node-canvas =========== ### Canvas graphics API backed by Cairo [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/Automattic/node-canvas.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/Automattic/node-canvas) [![NPM version](https://badge.fury.io/js/canvas.svg)](http://badge.fury.io/js/canvas) node-canvas is a [Cairo](http://cairographics.org/) backed Canvas implementation for [NodeJS](http://nodejs.org). ## Authors - TJ Holowaychuk ([visionmedia](http://github.com/visionmedia)) - Nathan Rajlich ([TooTallNate](http://github.com/TooTallNate)) - Rod Vagg ([rvagg](http://github.com/rvagg)) - Juriy Zaytsev ([kangax](http://github.com/kangax)) ## Installation ```bash $ npm install canvas ``` Unless previously installed you'll _need_ __Cairo__. For system-specific installation view the [Wiki](https://github.com/LearnBoost/node-canvas/wiki/_pages). You can quickly install Cairo and its dependencies for OS X using the one liner below: ```bash $ wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/LearnBoost/node-canvas/master/install -O - | sh ``` ## Screencasts - [Introduction](http://screenr.com/CTk) ## Example ```javascript var Canvas = require('canvas') , Image = Canvas.Image , canvas = new Canvas(200,200) , ctx = canvas.getContext('2d'); ctx.font = '30px Impact'; ctx.rotate(.1); ctx.fillText("Awesome!", 50, 100); var te = ctx.measureText('Awesome!'); ctx.strokeStyle = 'rgba(0,0,0,0.5)'; ctx.beginPath(); ctx.lineTo(50, 102); ctx.lineTo(50 + te.width, 102); ctx.stroke(); console.log(''); ``` ## Non-Standard API node-canvas extends the canvas API to provide interfacing with node, for example streaming PNG data, converting to a `Buffer` instance, etc. Among the interfacing API, in some cases the drawing API has been extended for SSJS image manipulation / creation usage, however keep in mind these additions may fail to render properly within browsers. ### Image#src=Buffer node-canvas adds `Image#src=Buffer` support, allowing you to read images from disc, redis, etc and apply them via `ctx.drawImage()`. Below we draw scaled down squid png by reading it from the disk with node's I/O. ```javascript fs.readFile(__dirname + '/images/squid.png', function(err, squid){ if (err) throw err; img = new Image; img.src = squid; ctx.drawImage(img, 0, 0, img.width / 4, img.height / 4); }); ``` Below is an example of a canvas drawing it-self as the source several time: ```javascript var img = new Image; img.src = canvas.toBuffer(); ctx.drawImage(img, 0, 0, 50, 50); ctx.drawImage(img, 50, 0, 50, 50); ctx.drawImage(img, 100, 0, 50, 50); ``` ### Image#dataMode node-canvas adds `Image#dataMode` support, which can be used to opt-in to mime data tracking of images (currently only JPEGs). When mime data is tracked, in PDF mode JPEGs can be embedded directly into the output, rather than being re-encoded into PNG. This can drastically reduce filesize, and speed up rendering. ```javascript var img = new Image; img.dataMode = Image.MODE_IMAGE; // Only image data tracked img.dataMode = Image.MODE_MIME; // Only mime data tracked img.dataMode = Image.MODE_MIME | Image.MODE_IMAGE; // Both are tracked ``` If image data is not tracked, and the Image is drawn to an image rather than a PDF canvas, the output will be junk. Enabling mime data tracking has no benefits (only a slow down) unless you are generating a PDF. ### Canvas#pngStream() To create a `PNGStream` simply call `canvas.pngStream()`, and the stream will start to emit _data_ events, finally emitting _end_ when finished. If an exception occurs the _error_ event is emitted. ```javascript var fs = require('fs') , out = fs.createWriteStream(__dirname + '/text.png') , stream = canvas.pngStream(); stream.on('data', function(chunk){ out.write(chunk); }); stream.on('end', function(){ console.log('saved png'); }); ``` Currently _only_ sync streaming is supported, however we plan on supporting async streaming as well (of course :) ). Until then the `Canvas#toBuffer(callback)` alternative is async utilizing `eio_custom()`. ### Canvas#jpegStream() and Canvas#syncJPEGStream() You can likewise create a `JPEGStream` by calling `canvas.jpegStream()` with some optional parameters; functionality is otherwise identical to `pngStream()`. See `examples/crop.js` for an example. _Note: At the moment, `jpegStream()` is the same as `syncJPEGStream()`, both are synchronous_ ```javascript