG_READ_RGB_TO_GRAY_SUPPORTED)
4235      if ((png_ptr->transformations & (PNG_COMPOSE | PNG_RGB_TO_GRAY)) != 0)
4236      {
4237         png_build_16bit_table(png_ptr, &png_ptr->gamma_16_to_1, shift,
4238             png_reciprocal(png_ptr->colorspace.gamma));
4239
4240         /* Notice that the '16 from 1' table should be full precision, however
4241          * the lookup on this table still uses gamma_shift, so it can't be.
4242          * TODO: fix this.
4243          */
4244         png_build_16bit_table(png_ptr, &png_ptr->gamma_16_from_1, shift,
4245             png_ptr->screen_gamma > 0 ? png_reciprocal(png_ptr->screen_gamma) :
4246             png_ptr->colorspace.gamma/* Probably doing rgb_to_gray */);
4247      }
4248#endif /* READ_BACKGROUND || READ_ALPHA_MODE || RGB_TO_GRAY */
4249   }
4250#endif /* 16BIT */
4251}
4252#endif /* READ_GAMMA */
4253
4254/* HARDWARE OR SOFTWARE OPTION SUPPORT */
4255#ifdef PNG_SET_OPTION_SUPPORTED
4256int PNGAPI
4257png_set_option(png_structrp png_ptr, int option, int onoff)
4258{
4259   if (png_ptr != NULL && option >= 0 && option < PNG_OPTION_NEXT &&
4260      (option & 1) == 0)
4261   {
4262      int mask = 3 << option;
4263      int setting = (2 + (onoff != 0)) << option;
4264      int current = png_ptr->options;
4265
4266      png_ptr->options = (png_byte)(((current & ~mask) | setting) & 0xff);
4267
4268      return (current & mask) >> option;
4269   }
4270
4271   return PNG_OPTION_INVALID;
4272}
4273#endif
4274
4275/* sRGB support */
4276#if defined(PNG_SIMPLIFIED_READ_SUPPORTED) ||\
4277   defined(PNG_SIMPLIFIED_WRITE_SUPPORTED)
4278/* sRGB conversion tables; these are machine generated with the code in
4279 * contrib/tools/makesRGB.c.  The actual sRGB transfer curve defined in the
4280 * specification (see the article at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SRGB)
4281 * is used, not the gamma=1/2.2 approximation use elsewhere in libpng.
4282 * The sRGB to linear table is exact (to the nearest 16-bit linear fraction).
4283 * The inverse (linear to sRGB) table has accuracies as follows:
4284 *
4285 * For all possible (255*65535+1) input values:
4286 *
4287 *    error: -0.515566 - 0.625971, 79441 (0.475369%) of readings inexact
4288 *
4289 * For the input values corresponding to the 65536 16-bit values:
4290 *
4291 *    error: -0.513727 - 0.607759, 308 (0.469978%) of readings inexact
4292 *
4293 * In all cases the inexact readings are only off by one.
