Commit Graph

8 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Vitaly Prosyak
2e2ad02d5c libweston: add definition of color mapping function
Introduce 3D LUT definition as part of Weston
color transform struct. A 3D LUT is a LUT containing
entries for each possible RGB triplets.
Co-authored-by: Pekka Paalanen <pekka.paalanen@collabora.com>
Signed-off-by: Vitaly Prosyak <vitaly.prosyak@amd.com>
2022-02-09 20:42:50 -05:00
Pekka Paalanen
aa6346f274 color: introduce weston_color_profile
Roughly speaking, a color profile describes the color space of content
or an output. Under the hood, the description includes one or more ways
to map colors between the profile space and some standard profile
connecting space (PCS).

This object is not called a color space. A color space has a unique
definition, while a color profile may contain multiple different
mappings depending on render intent. Some of these mappings may be
subjective, with an artistic touch.

When a source color profile and a destination color profile are combined
under a specific render intent, they produce a color transformation.
Color transformations are already preresented by weston_color_transform.

This patch adds the basic API for color profile objects. Everything
worthwhile of these objects is implemented in the color managers:
color-noop never creates these, and in color-lcms they are basically a
container for cmsHPROFILE, the Little CMS object for color profiles.
Color profile objects will not be interpreted outside of the color
managers, unlike color transformations.

For a start, the color manager API has one function to create color
profiles: from ICC profile data. More creation functions for other
sources will be added later.

The API has errmsg return parameter for error messages. These are not
simply weston_log()'d, because CM&HDR protocol will allow clients to
trigger errors and the protocol handles that gracefully. Therefore
instead of flooding the compositor logs, the error messages will
probably need to be relayed back to clients.

Color-lcms is expected to create a cmsHPROFILE for all kinds of color
profiles, not just for those created from ICC profile data. Hence,
color-lcms will fingerprint color profiles by the MD5 hash which Little
CMS computes for us. The fingerprint is used for de-duplication: instead
of creating copies, reference existing color profiles.

This code is very much based on Sebastian Wick's earlier work on Weston
color management, but structured and named differently.

Co-authored-by: Sebastian Wick <sebastian@sebastianwick.net>
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <pekka.paalanen@collabora.com>
2021-11-23 09:23:05 +00:00
Pekka Paalanen
92f2367e58 gl-renderer: implement 3 x 1D LUT color pre-curve
This makes weston_color_transform object be able to express
three-channel one-dimensional look-up table transformations. They are
useful for applying EOTF and EOTF^-1 mapping, or, gamma curves. They
will also be useful in optimizing a following 3D LUT tap distribution
once support for 3D LUT is added.

The code added here translates from the lut_3x1d fill_in() interface to
a GL texture to be used with SHADER_COLOR_CURVE_LUT_3x1D for
weston_surfaces.

It demonstrates how renderer data is attached to weston_color_transform
and cached.

GL_OES_texture_float_linear is required to be able to use bilinear
texture filtering with 32-bit floating-point textures, used for the LUT.

As the size of the LUT depends on what implements it, lut_3x1d fill_in()
interface is a callback to the color management component to ask for an
arbitrary size. For GL-renderer this is not important as it can easily
realize any LUT size, but when DRM-backend wants to offload the EOTF^-1
mapping to KMS (GAMMA_LUT), the LUT size comes from KMS.

Nothing actually implements lut_3x1d fill_in() yet, that will come in a
later patch.

Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <pekka.paalanen@collabora.com>
2021-06-21 14:36:33 +00:00
Pekka Paalanen
5e79dd4892 libweston: begin color-lcms plugin
This creates the color-lcms plugin that in the future will be using
Little CMS as the color matching module, processing ICC profiles, and
producing HDR tone mappings.

Right now, this new plugin is functionally equivalent to the no-op color
manager, except it already links to lcms2 and checks that the renderer
supports color operations.

Color-lcms is a libweston plugin that is loaded with explicit
weston_compositor API. This does not currently allow loading alternative
color manager plugins. External color manager plugins might be
considered in the future when the libweston APIs around color management
stabilize.

This libweston plugin uses the same build option as the old cms-static
Weston plugins, as they both need lcms2. The minimum version for lcms2
was chosen by what Debian Buster provides today and for no other reason.

