Java headless bicubic image resize

Omry Yadan picture Omry Yadan · Dec 26, 2010 · Viewed 7k times · Source

I need to perform java image crop and resize without an X server.

I tried several methods. the first method below works, but outputs a fairly ugly resized image (probably using nearest neighbor algorithm for the resize:

static BufferedImage createResizedCopy(Image originalImage, int scaledWidth, int scaledHeight, boolean preserveAlpha)
{
    int imageType = preserveAlpha ? BufferedImage.TYPE_INT_RGB : BufferedImage.TYPE_INT_ARGB;
    BufferedImage scaledBI = new BufferedImage(scaledWidth, scaledHeight, imageType);
    Graphics2D g = scaledBI.createGraphics();
    if (preserveAlpha)
    {
        g.setComposite(AlphaComposite.Src);
    }
    g.drawImage(originalImage, 0, 0, scaledWidth, scaledHeight, null);
    g.dispose();
    return scaledBI;
}

So I decided to use bicubic resize, which gives better results:

public static BufferedImage createResizedCopy(BufferedImage source, int destWidth, int destHeight, Object interpolation)
{
    if (source == null) throw new NullPointerException("source image is NULL!");
    if (destWidth <= 0 && destHeight <= 0) throw new IllegalArgumentException("destination width & height are both <=0!");
    int sourceWidth = source.getWidth();
    int sourceHeight = source.getHeight();
    double xScale = ((double) destWidth) / (double) sourceWidth;
    double yScale = ((double) destHeight) / (double) sourceHeight;
    if (destWidth <= 0)
    {
        xScale = yScale;
        destWidth = (int) Math.rint(xScale * sourceWidth);
    }
    if (destHeight <= 0)
    {
        yScale = xScale;
        destHeight = (int) Math.rint(yScale * sourceHeight);
    }
    GraphicsConfiguration gc = getDefaultConfiguration();
    BufferedImage result = gc.createCompatibleImage(destWidth, destHeight, source.getColorModel().getTransparency());
    Graphics2D g2d = null;
    try
    {
        g2d = result.createGraphics();
        g2d.setRenderingHint(RenderingHints.KEY_INTERPOLATION, interpolation);
        AffineTransform at = AffineTransform.getScaleInstance(xScale, yScale);
        g2d.drawRenderedImage(source, at);
    }
    finally
    {
        if (g2d != null) g2d.dispose();
    }
    return result;
}

public static GraphicsConfiguration getDefaultConfiguration()
{
    GraphicsEnvironment ge = GraphicsEnvironment.getLocalGraphicsEnvironment();
    GraphicsDevice gd = ge.getDefaultScreenDevice();
    return gd.getDefaultConfiguration();
}

This worked fine until I tried to put it on the server, and at this point I bumped into java.awt.HeadlessException. my attempts to play with java.awt.headless=true failed.

So, here is the question: How do I resize and crop and image in Java without an X server, using a bicubic interpolation algorithm?

Answer: Using the code from Bozho comment, I created this function which does the trick (interpolation should be RenderingHints.VALUE_INTERPOLATION_*).

public static BufferedImage createResizedCopy(BufferedImage source, int destWidth, int destHeight, Object interpolation)
{
    BufferedImage bicubic = new BufferedImage(destWidth, destHeight, source.getType());
    Graphics2D bg = bicubic.createGraphics();
    bg.setRenderingHint(RenderingHints.KEY_INTERPOLATION, interpolation);
    float sx = (float)destWidth / source.getWidth();
    float sy = (float)destHeight / source.getHeight();
    bg.scale(sx, sy);
    bg.drawImage(source, 0, 0, null);
    bg.dispose();
    return bicubic;
}

Answer

Bozho picture Bozho · Dec 26, 2010

Check this code. Also check if Image.getScaledInstance(..) (with "smooth" scaling) doesn't solve the problem. And finally, take a look at the java-image-scaling-library.