4294 */
4295
4296#ifdef PNG_SIMPLIFIED_READ_SUPPORTED
4297/* The convert-to-sRGB table is only currently required for read. */
4298const png_uint_16 png_sRGB_table[256] =
4299{
4300   0,20,40,60,80,99,119,139,
4301   159,179,199,219,241,264,288,313,
4302   340,367,396,427,458,491,526,562,
4303   599,637,677,718,761,805,851,898,
4304   947,997,1048,1101,1156,1212,1270,1330,
4305   1391,1453,1517,1583,1651,1720,1790,1863,
4306   1937,2013,2090,2170,2250,2333,2418,2504,
4307   2592,2681,2773,2866,2961,3058,3157,3258,
4308   3360,3464,3570,3678,3788,3900,4014,4129,
4309   4247,4366,4488,4611,4736,4864,4993,5124,
4310   5257,5392,5530,5669,5810,5953,6099,6246,
4311   6395,6547,6700,6856,7014,7174,7335,7500,
4312   7666,7834,8004,8177,8352,8528,8708,8889,
4313   9072,9258,9445,9635,9828,10022,10219,10417,
4314   10619,10822,11028,11235,11446,11658,11873,12090,
4315   12309,12530,12754,12980,13209,13440,13673,13909,
4316   14146,14387,14629,14874,15122,15371,15623,15878,
4317   16135,16394,16656,16920,17187,17456,17727,18001,
4318   18277,18556,18837,19121,19407,19696,19987,20281,
4319   20577,20876,21177,21481,21787,22096,22407,22721,
4320   23038,23357,23678,24002,24329,24658,24990,25325,
4321   25662,26001,26344,26688,27036,27386,27739,28094,
4322   28452,28813,29176,29542,29911,30282,30656,31033,
4323   31412,31794,32179,32567,32957,33350,33745,34143,
4324   34544,34948,35355,35764,36176,36591,37008,37429,
4325   37852,38278,38706,39138,39572,40009,40449,40891,
4326   41337,41785,42236,42690,43147,43606,44069,44534,
4327   45002,45473,45947,46423,46903,47385,47871,48359,
4328   48850,49344,49841,50341,50844,51349,51858,52369,
4329   52884,53401,53921,54445,54971,55500,56032,56567,
4330   57105,57646,58190,58737,59287,59840,60396,60955,
4331   61517,62082,62650,63221,63795,64372,64952,65535
4332};
4333#endif /* SIMPLIFIED_READ */
4334
4335/* The base/delta tables are required for both read and write (but currently
4336 * only the simplified versions.)
4337 */
4338const png_uint_16 png_sRGB_base[512] =
4339{
4340   128,1782,3383,4644,5675,6564,7357,8074,
4341   8732,9346,9921,10463,10977,11466,11935,12384,
4342   12816,13233,13634,14024,14402,14769,15125,15473,
4343   15812,16142,16466,16781,17090,17393,17690,17981,
4344   18266,18546,18822,19093,19359,19621,19879,20133,
4345   20383,20630,20873,21113,21349,21583,21813,22041,
4346   22265,22487,22707,22923,23138,23350,23559,23767,
4347   23972,24175,24376,24575,24772,24967,25160,25352,
4348   25542,25730,25916,26101,26284,26465,26645,26823,
4349   27000,27176,27350,27523,27695,27865,28034,28201,
4350   28368,28533,28697,28860,29021,29182,29341,29500,
4351   29657,29813,29969,30123,30276,30429,30580,30730,
4352   30880,31028,31176,31323,31469,31614,31758,31902,
4353   32045,32186,32327,32468,32607,32746,32884,33021,
4354   33158,33294,33429,33564,33697,33831,33963,34095,
4355   34226,34357,34486,34616,34744,34873,35000,35127,
4356   35253,35379,35504,35629,35753,35876,35999,36122,
4357   36244,36365,36486,36606,36726,36845,36964,37083,
4358   37201,37318,37435,37551,37668,37783,37898,38013,
4359   38127,38241,38354,38467,38580,38692,38803,38915,
4360   39026,39136,39246,39356,39465,39574,39682,39790,
4361   39898,40005,40112,40219,40325,40431,40537,40642,
4362   40747,40851,40955,41059,41163,41266,41369,41471,
4363   41573,41675,41777,41878,41979,42079,42179,42279,
4364   42379,42478,42577,42676,42775,42873,42971,43068,
4365   43165,43262,43359,43456,43552,43648,43743,43839,
4366   43934,44028,44123,44217,44311,44405,44499,44592,
4367   44685,44778,44870,44962,45054,45146,45238,45329,
4368   45420,45511,45601,45692,45782,45872,45961,46051,
4369   46140,46229,46318,46406,46494,46583,46670,46758,
4370   46846,46933,47020,47107,47193,47280,47366,47452,
4371   47538,47623,47709,47794,47879,47964,48048,48133,
4372   48217,48301,48385,48468,48552,48635,48718,48801,
4373   48884,48966,49048,49131,49213,49294,49376,49458,
4374   49539,49620,49701,49782,49862,49943,50023,50103,
4375   50183,50263,50342,50422,50501,50580,50659,50738,
