# JPEG tests # Images of various sizes. == jpg-size-1x1.jpg jpg-size-1x1.png == jpg-size-2x2.jpg jpg-size-2x2.png == jpg-size-3x3.jpg jpg-size-3x3.png == jpg-size-4x4.jpg jpg-size-4x4.png == jpg-size-5x5.jpg jpg-size-5x5.png == jpg-size-6x6.jpg jpg-size-6x6.png == jpg-size-7x7.jpg jpg-size-7x7.png == jpg-size-8x8.jpg jpg-size-8x8.png == jpg-size-9x9.jpg jpg-size-9x9.png == jpg-size-15x15.jpg jpg-size-15x15.png == jpg-size-16x16.jpg jpg-size-16x16.png == jpg-size-17x17.jpg jpg-size-17x17.png == jpg-size-31x31.jpg jpg-size-31x31.png == jpg-size-32x32.jpg jpg-size-32x32.png == jpg-size-33x33.jpg jpg-size-33x33.png # Progressive encoding == jpg-progressive.jpg jpg-progressive.png # Grayscale colorspace == jpg-gray.jpg jpg-gray.png # CMYK colorspace == jpg-cmyk-1.jpg jpg-cmyk-1.png == jpg-cmyk-2.jpg jpg-cmyk-2.png # This intermittently fails on Android due to async image decoding (bug #685516) # Sometimes the image decodes in time and the test passes, other times the image # appears blank and the test fails. This only seems to be triggered since the # switch to 24-bit colour (bug #803299). random-if(Android) == jpg-srgb-icc.jpg jpg-srgb-icc.png # webcam-simulacrum.mjpg is a hand-edited file containing red.jpg and blue.jpg, # concatenated together with the relevant headers for # multipart/x-mixed-replace. Specifically, with the headers in # webcam-simulacrum.mjpg^headers^, the web browser will get the following: # # HTTP 200 OK # Content-Type: multipart/x-mixed-replace;boundary=BOUNDARYOMG # # --BOUNDARYOMG\r\n # Content-Type: image/jpeg\r\n # \r\n # (no newline) # --BOUNDARYOMG\r\n # Content-Type: image/jpeg\r\n # \r\n # (no newline) # --BOUNDARYOMG--\r\n # # (The boundary is arbitrary, and just has to be defined as something that # won't be in the text of the contents themselves. --$(boundary)\r\n means # "Here is the beginning of a boundary," and --$(boundary)-- means "All done # sending you parts.") HTTP == webcam-simulacrum.mjpg blue.jpg # Same as the above but as img elements in html files to get better test # coverage of multipart images. # Images loaded at the top level are actually loaded into an ImageDocument # which is a slim html document wrapper around the image. # Multipart images send multiple OnStartRequest's, each OnStartRequest causes # us to create a new ImageDocument to show the next part. # This differs from displaying a multipart image in an img element in a regular # document where we use the same document and same elements and same layout # frames for each part. So we have this testcase to test those different # codepaths. HTTP == webcam-simulacrum.html blue.html == non-interleaved_progressive-1.jpg non-interleaved_progressive-1-halfred-ref.png == non-interleaved_progressive-2.jpg non-interleaved_progressive-2-white-ref.png