magick implements image manipulation routines based on the ImageMagick MagickCore C library in Go. It is an opinionated high level wrapper around the proven ImageMagick lib.
Though Go's stdlib includes utilities for working with images, ImageMagick is one of the industry standards, not only in its relative ease-of-use for simple operations (like thumbnailing) but also in it's smart anti-aliasing and other proven techniques. We wanted to utilize the fast and conccurent environment that Go provides with the known and reliable output of what we were already seeing with ImageMagick.
There are other libraries that wrap ImageMagick or related libraries, but we were looking/aiming for something that had simple functions that handled the most common operations, that we wanted needed in our web applications: Thumbnailing (Resizing/Cropping), adding shadows, converting to jpg, etc.
One of the major bottlenecks we saw in our previous image pipeline was the reading and writing from disk (IO). We wanted to build our new pipeline around the idea that images could be read and manipulated from memory (or non-disk storage i.e. a database). This allows an image to be transformed without ever touching disk.
With files:
image, err := magick.NewFromFile("input.png")
defer image.Destroy()
err = image.Resize("400x200")
err = image.Shadow("#F00", 255, 5, 2, 2)
err = image.FillBackgroundColor("#00F")
err = image.ToFile("output.jpg")
With BLOBs:
image, err := magick.NewFromBlob(a_byteslice, "png")
defer image.Destroy()
err = image.Resize("400x200")
err = image.Shadow("#F00", 255, 5, 2, 2)
err = image.FillBackgroundColor("#00F")
a_new_byteslice, err = image.ToBlob("jpg")
For full API see the API docs
magick has been thorougly tested and is memory-leak free as long as you always Destroy()
MagickImage's after you no longer need them.
Internally, MagickCore can be used concurrently without issues, though weve observed crashes/issues with concurrent usage when ImageMagick is compiled with OpenMP on OS X (this happens to be the default with homebrew). Mileage may vary.
- Text rendering
- compositing two images
magick depends on ImageMagick and specifically the MagickCore C library. In most linux environments this is included in the ImageMagick-devel packages (e.g. yum install ImageMagick-devel
or sudo aptitude install ImageMagick-devel
).
magick is written and maintained by Aaron Quint (@aq) and Mike Bernstein (@mrb_bk)