4376   50816,50895,50973,51051,51129,51207,51285,51362,
4377   51439,51517,51594,51671,51747,51824,51900,51977,
4378   52053,52129,52205,52280,52356,52432,52507,52582,
4379   52657,52732,52807,52881,52956,53030,53104,53178,
4380   53252,53326,53400,53473,53546,53620,53693,53766,
4381   53839,53911,53984,54056,54129,54201,54273,54345,
4382   54417,54489,54560,54632,54703,54774,54845,54916,
4383   54987,55058,55129,55199,55269,55340,55410,55480,
4384   55550,55620,55689,55759,55828,55898,55967,56036,
4385   56105,56174,56243,56311,56380,56448,56517,56585,
4386   56653,56721,56789,56857,56924,56992,57059,57127,
4387   57194,57261,57328,57395,57462,57529,57595,57662,
4388   57728,57795,57861,57927,57993,58059,58125,58191,
4389   58256,58322,58387,58453,58518,58583,58648,58713,
4390   58778,58843,58908,58972,59037,59101,59165,59230,
4391   59294,59358,59422,59486,59549,59613,59677,59740,
4392   59804,59867,59930,59993,60056,60119,60182,60245,
4393   60308,60370,60433,60495,60558,60620,60682,60744,
4394   60806,60868,60930,60992,61054,61115,61177,61238,
4395   61300,61361,61422,61483,61544,61605,61666,61727,
4396   61788,61848,61909,61969,62030,62090,62150,62211,
4397   62271,62331,62391,62450,62510,62570,62630,62689,
4398   62749,62808,62867,62927,62986,63045,63104,63163,
4399   63222,63281,63340,63398,63457,63515,63574,63632,
4400   63691,63749,63807,63865,63923,63981,64039,64097,
4401   64155,64212,64270,64328,64385,64443,64500,64557,
4402   64614,64672,64729,64786,64843,64900,64956,65013,
4403   65070,65126,65183,65239,65296,65352,65409,65465
4404};
4405
4406const png_byte png_sRGB_delta[512] =
4407{
4408   207,201,158,129,113,100,90,82,77,72,68,64,61,59,56,54,
4409   52,50,49,47,46,45,43,42,41,40,39,39,38,37,36,36,
4410   35,34,34,33,33,32,32,31,31,30,30,30,29,29,28,28,
4411   28,27,27,27,27,26,26,26,25,25,25,25,24,24,24,24,
4412   23,23,23,23,23,22,22,22,22,22,22,21,21,21,21,21,
4413   21,20,20,20,20,20,20,20,20,19,19,19,19,19,19,19,
4414   19,18,18,18,18,18,18,18,18,18,18,17,17,17,17,17,
4415   17,17,17,17,17,17,16,16,16,16,16,16,16,16,16,16,
4416   16,16,16,16,15,15,15,15,15,15,15,15,15,15,15,15,
4417   15,15,15,15,14,14,14,14,14,14,14,14,14,14,14,14,
4418   14,14,14,14,14,14,14,13,13,13,13,13,13,13,13,13,
4419   13,13,13,13,13,13,13,13,13,13,13,13,13,13,12,12,
4420   12,12,12,12,12,12,12,12,12,12,12,12,12,12,12,12,
4421   12,12,12,12,12,12,12,12,12,12,12,12,11,11,11,11,
4422   11,11,11,11,11,11,11,11,11,11,11,11,11,11,11,11,
4423   11,11,11,11,11,11,11,11,11,11,11,11,11,11,11,11,
4424   11,10,10,10,10,10,10,10,10,10,10,10,10,10,10,10,
4425   10,10,10,10,10,10,10,10,10,10,10,10,10,10,10,10,
4426   10,10,10,10,10,10,10,10,10,10,10,10,10,10,10,10,
4427   10,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,
4428   9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,
4429   9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,
4430   9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,
4431   9,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,
4432   8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,
4433   8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,
4434   8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,
4435   8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,
4436   8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,
4437   7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,
4438   7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,
4439   7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7
4440};
4441#endif /* SIMPLIFIED READ/WRITE sRGB support */
4442
4443/* SIMPLIFIED READ/WRITE SUPPORT */
4444#if defined(PNG_SIMPLIFIED_READ_SUPPORTED) ||\
4445   defined(PNG_SIMPLIFIED_WRITE_SUPPORTED)
4446static int
4447png_image_free_function(png_voidp argument)
4448{
4449   png_imagep image = png_voidcast(png_imagep, argument);
4450   png_controlp cp = image->opaque;
4451   png_control c;
4452
4453   /* Double check that we have a png_ptr - it should be impossible to get here
4454    * without one.