var stream = canvas.jpegStream({ bufsize: 4096 // output buffer size in bytes, default: 4096 , quality: 75 // JPEG quality (0-100) default: 75 , progressive: false // true for progressive compression, default: false }); ``` ### Canvas#toBuffer() A call to `Canvas#toBuffer()` will return a node `Buffer` instance containing all of the PNG data. ```javascript canvas.toBuffer(); ``` ### Canvas#toBuffer() async Optionally we may pass a callback function to `Canvas#toBuffer()`, and this process will be performed asynchronously, and will `callback(err, buf)`. ```javascript canvas.toBuffer(function(err, buf){ }); ``` ### Canvas#toDataURL() async Optionally we may pass a callback function to `Canvas#toDataURL()`, and this process will be performed asynchronously, and will `callback(err, str)`. ```javascript canvas.toDataURL(function(err, str){ }); ``` or specify the mime type: ```javascript canvas.toDataURL('image/png', function(err, str){ }); ``` ### CanvasRenderingContext2d#patternQuality Given one of the values below will alter pattern (gradients, images, etc) render quality, defaults to _good_. - fast - good - best - nearest - bilinear ### CanvasRenderingContext2d#textDrawingMode Can be either `path` or `glyph`. Using `glyph` is much faster than `path` for drawing, and when using a PDF context will embed the text natively, so will be selectable and lower filesize. The downside is that cairo does not have any subpixel precision for `glyph`, so this will be noticeably lower quality for text positioning in cases such as rotated text. Also, strokeText in `glyph` will act the same as fillText, except using the stroke style for the fill. Defaults to _path_. This property is tracked as part of the canvas state in save/restore. ### CanvasRenderingContext2d#filter Like `patternQuality`, but applies to transformations effecting more than just patterns. Defaults to _good_. - fast - good - best - nearest - bilinear ### Global Composite Operations In addition to those specified and commonly implemented by browsers, the following have been added: - multiply - screen - overlay - hard-light - soft-light - hsl-hue - hsl-saturation - hsl-color - hsl-luminosity ## Anti-Aliasing Set anti-aliasing mode - default - none - gray - subpixel For example: ```javascript ctx.antialias = 'none'; ``` ## PDF Support Basic PDF support was added in 0.11.0. Make sure to install cairo with `--enable-pdf=yes` for the PDF backend. node-canvas must know that it is creating a PDF on initialization, using the "pdf" string: ```js var canvas = new Canvas(200, 500, 'pdf'); ``` An additional method `.addPage()` is then available to create multiple page PDFs: ```js ctx.font = '22px Helvetica'; ctx.fillText('Hello World', 50, 80); ctx.addPage(); ctx.font = '22px Helvetica'; ctx.fillText('Hello World 2', 50, 80); ctx.addPage(); ctx.font = '22px Helvetica'; ctx.fillText('Hello World 3', 50, 80); ctx.addPage(); ``` ## Benchmarks Although node-canvas is extremely new, and we have not even begun optimization yet it is already quite fast. For benchmarks vs other node canvas implementations view this [gist](https://gist.github.com/664922), or update the submodules and run `$ make benchmark` yourself. ## Contribute Want to contribute to node-canvas? patches for features, bug fixes, documentation, examples and others are certainly welcome. Take a look at the [issue queue](https://github.com/LearnBoost/node-canvas/issues) for existing issues. ## Examples Examples are placed in _./examples_, be sure to check them out! most produce a png image of the same name, and others such as _live-clock.js_ launch an http server to be viewed in the browser. ## Testing If you have not previously, init git submodules: $ git submodule update --init Build node-canvas: $ node-waf configure build Unit tests: $ make test Visual tests: $ make test-server ## Versions Tested with and designed for: - node 0.4.2 - cairo 1.8.6 For node 0.2.x `node-canvas` <= 0.4.3 may be used, 0.5.0 and above are designed for node 0.4.x only. ## License (The MIT License) Copyright (c) 2010 LearnBoost, and contributors <dev@learnboost.com> Copyright (c) 2014 Automattic, Inc and contributors <dev@automattic.com> Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the 'Software'), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED 'AS IS', WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.