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root/radiance/ray/doc/man/man1/normtiff.1
Revision: 1.3
Committed: Tue Jun 14 22:23:30 2005 UTC (18 years, 10 months ago) by greg
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: rad3R7P2, rad3R7P1, rad3R8
Changes since 1.2: +3 -0 lines
Log Message:
Added -z option to normtiff to output LZW-compressed TIFFs

File Contents

# Content
1 .TH NORMTIFF 1 2/25/99 RADIANCE
2 .SH NAME
3 normtiff - tone-map and convert RADIANCE picture or HDR TIFF to standard TIFF
4 .SH SYNOPSIS
5 .B normtiff
6 [
7 .B options
8 ]
9 .B input
10 .B output.tif
11 .SH DESCRIPTION
12 .I Normtiff
13 prepares a Radiance picture or high dynamic-range TIFF
14 for output to a display or hard copy device.
15 If the dynamic range of the scene exceeds that of the display (as is
16 usually the case),
17 .I normtiff
18 will compress the dynamic range of the picture such that both
19 dark and bright regions are visible.
20 In addition, certain limitations in human vision may be mimicked in
21 order to provide an appearance similar to the experience one might
22 have in the actual scene.
23 .PP
24 Output is always an uncompressed RGB TIFF, which must be named
25 on the command line along with the input file.
26 If the input file has a ".tif" or ".tiff" extension,
27 .I normtiff
28 attempts to read it as a TIFF.
29 Otherwise,
30 .I normtiff
31 first tries opening it as a RADIANCE picture, only opening it
32 as a TIFF if it fails header inspection.
33 (See the
34 .I getinfo(1)
35 program.)\0
36 If the input is neither a RADIANCE picture nor a high dynamic-range TIFF,
37 the program reports an error and exits.
38 .PP
39 The following command line options are understood.
40 Since this program is very similar to
41 .I pcond(1),
42 several of the switches are identical.
43 .TP 10n
44 .BR -b
45 Toggle 8-bit black and white (grayscale) TIFF output.
46 If the input is a grayscale TIFF, this switch is
47 automatically selected.
48 Otherwise, the output defaults to 24-bit RGB.
49 .TP
50 .BR -z
51 Output LZW-compressed TIFF (smaller file).
52 .TP
53 .BR -h
54 Mimic human visual response in the output.
55 The goal of this process is to produce output that correlates
56 strongly with a person's subjective impression of a scene.
57 This switch turns on both the
58 .I \-s
59 and
60 .I \-c
61 switches, described below.
62 .TP
63 .BR -s
64 Toggle the use of the human contrast sensitivity function in determining the
65 exposure for the image.
66 A darker scene will have relatively lower exposure with lower
67 contrast than a well-lit scene.
68 .TP
69 .BR -c
70 Toggle mesopic color correction.
71 If parts of the image are in the mesopic or scotopic range where
72 the cone photoreceptors lose their efficiency, this switch will
73 cause a corresponding loss of color visibility in the output and a
74 shift to a scotopic (blue-dominant) response function.
75 .TP
76 .BR -l
77 Toggle the use of a linear response function versus the standard dynamic
78 range compression algorithm.
79 This may make some parts of the resulting image too
80 dark or too bright to see.
81 .TP
82 .BI -u \ Ldmax
83 Specifies the top of the luminance range for the target output device.
84 That is, the luminance (in candelas/m^2) for an output pixel value
85 of (R,G,B)=(255,255,255).
86 This parameter affects tone mapping only when the
87 .I \-s
88 switch is on.
89 The default value is 100 cd/m^2.
90 .TP
91 .BI -d \ Lddyn
92 Specifies the dynamic range for the target output device, which is
93 the ratio of the maximum and minimum usable display luminances.
94 The default value is 32, which is typical for CRT monitors.
95 .TP
96 .BI -p " xr yr xg yg xb yb xw yw"
97 Specifies the RGB primaries for the target output device.
98 These are the 1931 CIE (x,y) chromaticity values for red, green,
99 blue and white, respectively.
100 .TP
101 .BI -g \ gamma
102 Specifies the output device gamma correction value.
103 The default value is 2.2, which is appropriate for most CRT monitors.
104 (A value of 1.8 is common in color prepress and color printers.)\0
105 .SH EXAMPLES
106 To convert a RADIANCE picture to an 8-bit grayscale TIFF:
107 .IP "" .2i
108 normtiff -b scene.pic sceneb.tif
109 .PP
110 To condition a high dynamic-range TIFF for a particular film recorder with
111 known color primaries, dynamic range and gamma response:
112 .IP "" .2i
113 pcond -d 50 -g 2.5 -p .580 .340 .281 .570 .153 .079 .333 .333 orig.tif filmrgb.tif
114 .PP
115 To simulate human visual response on a monitor with known maximum luminance:
116 .IP "" .2i
117 normtiff -h -u 80 scene.pic sceneh.tif
118 .SH REFERENCE
119 Greg Ward Larson, Holly Rushmeier, Christine Piatko,
120 ``A Visibility Matching Tone Reproduction Operator for High Dynamic Range
121 Scenes,''
122 .I "IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics",
123 December 1997.
124 .PP
125 http://positron.cs.berkeley.edu/gwlarson/pixformat/
126 .SH AUTHOR
127 Greg Ward Larson
128 .SH ACKNOWLEDGMENT
129 This work was supported by Silicon Graphics, Inc.
130 .SH "SEE ALSO"
131 getinfo(1), pcond(1), pflip(1),
132 pvalue(1), protate(1), ra_xyze(1), rpict(1), ximage(1)