4455    */
4456   if (cp->png_ptr == NULL)
4457      return 0;
4458
4459   /* First free any data held in the control structure. */
4460#  ifdef PNG_STDIO_SUPPORTED
4461      if (cp->owned_file != 0)
4462      {
4463         FILE *fp = png_voidcast(FILE*, cp->png_ptr->io_ptr);
4464         cp->owned_file = 0;
4465
4466         /* Ignore errors here. */
4467         if (fp != NULL)
4468         {
4469            cp->png_ptr->io_ptr = NULL;
4470            (void)fclose(fp);
4471         }
4472      }
4473#  endif
4474
4475   /* Copy the control structure so that the original, allocated, version can be
4476    * safely freed.  Notice that a png_error here stops the remainder of the
4477    * cleanup, but this is probably fine because that would indicate bad memory
4478    * problems anyway.
4479    */
4480   c = *cp;
4481   image->opaque = &c;
4482   png_free(c.png_ptr, cp);
4483
4484   /* Then the structures, calling the correct API. */
4485   if (c.for_write != 0)
4486   {
4487#     ifdef PNG_SIMPLIFIED_WRITE_SUPPORTED
4488         png_destroy_write_struct(&c.png_ptr, &c.info_ptr);
4489#     else
4490         png_error(c.png_ptr, "simplified write not supported");
4491#     endif
4492   }
4493   else
4494   {
4495#     ifdef PNG_SIMPLIFIED_READ_SUPPORTED
4496         png_destroy_read_struct(&c.png_ptr, &c.info_ptr, NULL);
4497#     else
4498         png_error(c.png_ptr, "simplified read not supported");
4499#     endif
4500   }
4501
4502   /* Success. */
4503   return 1;
4504}
4505
4506void PNGAPI
4507png_image_free(png_imagep image)
4508{
4509   /* Safely call the real function, but only if doing so is safe at this point
4510    * (if not inside an error handling context).  Otherwise assume
4511    * png_safe_execute will call this API after the return.
4512    */
4513   if (image != NULL && image->opaque != NULL &&
4514      image->opaque->error_buf == NULL)
4515   {
4516      /* Ignore errors here: */
4517      (void)png_safe_execute(image, png_image_free_function, image);
4518      image->opaque = NULL;
4519   }
4520}
4521
4522int /* PRIVATE */
4523png_image_error(png_imagep image, png_const_charp error_message)
4524{
4525   /* Utility to log an error. */
4526   png_safecat(image->message, (sizeof image->message), 0, error_message);
4527   image->warning_or_error |= PNG_IMAGE_ERROR;
4528   png_image_free(image);
4529   return 0;
4530}
4531
4532#endif /* SIMPLIFIED READ/WRITE */
4533#endif /* READ || WRITE */
4534