Plack::Middleware::Image::Scale - Resize jpeg and png images on the fly
version 0.011
## example1.psgi
use Plack::Builder;
use Plack::Middleware::Image::Scale;
my $app = sub { return [200,[],[]] };
builder {
enable 'ConditionalGET';
enable 'Image::Scale';
enable 'Static', path => qr{^/images/};
$app;
};
A request to /images/foo_40x40.png will use images/foo.(png|jpg|gif|jpeg) as original, scale it to 40x40 px size and convert to PNG format.
## example2.psgi
use Plack::Builder;
use Plack::App::File;
use Plack::Middleware::Image::Scale;
my $app = sub { return [200,['Content-Type'=>'text/plain'],['hello']] };
my $thumber = builder {
enable 'ConditionalGET';
enable 'Image::Scale',
width => 200, height => 100,
flags => { fill => 'ff00ff' };
Plack::App::File->new( root => 'images' );
};
builder {
mount '/thumbs' => $thumber;
mount '/' => $app;
};
A request to /thumbs/foo.png will use images/foo.(png|jpg|gif|jpeg) as original, scale it small enough to fit 200x100 px size, fill extra borders (top/down or left/right, depending on the original image aspect ratio) with cyan background, and convert to PNG format. Also clipping is available, see "CONFIGURATION".
Scale and convert images to the requested format on the fly. By default the size and other scaling parameters are extracted from the request URI. Scaling is done with Image::Scale.
The original image is not modified or even accessed directly by this module. The converted image is not cached, but the request can be validated (If-Modified-Since) against original image without doing the image processing. This middleware should be used together a cache proxy, that caches the converted images for all clients, and implements content validation.
The response headers (like Last-Modified or ETag) are from the original image, but body is replaced with a PSGI content filter to do the image processing. The original image is fetched from next middleware layer or application with a normal PSGI request. You can use Plack::Middleware::Static, or Catalyst::Plugin::Static::Simple for example.
See "CONFIGURATION" for various size/format specifications that can be used in the request URI, and "ATTRIBUTES" for common configuration options that you can use when constructing the middleware.
Must be a RegexpRef, CodeRef, Str or Undef.
The PATH_INFO is compared against this value to
evaluate if the request should be processed. Undef (the default) will match
always. PATH_INFO
is topicalized by settings it to $_
, and it may be
rewritten during CodeRef
matching. Rewriting can be used to relocate image
paths, much like path
parameter for Plack::Middleware::Static.
If path matches, next it will be compared against "name". If path doesn't match, the request will be delegated to the next middleware layer or application.
Must be a RegexpRef, or CodeRef.
The PATH_INFO, possibly rewritten during "path"
matching, is compared against this value to extract name
, size
and ext
. The default value is:
qr{^(.+)(?:_(.+?))?(?:\.(jpe?g|png|image))$}
The expression is evaluated in array context and may return three elements:
name
, size
and ext
. Returning an empty array means no match.
Non-matching requests are delegated to the next middleware layer or
application.
If the path matches, the original image is fetched from name
."orig_ext",
scaled with parameters extracted from size
and converted to the content type
defined by ext
. See also "any_ext".
Must be a RegexpRef, CodeRef, HashRef, Undef.
The size
extracted by "match" is compared against this value to evaluate
if the request should be processed, and to map it into width, height and flags
for image processing. Undef will match always and use default width, height
and flags as defined by the "ATTRIBUTES". The default value is:
qr{^(\d+)?x(\d+)?(?:-(.+))?$}
The expression is evaluated in array context and may return three elements;
width
, height
and flags
. Returning an empty array means no match.
Non-matching requests are delegated to the next middleware layer or
application.
Optionally a hash reference can be returned. Keys width
, height
, and any
remaining keys as an hash reference, will be unrolled from the hash reference.
If defined and request ext
is equal to this, the content type of the original
image is used in the output. This means that the image format of the original
image is preserved. Default is image
.
ArrayRef of possible original image formats. See "fetch_orig".
Memory limit for the image scaling in bytes, as defined in Image::Scale.
JPEG quality, as defined in Image::Scale.
Use this to set and override image width.
Use this to set and override image height.
Use this to set and override image processing flags.
Call parameters: PSGI request HashRef $env, Str $basename. Return value: PSGI response ArrayRef $res.
The original image is fetched from the next layer or application. All possible extensions defined in "orig_ext" are tried in order, to search for the original image. All other responses except a straight 404 (as returned by Plack::Middleware::Static for example) are considered matches.
Call parameters: @args. Return value: PSGI content filter CodeRef $cb.
Create the content filter callback and return a CodeRef to it. The filter will
buffer the data and call "image_scale" with parameters @args
when EOF is
received, and finally return the converted data.
Call parameters: ScalarRef $buffer, String $ct, Int $width, Int $height, HashRef|Str $flags. Return value: $imagedata
Read image from $buffer, scale it to $width x $height and return as content-type $ct. Optional $flags to specify image processing options like background fills or cropping.
The default match pattern for URI is "..._width_x_height-flags.ext".
If URI doesn't match, the request is passed through. Any number of flags can
be specified, separated with -
. Flags can be boolean (exists or doesn't
exist), or have a numerical value. Flag name and value are separated with a
zero-width word to number boundary. For example z20
specifies flag z
with value 20
.
Width of the output image. If not defined, it can be anything (to preserve the image aspect ratio).
Height of the output image. If not defined, it can be anything (to preserve the image aspect ratio).
Image aspect ratio is preserved by scaling the image to fit within the specified size. This means scaling to the smaller or the two possible sizes that preserve aspect ratio. Extra borders of background color are added to fill the requested image size exactly.
/images/foo_400x200-fill.png
If fill has a value, it specifies the background color to use. Undefined color with png output means transparent background.
Image aspect ratio is preserved by scaling and cropping from middle of the image. This means scaling to the bigger of the two possible sizes that preserve the aspect ratio, and then cropping to the exact size.
Image aspect ratio is preserved by scaling the image to the smaller of the two possible sizes. This means that the resulting picture may have one dimension smaller than specified, but cropping or filling is avoided.
See documentation in distribution directory doc
for a visual explanation.
Zoom the original image N percent bigger. For example z20
to zoom 20%.
Zooming applies only to explicitly defined width and/or height, and it does
not change the crop size.
/images/foo_40x-z20.png
## see example4.psgi
my %imagesize = Config::General->new('imagesize.conf')->getall;
# ...
enable 'Image::Scale', size => \%imagesize;
A request to /images/foo_medium.png will use images/foo.(png|jpg|gif|jpeg) as original. The size and flags are taken from the configuration file as parsed by Config::General.
## imagesize.conf
<medium>
width 200
height 100
crop
</medium>
<big>
width 300
height 100
crop
</big>
<thumbred>
width 50
height 100
fill ff0000
</thumbred>
For more examples, browse into directory eg inside the distribution directory for this version.
The cropping requires Imager. This is a run-time dependency, and fallback is not to crop the image to the expected size.
Panu Ervamaa <pnu@cpan.org>
This software is copyright (c) 2011-2016 by Panu Ervamaa.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.