36

I've implemented a simple application which shows the camera picture on the screen. What I like to do now is grab a single frame and process it as bitmap. From what I could find out to this point it is not an easy thing to do.

I've tried using the onPreviewFrame method with which you get the current frame as a byte array and tried to decode it with the BitmapFactory class but it returns null. The format of the frame is a headerless YUV which could be translated to bitmap but it takes too long on a phone. Also I've read that the onPreviewFrame method has contraints on the runtime, if it takes too long the application could crash.

So what is the right way to do this?

2
  • Using ffmpeg we can do it in native code.
    – Vinay
    Dec 14, 2009 at 15:15
  • Hi @Vinay, am trying it from so many days but still no result, if you wrked on it then can you please refer this stackoverflow.com/questions/11322952/… i did untill this, if you want to refer coe then i will push it to git. Jul 7, 2012 at 6:20

5 Answers 5

34

Ok what we ended up doing is using the onPreviewFrame method and decoding the data in a seperate Thread using a method which can be found in the android help group.

decodeYUV(argb8888, data, camSize.width, camSize.height);
Bitmap bitmap = Bitmap.createBitmap(argb8888, camSize.width,
                    camSize.height, Config.ARGB_8888);

...

// decode Y, U, and V values on the YUV 420 buffer described as YCbCr_422_SP by Android 
// David Manpearl 081201 
public void decodeYUV(int[] out, byte[] fg, int width, int height)
        throws NullPointerException, IllegalArgumentException {
    int sz = width * height;
    if (out == null)
        throw new NullPointerException("buffer out is null");
    if (out.length < sz)
        throw new IllegalArgumentException("buffer out size " + out.length
                + " < minimum " + sz);
    if (fg == null)
        throw new NullPointerException("buffer 'fg' is null");
    if (fg.length < sz)
        throw new IllegalArgumentException("buffer fg size " + fg.length
                + " < minimum " + sz * 3 / 2);
    int i, j;
    int Y, Cr = 0, Cb = 0;
    for (j = 0; j < height; j++) {
        int pixPtr = j * width;
        final int jDiv2 = j >> 1;
        for (i = 0; i < width; i++) {
            Y = fg[pixPtr];
            if (Y < 0)
                Y += 255;
            if ((i & 0x1) != 1) {
                final int cOff = sz + jDiv2 * width + (i >> 1) * 2;
                Cb = fg[cOff];
                if (Cb < 0)
                    Cb += 127;
                else
                    Cb -= 128;
                Cr = fg[cOff + 1];
                if (Cr < 0)
                    Cr += 127;
                else
                    Cr -= 128;
            }
            int R = Y + Cr + (Cr >> 2) + (Cr >> 3) + (Cr >> 5);
            if (R < 0)
                R = 0;
            else if (R > 255)
                R = 255;
            int G = Y - (Cb >> 2) + (Cb >> 4) + (Cb >> 5) - (Cr >> 1)
                    + (Cr >> 3) + (Cr >> 4) + (Cr >> 5);
            if (G < 0)
                G = 0;
            else if (G > 255)
                G = 255;
            int B = Y + Cb + (Cb >> 1) + (Cb >> 2) + (Cb >> 6);
            if (B < 0)
                B = 0;
            else if (B > 255)
                B = 255;
            out[pixPtr++] = 0xff000000 + (B << 16) + (G << 8) + R;
        }
    }

}

Link: http://groups.google.com/group/android-developers/browse_thread/thread/c85e829ab209ceea/3f180a16a4872b58?lnk=gst&q=onpreviewframe#3f180a16a4872b58

9
  • 2
    Hey Alexander, are you doing any other processing or voodoo magic in the background? I've tried this and end up with an image like this: dl.dropbox.com/u/6620976/image.jpg. Any insight is appreciated.
    – Brian D
    Feb 28, 2011 at 19:26
  • Nevermind! I just needed to define my surface's width and height and it all works great. Thanks for posting this up!
    – Brian D
    Feb 28, 2011 at 20:02
  • @Brian D: I am facing the same problem, can you please show me your surface code?
    – Mudassir
    May 23, 2011 at 5:12
  • 1
    For a native implementation, one can look at libyuv.
    – auselen
    Sep 16, 2012 at 21:25
  • 2
    What is the array "argb8888" that must be passed to the decodeYUV method?
    – user140888
    Apr 9, 2015 at 10:38
14

