X-Git-Url: https://git.ucc.asn.au/?p=ipdf%2Fsam.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=chapters%2FBackground.tex;h=87d18cebee3a9caf81c1600a8dbdc8f8a034de2a;hp=751dbe998a9bae95e7bcd3fdb7de39786174237d;hb=3cc6f72b6bbdde973827f4f3cd47563d240cc345;hpb=d4698605773e2b11d5a1c7f50c8821d224ad82cb;ds=sidebyside diff --git a/chapters/Background.tex b/chapters/Background.tex index 751dbe9..87d18ce 100644 --- a/chapters/Background.tex +++ b/chapters/Background.tex @@ -1,101 +1,218 @@ \chapter{Literature Review}\label{Background} -This chapter will \rephrase{review the literature. It will also include some figures created by us from our test programs to aid with conceptual understanding of the literature.} +The first half of this chapter will be devoted to documents themselves, including: the representation and displaying of graphics primitives\cite{computergraphics2}, and how collections of these primitives are represented in document formats, focusing on widely used standards\cite{plrm, pdfref17, svg2011-1.1}. -\rephrase{TODO: Decide exactly what figures to make, then go make them; so far I have some ideas for a few about Floating Point operations, but none about the other stuff}. +We will find that although there has been a great deal of research into the rendering, storing, editing, manipulation, and extension of document formats, modern standards are content to specify at best single precision IEEE-754 floating point arithmetic. -\rephrase{TODO: Actually (re)write this entire chapter}. -\rephrase{????: Do I really want to make this go down to} \verb/\subsubsection/ +The research on arbitrary precision arithmetic applied to documents is very sparse; however arbitrary precision arithmetic itself is a very active field of research. Therefore, the second half of this chapter will be devoted to considering fixed precision floating point numbers as specified by the IEEE-754 standard, possible limitations in precision, and alternative number representations for increased or arbitrary precision arithmetic. -A paper by paper summary of the literature is also available at: \\ \url{http://szmoore.net/ipdf/documents/LiteratureNotes.pdf}. +In Chapter \ref{Progress}, we will discuss our findings so far with regards to arbitrary precision arithmetic applied to document formats, and expand upon the goals outlined in Chapture \ref{Proposal}. +\section{Raster and Vector Images}\label{Raster and Vector Images} +\input{chapters/Background_Raster-vs-Vector} -\rephrase{TODO: Actually make that readable or just remove the link}. +\section{Rasterising Vector Images}\label{Rasterising Vector Images} -\section{Document Formats} +Throughout Section \ref{vector-vs-raster-graphics} we were careful to refer to ``modern'' display devices, which are raster based. It is of some historical significance that vector display devices were popular during the 70s and 80s, and papers oriented towards drawing on these devices can be found\cite{brassel1979analgorithm}. Whilst curves can be drawn at high resolution on vector displays, a major disadvantage was shading; by the early 90s the vast majority of computer displays were raster based\cite{computergraphics2}. -Since mankind climbed down from the trees... \rephrase{plagiarism alert!} +Hearn and Baker's textbook ``Computer Graphics''\cite{computergraphics2} gives a comprehensive overview of graphics from physical display technologies through fundamental drawing algorithms to popular graphics APIs. This section will examine algorithms for drawing two dimensional geometric primitives on raster displays as discussed in ``Computer Graphics'' and the relevant literature. Informal tutorials are abundant on the internet\cite{elias2000graphics}. This section is by no means a comprehensive survey of the literature but intends to provide some idea of the computations which are required to render a document. -\subsection{Vector Graphics vs Raster Graphics} +\subsection{Straight Lines}\label{Straight Lines} +\input{chapters/Background_Lines} -Raster Graphics: Stores the exact pixels as they would appear on a device. Causes obvious issues with scaling. Lowest level representation of a document. +\subsection{Spline Curves}\label{Spline Curves} +Splines are continuous curves formed from piecewise polynomial segments. A polynomial of $n$th degree is defined by $n$ constants $\{a_0, a_1, ... a_n\}$ and: +\begin{align} + y(x) &= \displaystyle\sum_{k=0}^n a_k x^k +\end{align} -Vector Graphics: Stores relative position of primitives - scales better. BUT still can't scale forever. Vector Graphics must be rasterised before being drawn on most display devices. -Vector Graphics formats may contain more information than is shown on the display device; Raster Graphics always contain as much or less pixel information than is shown. +A straight line is simply a polynomial of $0$th degree. Splines may be rasterised by sampling of $y(x)$ at a number of points $x_i$ and rendering straight lines between $(x_i, y_i)$ and $(x_{i+1}, y_{i+1})$ as discussed in Section \ref{Straight Lines}. More direct algorithms for drawing splines based upon Brasenham and Wu's algorithms also exist\cite{citationneeded}. -\rephrase{Captain Obvious strikes again!