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⚠️ Please note that this component is currently undergoing migration under the ASF PDFBox umbrella. The new Maven coordinates are not yet working. In the mean time please refer to the latest released version.

Welcome to the Java ImageIO plugin for the JBIG2 image format!

The Java ImageIO plugin for JBIG2 enables access to images encoded using the JBIG2 image compression standard. This component is part of the Apache PDFBox® project

Status

Build Status

Features

The key features of the plugin are:

  • Read-only (decode) support for images encoded using the JBIG2 standard, aka ITU T.88 and ISO/IEC 14492.
  • Full support for all features defined in the standard, including arithmetic coding, Huffman coding and MQ coding.
  • Pure Java code. No funny native or JNI stuff required.
  • Secure.
  • Production quality. Robust and well-tested.
  • Reasonable performance.
  • Standard ImageIO API.
  • Support for shared data segments as used by PDF via custom DecodeParams.

License

This ImageIO plugin is licensed under the Apache Software License 2.0. Alternatively see here.

Release Notes

Please take a look at the release notes.

Support

Support is available through the [Apache PDFBox community}(https://pdfbox.apache.org/support.html)

Usage

Introduction

Please choose the appropriate section below, depending on whether you need to embed the ImageIO decoder inside your application (which would, for example, be the case if you want to support shared data segments) or you just want to add JBIG2 support to an existing ImageIO-enabled application.

Use within existing Image I/O-based applications

Using the JBIG2 plugin with an existing application that already supports Java ImageIO is - at least in theory - very simple: just plunk the plugin jar down into your classpath and you're ready to go. What, exactly, you have to do to achieve this, depends on the application in question. Unfortunately, there is no general way to add the plugin to an application. Some general recommendations:

  • If you implemented the application yourself: hey, don't look at us. You'll know best what to do. If you build your application using Maven, just pull in the plugin as a dependency. See below.
  • Consult the application's manual (well, duh!).
  • Maybe the application installation has a folder called 'plugins' or something like that. Try putting the jar into it. With some luck, the application will pick it up.
  • Is the application started using a Unix shell script or Windows batch file? Try to identify where the classpath is assembled and add the plugin jar to it.
  • As a last resort, you could try to add the plugin jar to the lib/ext directory of your JRE installation. But please be advised that this is not considered to be good style.

Use dependency management

The JBIG2 ImageIO-Plugin is available from Maven Central.

Maven

To use the plugin within a Maven POM-based project, simply include a dependency to the following artifact in the appropriate pom.xml:

<dependency>
  <groupId>org.apache.pdfbox.jbig2</groupId>
	<artifactId>pdfbox-jbig2-imageio</artifactId>
  <version>3.0-SNAPSHOT</version>
</dependency>

How to deal with embedded JBIG2 data

Several formats allow to embed JBIG2-compressed data in its own structure. PDF, for example, supports JBIG2-compressed data and adds the ability to embed shared data segments. Therefore the JBIG2ImageReader can handle JBIG2Globals which are stored separately and can be passed into the reader if neccessary via setGlobals()-method.

The reader recognizes if the input data is headless and so embedded. This is assumed if the file header is missing.

You can also specify that the coming input data is embedded by using the special constructor in JBIG2ImageReader.

What if the plugin is on classpath but not seen?

ImageIO is able to scan the classpath for readers and writers. Call ImageIO.scanForPlugins() if the reader is not seen. (Note: Thanks to George Sexton for this tip in context of using ImageIO within Apache Tomcat)