In API 17+, you can do conversion to RGBA888 from NV21 with the 'ScriptIntrinsicYuvToRGB' RenderScript. This allows you to easily process preview frames without manually encoding/decoding frames:

@Override 
public void onPreviewFrame(byte[] data, Camera camera) { 
   Bitmap bitmap = Bitmap.createBitmap(r.width(), r.height(), Bitmap.Config.ARGB_8888);
    Allocation bmData = renderScriptNV21ToRGBA888(
        mContext,
        r.width(),
        r.height(),
        data);
    bmData.copyTo(bitmap);
}

public Allocation renderScriptNV21ToRGBA888(Context context, int width, int height, byte[] nv21) {
  RenderScript rs = RenderScript.create(context);
  ScriptIntrinsicYuvToRGB yuvToRgbIntrinsic = ScriptIntrinsicYuvToRGB.create(rs, Element.U8_4(rs));

  Type.Builder yuvType = new Type.Builder(rs, Element.U8(rs)).setX(nv21.length);
  Allocation in = Allocation.createTyped(rs, yuvType.create(), Allocation.USAGE_SCRIPT);

  Type.Builder rgbaType = new Type.Builder(rs, Element.RGBA_8888(rs)).setX(width).setY(height);
  Allocation out = Allocation.createTyped(rs, rgbaType.create(), Allocation.USAGE_SCRIPT);

  in.copyFrom(nv21);

  yuvToRgbIntrinsic.setInput(in);
  yuvToRgbIntrinsic.forEach(out);
  return out;
}
11

I actually tried the code given the previous answer found that the Colorvalues are not exact. I checked it by taking both the preview and the camera.takePicture which directly returns a JPEG array. And the colors were very different. After a little bit more searching I found another example to convert the PreviewImage from YCrCb to RGB:

static public void decodeYUV420SP(int[] rgb, byte[] yuv420sp, int width, int height) {
    final int frameSize = width * height;

    for (int j = 0, yp = 0; j < height; j++) {
        int uvp = frameSize + (j >> 1) * width, u = 0, v = 0;
        for (int i = 0; i < width; i++, yp++) {
            int y = (0xff & ((int) yuv420sp[yp])) - 16;
            if (y < 0) y = 0;
            if ((i & 1) == 0) {
                v = (0xff & yuv420sp[uvp++]) - 128;
                u = (0xff & yuv420sp[uvp++]) - 128;
            }
            int y1192 = 1192 * y;
            int r = (y1192 + 1634 * v);
            int g = (y1192 - 833 * v - 400 * u);
            int b = (y1192 + 2066 * u);

            if (r < 0) r = 0; else if (r > 262143) r = 262143;
            if (g < 0) g = 0; else if (g > 262143) g = 262143;
            if (b < 0) b = 0; else if (b > 262143) b = 262143;

            rgb[yp] = 0xff000000 | ((r << 6) & 0xff0000) | ((g >> 2) & 0xff00) | ((b >> 10) & 0xff);
        }
    }
}

The color values given by this and the takePicture() exactly match. I thought I should post it here. This is where I got this code from. Hope this helps.

1
  • 3
    Thanks - I ended up using the code in post #37 instead (it was posted long after this answer was, but for those of us in the future it works nicely).
    – Matt
    Apr 12, 2013 at 15:06
2

Tim's RenderScript solution is great. Two comments here though:

  1. Create and reuse RenderScript rs, and Allocation in, out. Creating them every frame will hurt the performance.
  2. RenderScript support library can help you back support to Android 2.3.
0

I don't see any of the answers better in performance than the built-in way to convert it. You can get the bitmap using this.

        Camera.Parameters params = camera.getParameters();
        Camera.Size previewsize = params.getPreviewSize();
        YuvImage yuv = new YuvImage(data, ImageFormat.NV21, previewsize.width, previewsize.height, null);
        ByteArrayOutputStream stream = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
        
        yuv.compressToJpeg(new Rect(0,0,previewsize.width, previewsize.height), 100, stream);

        byte[] buf = stream.toByteArray();
        Bitmap bitmap = BitmapFactory.decodeByteArray(buf, 0, buf.length);

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