speedtest-resize

Compare various Image resize algorithms for the Go language

  • Owner: fawick/speedtest-resize
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speedtest-resize

Compare various Image resize algorithms for the Go language

I am writing a web gallery called gonagall in Go
(https://github.com/fawick/gonagall). For that, I need a efficient solution for
scaling and resizing a lot of images (mostly JPGs) to generate thumbnails and
bandwidth-friendly sized copies from high-resolution original photo files.

In this project I compare the speed of a few selected image resizing algorithms
with each other as well as with ImageMagick and GraphicsMagick. The competitors
are

Installation

To run the tests go get the source and compile/run it:

$ go get -u github.com/fawick/speedtest-resize -tags all
$ cd $GOPATH/src/speedtest-resize
$ go run main.go <jpg file folder>

Alternatively, call the go command (or the compiled binary) from the image
folder without supplying a parameter

$ cd <jpg file folder>
$ go run $GOPATH/src/speedtest-resize/main.go

A the package requires different 3rdparty libraries to be installed, you can
use build tags to control what libraries to use. The following build tags are
available:, Tag, Description, -----------, -------------------------------------------------------, opencv, Include lazywei/go-opencv in the tests., imagick, Include gographics/imagick in the tests., vips, Include DAddYE/vips in the tests., fastjpeg, Include camlistore/fastjpeg in the tests., all, An alias for opencv imagick fastjpeg vips., nopure, Don't include the Pure Golang packages, noexec, Don't run the tests that execute other programs., The default go get without any tags will try the packages that are pure go
and the external programs but not use any non-Go library.

Benchmark

Im my test scenario all of these tools/packages are unleashed on a directory
containing JPG photo files, all of which have a resolution of 5616x3744 pixels
(aspect ratio 2:1, both landscape and portrait).

For each tool/package and for all files, the total time for loading the
original file, scaling the image to a thumbnail of 150x100 pixels, and writing
it to a new JPG file is measured. In the end, the total runtime for processing
the 10 first files and the average time per file is printed for each
tool/package.

The scenario is run on a Intel(R) Pentium(R) Dual T2390 @ 1.86GHz running
Ubuntu 14.04. Here are the results:, Table, Time (avg.), Size (avg.), Pure Go, -----------------------, ------------:, ------------:, :-------:, vipsthumbnail, 0.120s, 0.065%, ImageMagick_thumbnail, 0.326s, 0.242%, vips, 0.339s, 0.100%, magickwand_box, 1.148s, 0.538%, ImageMagick_resize, 2.316s, 0.626%, rez_bilinear, 2.913s, 0.053%, X, Nfnt_NearestNeighbor, 3.498s, 0.057%, X, imaging_box, 4.734s, 0.057%, X, gift_box, 4.746s, 0.057%, X, --------

Yet another scenario ran by lazywei, 2.5GHz Intel Core i5, Mac OS X 10.9.1:, Tables, Average time per file, --------------------, ----------------------:, magickwand_box, 155.371531ms, imaging_Box, 463.459339ms, Nfnt_NearestNeighbor, 1.436507946s, OpenCv, 97.353041ms, --------

Yet another scenario ran by bamiaux, 3.3GHz Intel Core i5, win 7:, Tables, Average time per file, --------------------, ----------------------:, rez_bilinear, 148ms, imaging_Box, 243ms, Nfnt_NearestNeighbor, 233ms, --------

A new scenario ran by nono, 3.4GHz Intel Core i7, Ubuntu 16.10:, Table, Time (file avg.), Size (file avg.), Pure Go, --------------------------------, -----------------:, -----------------:, :-------:, ImageMagick_thumbnail, 0.057s, 0.361%, vips, 0.070s, 0.260%, epeg, 0.079s, 0.207%, fastjpeg, 0.082s, 0.186%, opencv, 0.110s, 0.597%, vipsthumbnail, 0.115s, 0.441%, GraphicsMagick_thumbnail, 0.172s, 0.427%, magickwand_box, 0.190s, 0.575%, T-REZ, 0.204s, 0.323%, rez_bilinear, 0.349s, 0.140%, X, x_image_draw, 0.370s, 0.160%, X, imaging_box, 0.439s, 0.146%, X, gift_box, 0.440s, 0.146%, X, Nfnt_NearestNeighbor, 0.447s, 0.146%, X, bild_resize, 0.515s, 0.206%, X, ImageMagick_resize, 0.568s, 0.542%, --------

So, what is to learn from that? While all of the currently existing
pure-Go-language solutions do a pretty good job in generating good-looking
thumbnails, they are much slower than the veteran dedicated image processing
toolboxes. That is hardly surprising, given that both ImageMagick and
GraphicsMagick have been around for decades and have been optimized to work as
efficient as possible. Go and its image processing packages are still the new
kids on the block, and while they work pretty neat for the occasional tweak of
an image or two, I rather not use them as the default image processor in
gonagall yet.

I was surprised to find that GraphicsMagick was slower than ImageMagick in my
test scenario, as I expected it to be exactly the other way around with
GraphicsMagick's fancy multi-processor algorithms.

While the imagick Wrapper is written in Go, it uses CGO bindings of the C
MagickWand API. It outperforms the pure-Go approaches (five times faster than
http://github.com/disintegration/imaging) but it still slower than calling
ImageMagick in an external process. Of the above 1.13 seconds, only around 275
millisecs were used for resizing and saving an individual file, while over 850
ms were used by simply loading the file. I wonder how much optimization can
still be done in the imagick loading routines.

Holy cow! vipsthumbnail is blazing fast.

Main metrics

Overview
Name With Ownerfawick/speedtest-resize
Primary LanguageGo
Program languageGo (Language Count: 1)
Platform
License:Other
所有者活动
Created At2013-09-16 12:40:05
Pushed At2020-10-28 16:26:39
Last Commit At2020-10-28 17:26:38
Release Count1
Last Release Namev0.0.1 (Posted on )
First Release Namev0.0.1 (Posted on )
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Stargazers Count242
Watchers Count8
Fork Count18
Commits Count57
Has Issues Enabled
Issues Count10
Issue Open Count0
Pull Requests Count8
Pull Requests Open Count1
Pull Requests Close Count0
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