php-vips
is a binding for libvips 8.7
and later that runs on PHP 7.4 and later.
libvips is fast and needs little memory. The
vips-php-bench
repository
tests php-vips
against imagick
and gd
. On that test, and on my laptop,
php-vips
is around four times faster than imagick
and needs 10 times
less memory.
Programs that use libvips don't manipulate images directly, instead they create pipelines of image processing operations starting from a source image. When the pipe is connected to a destination, the whole pipeline executes at once and in parallel, streaming the image from source to destination in a set of small fragments.
You need to install the libvips library. It's in the linux package managers, homebrew and MacPorts, and there are Windows binaries on the vips website. For example, on Debian:
sudo apt-get install --no-install-recommends libvips42
(--no-install-recommends
stops Debian installing a lot of extra packages)
Or macOS:
brew install vips
You'll need to enable FFI in your
PHP, then add vips
to your composer.json
:
"require": {
"jcupitt/vips" : "2.4.0"
}
php-vips does not yet support preloading, so you need to enable FFI globally. This has some security implications, since anyone who can run php on your server can use it to call any native library they have access to.
Of course if attackers are running their own PHP code on your webserver you are probably already toast, unfortunately.
Finally, on php 8.3 and later you need to disable stack overflow tests. php-vips executes FFI callbacks off the main thread and this confuses those checks, at least in php 8.3.0.
Add:
zend.max_allowed_stack_size=-1
To your php.ini
.
#!/usr/bin/env php
<?php
require __DIR__ . '/vendor/autoload.php';
use Jcupitt\Vips;
// fast thumbnail generator
$image = Vips\Image::thumbnail('somefile.jpg', 128);
$image->writeToFile('tiny.jpg');
// load an image, get fields, process, save
$image = Vips\Image::newFromFile($argv[1]);
echo "width = $image->width\n";
$image = $image->invert();
$image->writeToFile($argv[2]);
Run with:
$ composer install
$ ./try1.php ~/pics/k2.jpg x.tif
See examples/
. We have a complete set of formatted API
docs.
php-vips uses php-ffi to
call directly into the libvips binary. It introspects the library binary
and presents the methods it finds as members of the Image
class.
This means that the API you see depends on the version of libvips that php-vips finds at runtime, and not on php-vips. php-vips documentation assumes you are using the latest stable version of the libvips library.
The previous php-vips version that relied on a binary extension and not on php-ffi is still available and supported in the 1.x branch.
Almost all methods return a new image as the result, so you can chain them. For example:
$new_image = $image->more(12)->ifthenelse(255, $image);
will make a mask of pixels greater than 12, then use the mask to set pixels to either 255 or the original image.
Note that libvips operators always make new images, they don't modify existing
images, so after the line above, $image
is unchanged.
You can use long, double, array and image as parameters. For example:
$image = $image->add(2);
to add two to every band element, or:
$image = $image->add([1, 2, 3]);
to add 1 to the first band, 2 to the second and 3 to the third. Or:
$image = $image->add($image2);
to add two images. Or:
$image = $image->add([[1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6]]);
To make a 3 x 2 image from the array, then add that image to the original.
Almost all methods can take an extra final argument: an array of options. For example:
$image->writeToFile("fred.jpg", ["Q" => 90]);
php-vips
comes with API
docs.
To regenerate these from your sources, type:
$ vendor/bin/phpdoc
And look in docs/
.
Unfortunatly, due to php-doc limitations, these do not list every option to every operation. For a full API description you need to see the main libvips documentation:
https://libvips.org/API/current
$ composer install
$ composer test
$ vendor/bin/phpdoc
$ cd src
$ ../examples/generate_phpdoc.py