.github/workflows | ||
assets | ||
bench | ||
doc | ||
ext | ||
fuzz | ||
libqoi | ||
src | ||
tests | ||
.gitignore | ||
.gitmodules | ||
Cargo.toml | ||
LICENSE-APACHE | ||
LICENSE-MIT | ||
README.md | ||
rustfmt.toml |
qoi
Fast encoder/decoder for QOI image format, implemented in pure and safe Rust.
- One of the fastest QOI encoders/decoders out there.
- Compliant with the latest QOI format specification.
- Zero unsafe code.
- Supports decoding from / encoding to
std::io
streams directly. no_std
support.- Roundtrip-tested vs the reference C implementation; fuzz-tested.
Note about this fork
This fork implements a slight improvement to the original specs, which leaves unused the QOI_OP_RGBA
chunk flag with RGB.
Here, we use this flag for the new QOI_OP_RUN2
chunk. It's like the QOI_OP_RUN
chunk, but followed by two bytes representing run
(BE). (only for RGB, as the flag is already used for RGBA)
The decoder remains fully compatible with the original one (except when using QOI_OP_RGBA
in a RGB image). The encoder is fully compatible for RGBA, not for RGB (except using the reference
feature).
Why this? Because it enables significant improvements for compressing images with large uniform areas (such as screen captures), or for encoding a diff-filtered video stream where successive frames often have identical regions. (see syeve for the video encoding)
Examples
use qoi::{encode_to_vec, decode_to_vec};
let encoded = encode_to_vec(&pixels, width, height)?;
let (header, decoded) = decode_to_vec(&encoded)?;
assert_eq!(header.width, width);
assert_eq!(header.height, height);
assert_eq!(decoded, pixels);
Benchmarks
decode:Mp/s encode:Mp/s decode:MB/s encode:MB/s
qoi.h 282.9 225.3 978.3 778.9
qoi-rust 427.4 290.0 1477.7 1002.9
- Reference C implementation: phoboslab/qoi@00e34217.
- Benchmark timings were collected on an Apple M1 laptop.
- 2846 images from the suite provided upstream (tarball): all pngs except two with broken checksums.
- 1.32 GPixels in total with 4.46 GB of raw pixel data.
Benchmarks have also been run for all of the other Rust implementations of QOI for comparison purposes and, at the time of writing this document, this library proved to be the fastest one by a noticeable margin.
Rust version
The minimum required Rust version for the latest crate version is 1.61.0.
no_std
This crate supports no_std
mode. By default, std is enabled via the std
feature. You can deactivate the default-features
to target core instead.
In that case anything related to std::io
, std::error::Error
and heap
allocations is disabled. There is an additional alloc
feature that can
be activated to bring back the support for heap allocations.
License
This project is dual-licensed under MIT and Apache 2.0.