There are a few limitations:
- mixed mode (HT and regular code blocks) is not supported.
- ROI in HT blocks is not supported.
- Placeholder passes are not supported.
- MultiHT sets are not support, only a singleHT set.
- there are known issues with some compliance testing files related to
the parsing of packet header.
Support was already there, but restricted to Cinema and IMF profiles,
and 255 tiles
* Add -TLM switch added to opj_compress
* Make opj_encoder_set_extra_options() function accept a TLM=YES option.
The previous constant opj_c13318 was mysteriously equal to 2/K , and in
the DWT, we had to divide K and opj_c13318 by 2... The issue was that the
band->stepsize computation in tcd.c didn't take into account the log2gain of
the band.
The effect of this change is expected to be mostly equivalent to the previous
situation, except some difference in rounding. But it leads to a dramatic
reduction of the mean square error and peak error in the irreversible encoding
of issue141.tif !
* -PLT switch added to opj_compress
* Add a opj_encoder_set_extra_options() function that
accepts a PLT=YES option, and could be expanded later
for other uses.
-------
Testing with a Sentinel2 10m band, T36JTT_20160914T074612_B02.jp2,
coming from S2A_MSIL1C_20160914T074612_N0204_R135_T36JTT_20160914T081456.SAFE
Decompress it to TIFF:
```
opj_uncompress -i T36JTT_20160914T074612_B02.jp2 -o T36JTT_20160914T074612_B02.tif
```
Recompress it with similar parameters as original:
```
opj_compress -n 5 -c [256,256],[256,256],[256,256],[256,256],[256,256] -t 1024,1024 -PLT -i T36JTT_20160914T074612_B02.tif -o T36JTT_20160914T074612_B02_PLT.jp2
```
Dump codestream detail with GDAL dump_jp2.py utility (https://github.com/OSGeo/gdal/blob/master/gdal/swig/python/samples/dump_jp2.py)
```
python dump_jp2.py T36JTT_20160914T074612_B02.jp2 > /tmp/dump_sentinel2_ori.txt
python dump_jp2.py T36JTT_20160914T074612_B02_PLT.jp2 > /tmp/dump_sentinel2_openjpeg_plt.txt
```
The diff between both show very similar structure, and identical number of packets in PLT markers
Now testing with Kakadu (KDU803_Demo_Apps_for_Linux-x86-64_200210)
Full file decompression:
```
kdu_expand -i T36JTT_20160914T074612_B02_PLT.jp2 -o tmp.tif
Consumed 121 tile-part(s) from a total of 121 tile(s).
Consumed 80,318,806 codestream bytes (excluding any file format) = 5.329697
bits/pel.
Processed using the multi-threaded environment, with
8 parallel threads of execution
```
Partial decompresson (presumably using PLT markers):
```
kdu_expand -i T36JTT_20160914T074612_B02.jp2 -o tmp.pgm -region "{0.5,0.5},{0.01,0.01}"
kdu_expand -i T36JTT_20160914T074612_B02_PLT.jp2 -o tmp2.pgm -region "{0.5,0.5},{0.01,0.01}"
diff tmp.pgm tmp2.pgm && echo "same !"
```
-------
Funded by ESA for S2-MPC project
This adds a opj_set_decoded_components(opj_codec_t *p_codec,
OPJ_UINT32 numcomps, const OPJ_UINT32* comps_indices) function,
and equivalent "opj_decompress -c compno[,compno]*" option.
When specified, neither the MCT transform nor JP2 channel transformations
will be applied.
Tests added for various combinations of whole image vs tiled-based decoding,
full or reduced resolution, use of decode area or not.
PR #975 introduced a check that rejects images that have different bit depth/sign
per compoment in SIZ marker if the JP2 IHDR box has BPC != 255
This didn't work properly if decoding a .j2k file since the new bit added in
opj_cp_t wasn't initialized to the right value.
For clarity, tThis new bit has also been renamed to allow_different_bit_depth_sign
But looking closer at the code, it seems we were already tolerant to inconsistencies.
For example we parsed a JP2 BPCC box even if BPC != 255 (just a warning is emitted)
So failing hard in opj_j2k_read_siz() wouldn't be very inconsistent, and that
alone cannot protect against other issues, so just emit a warning if BPC != 255
and the SIZ marker contains different bit depth/sign per component.
Note: we could also check that the content of JP2 BPCC box is consistant with the one
of the SIZ marker.
There are situations where, given a tile size, at a resolution level,
there are sub-bands with x0==x1 or y0==y1, that consequently don't have any
valid codeblocks, but the other sub-bands may be non-empty.
Given that we recycle the memory from one tile to another one, those
ghost codeblocks might be non-0 and thus candidate for packet inclusion.