This plugin intends to support the Wayland CM&HDR protocol extension and
hence sets supports_client_protocol to true. This will expose the
protocol extension to clients when it gets implemented.

Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <pekka.paalanen@collabora.com>
2021-06-14 12:53:41 +00:00
Pekka Paalanen
8fb23ed110 color: add from sRGB to blending color transformation
This is needed when the compositor produces any content internally:
- the lines in triangle fan debug
- the censoring color fill (unmet HDCP requirements)

Solid color surfaces do not need this special-casing because
weston_surface is supposed to carry color space information, which will
get used in gl_shader_config_init_for_view().

This makes sure the internally produced graphics fit in, e.g on a
monitor in HDR mode.

For now, just ensure there is an identity transformation. Actual
implementations in GL-renderer will follow later.

Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <pekka.paalanen@collabora.com>
2021-06-14 12:53:41 +00:00
Pekka Paalanen
cda3951a9a color: add from sRGB to output color transformation
This is needed when drawing anything internal directly to an output,
like the borders/decorations in a nested compositor setup. This makes
the assumption that the internal stuff starts in sRGB, which should be
safe. As borders are never blended with other content, this should also
be sufficient.

This patch is a reminder that that path exists, rather than a real
implementation. To be implemented when someone needs it.

Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <pekka.paalanen@collabora.com>
2021-06-14 12:53:41 +00:00
Pekka Paalanen
1d2eee208c color: add output color transform API
This is the blending space to monitor space color transform. It needs to
be implemented in the renderers, unless a backend sets
from_blend_to_output_by_backend = true, in which case the backend does
it and the renderer does not.

The intention is that from_blend_to_output_by_backend can be toggled
frame by frame to allow backends to react to dynamic change of output
color profile.

For now, renderers just assert that they don't need to do anything for
output color transform.

Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <pekka.paalanen@collabora.com>
2021-06-14 12:53:41 +00:00
Pekka Paalanen
90a5ffa097 libweston: introduce CMS component architecture
See: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wayland/weston/-/issues/467#note_814985

This starts building the framework required for implementing color
management.

The main new interface is struct weston_color_manager. This commit also
adds a no-op color manager implementation, which is used if no other
color manager is loaded. This no-op color manager simply provides
identity color transforms for everything, so that Weston keeps running
exactly like before.

weston_color_manager interface is incomplete and will be extended later.

Colorspace objects are not introduced in this commit. However, when
client content colorspace and output colorspace definitions are
combined, they will produce color transformations from client content to
output blending space and from output blending space to output space.

This commit introduces a placeholder struct for color transforms,
weston_color_transform. Objects of this type are expected to be heavy to
create and store, which is why they are designed to be shared as much as
possible, ideally making their instances unique. As color transform
description is intended to be generic in libweston core, renderers and
backends are expected to derive their own state for each transform
object as necessary. Creating and storing the derived state maybe be
expensive as well, more the reason to re-use these objects as much as
possible. E.g. GL-renderer might upload a 3D LUT into a texture and keep
the texture around. DRM-backend might create a KMS blob for a LUT and
keep that around.

As a color transform depends on both the surface and the output, a
transform object may need to be created for each unique pair of them.
Therefore color transforms are referenced from weston_paint_node. As
paint nodes exist for not just surface+output but surface+view+output
triplets, the code ensures that all paint nodes (having different view)
for the same surface+output have the same color transform state.

As a special case, if weston_color_transform is NULL, it means identity
transform. This short-circuits some checks and memory allocations, but
it does mean we use a separate member on weston_paint_node to know if
the color transform has been initialized or not.

Color transformations are pre-created at the weston_output
paint_node_z_order_list creation step. Currently the z order lists
contain all views globally, which means we populate color transforms we
may never need, e.g. a view is never shown on a particular output.
This problem should get fixed naturally when z order lists are
constructed "pruned" in the future: to contain only those paint nodes
that actually contribute to the output's image.

As nothing actually supports color transforms yet, both renderers and
the DRM-backend assert that they only get identity transforms. This
check has the side-effect that all surface-output pairs actually get a
weston_surface_color_transform_ref even though it points to NULL
weston_color_transform.

This design is inspired by Sebastian Wick's Weston color management
work.

Co-authored-by: Sebastian Wick <sebastian@sebastianwick.net>
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <pekka.paalanen@collabora.com>
2021-06-14 12:53:41 +00:00