4

I'm writing some code for converting android bitmap to NV12 format.

I found code that gives me NV21 from android bitmap, and it seems that the code works. (Convert bitmap array to YUV (YCbCr NV21))

Only difference I found is to switch U and V byte between NV12 and NV21 according to reference. (http://www.fourcc.org/yuv.php)

So I changed the position of U and V from original code, and then the result is like following.

byte [] getNV12(int inputWidth, int inputHeight, Bitmap scaled) {
    // Reference (Variation) : https://gist.github.com/wobbals/5725412

    int [] argb = new int[inputWidth * inputHeight];

    //Log.i(TAG, "scaled : " + scaled);
    scaled.getPixels(argb, 0, inputWidth, 0, 0, inputWidth, inputHeight);

    byte [] yuv = new byte[inputWidth*inputHeight*3/2];
    encodeYUV420SP(yuv, argb, inputWidth, inputHeight);

    scaled.recycle();

    return yuv;
}

void encodeYUV420SP(byte[] yuv420sp, int[] argb, int width, int height) {
    final int frameSize = width * height;

    int yIndex = 0;
    int uvIndex = frameSize;

    int a, R, G, B, Y, U, V;
    int index = 0;
    for (int j = 0; j < height; j++) {
        for (int i = 0; i < width; i++) {

            a = (argb[index] & 0xff000000) >> 24; // a is not used obviously
        R = (argb[index] & 0xff0000) >> 16;
            G = (argb[index] & 0xff00) >> 8;
            B = (argb[index] & 0xff) >> 0;

        // well known RGB to YUV algorithm
        Y = ( (  66 * R + 129 * G +  25 * B + 128) >> 8) +  16;
        V = ( ( -38 * R -  74 * G + 112 * B + 128) >> 8) + 128; // Previously U
        U = ( ( 112 * R -  94 * G -  18 * B + 128) >> 8) + 128; // Previously V

        yuv420sp[yIndex++] = (byte) ((Y < 0) ? 0 : ((Y > 255) ? 255 : Y));
        if (j % 2 == 0 && index % 2 == 0) { 
            yuv420sp[uvIndex++] = (byte)((V<0) ? 0 : ((V > 255) ? 255 : V));
            yuv420sp[uvIndex++] = (byte)((U<0) ? 0 : ((U > 255) ? 255 : U));
        }

        index ++;
        }
    }
}

Am I wrong in converting images? (I'm pretty sure that encoder has no problem.)

Broken image screenshot : https://www.dropbox.com/s/vho14831fgnh1kl/Thu%20Aug%2001%2008_56_14%20GMT%2B09_00%202013%20%281%29.mp4_000002000.jpg

3 Answers 3

1

Replace

a = (argb[index] & 0xff000000) >> 24; // a is not used obviously
 R = (argb[index] & 0xff0000) >> 16;
 G = (argb[index] & 0xff00) >> 8;
 B = (argb[index] & 0xff) >> 0;

with,

R = (argb[index] & 0xff000000) >>> 24;
G = (argb[index] & 0xff0000) >> 16;
B = (argb[index] & 0xff00) >> 8;
0
1

you can just use

R = Color.red(argb[index]);
G = Color.green(argb[index]);
B = Color.blue(argb[index]);

rest of your code works great.

0

I was using the same code for creating video using mediaEncoder from camera images. There was an issue of color ( for example images look here) in the generated video. It seems mediaEncoder supports few formats (Ref - Q5)

So had to convert it to N12 (or I420 format), I modified the above code like this based on wikipedia article

int uIndex = frameSize;
int vIndex = frameSize + frameSize/4;

....
     yuv420sp[uIndex++] = (byte)((U<0) ? 0 : ((U > 255) ? 255 : U));
     yuv420sp[vIndex++] = (byte)((V<0) ? 0 : ((V > 255) ? 255 : V));
...

Now the generated video seems to be working fine.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service, privacy policy and cookie policy

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.