} \\ -Figure \ref{fox} shows an example of scaling. The top image is a vector graphics drawing which has been scaled. The bottom image was a raster image of the original drawing which has then been scaled by the same amount. Scaling in = interpolation/antialiasing/just scale the pixels depending on the viewer and scale; scaling out = blurring of pixels by averaging of neighbours. If you are viewing this document in a PDF viewer you can try it yourself! Otherwise, welcome to the 21st century. +There are many different ways to define a spline. One approach is to specify ``knots'' on the spline and solve for the cooefficients to generate a cubic spline ($n = 3$) passing through the points. Alternatively, special polynomials may be defined using ``control'' points which themselves are not part of the curve; these are convenient for graphical based editors. Bezier splines are the most straight forward way to define a curve in the standards considered in Section \ref{Document Representations} +\subsubsection{Bezier Curves} +\input{chapters/Background_Bezier} +\subsection{Font Rendering} -\begin{figure}[H] - \centering - \includegraphics[width=0.5\textwidth]{figures/fox.pdf} - \includegraphics[width=0.5\textwidth]{figures/fox.png} - \caption{Scaling of Vector and Raster Graphics}\label{fox} -\end{figure} -\rephrase{I am torn as to whether to use a Fox or Rabbit or Rox here}. +Donald Knuth's 1986 textbook ``Metafont'' blargh + + + +\subsection{Shading} + +Algorithms for shading on vector displays involved drawing equally spaced lines in the region with endpoints defined by the boundaries of the region\cite{brassel1979analgorithm}. Apart from being unrealistic, these techniques required a computationally expensive sorting of vertices\cite{lane1983analgorithm}. + +On raster displays, shading is typically based upon Lane's algorithm of 1983\cite{lane1983analgorithm}. Lane's algorithm relies on the ability to ``subtract'' fill from a region. This algorithm is now implemented in the GPU \rephrase{stencil buffer-y and... stuff} \cite{kilgard2012gpu} + +\subsection{Compositing and the Painter's Model}\label{Compositing and the Painter's Model} + +So far we have discussed techniques for rendering vector graphics primitives in isolation, with no regard to the overall structure of a document which may contain many thousands of primitives. A straight forward approach would be to render all elements sequentially to the display, with the most recently drawn pixels overwriting lower elements. Such an approach is particularly inconvenient for anti-aliased images where colours must appear to smoothly blur between the edge of a primitive and any drawn underneath it. + +Colour raster displays are based on an additive red-green-blue $(r,g,b)$ colour representation which matches the human eye's response to light\cite{computergraphics2}. In 1984, Porter and Duff introduced a fourth colour channel for rasterised images called the ``alpha'' channel, analogous to the transparency of a pixel\cite{porter1984compositing}. In compositing models, elements can be rendered seperately, with the four colour channels of successively drawn elements being combined according to one of several possible operations. + +In the ``painter's model'' as described by the SVG standard, Porter and Duff's ``over'' operation is used when rendering one primitive over another\cite{svg2011-1.1}. +Given an existing pixel $P_1$ with colour values $(r_1, g_1, b_1, a_1)$ and a pixel $P_2$ with colours $(r_2, g_2, b_2, a_2)$ to be painted over $P_1$, the resultant pixel $P_T$ has colours given by: +\begin{align} + a_T &= 1 - (1-a_1)(1-a_2) \\ + r_T &= (1 - a_2)r_1 + r_2 \quad \text{(similar for $g_T$ and $b_T$)} +\end{align} +It should be apparent that alpha values of $1$ correspond to an opaque pixel; that is, when $a_2 = 1$ the resultant pixel $P_T$ is the same as $P_2$. +When the final pixel is actually drawn on an rgb display, the $(r, g, b)$ components are $(r_T/a_T, g_T/a_T, b_T/a_T)$. + +The PostScript and PDF standards, as well as the OpenGL API also use a painter's model for compositing. However, PostScript does not include an alpha channel, so $P_T = P_2$ always\cite{plrm}. Figure \ref{SVG} illustrates the painter's model for partially transparent shapes as they would appear in both the SVG and PDF models. +\subsection{Rasterisation on the CPU and GPU} -\subsection{Document Format Categories} +Traditionally, vector graphics have been rasterized by the CPU before being sent to the GPU for drawing\cite{kilgard2012gpu}. Lots of people would like to change this \cite{worth2003xr, loop2007rendering, rice2008openvg, kilgard2012gpu, green2007improved}. -Main reference: Pixels or Perish\cite{hayes2012pixels} +\rephrase{2. Here are the ways documents are structured ... we got here eventually} -\begin{enumerate} - \item DOM - eg: HTML/XMLish - defined in terms of elements that can contain other elements - \item Programming Language - eg: PostScript - programmer (or program) produces a program that is interpreted - \item Combination - eg: Javascript with HTML/XML - Program is interpreted that modifies the DOM. +\section{Document Representations}\label{Document Representations} + +The representation of information, particularly for scientific purposes, has changed dramatically over the last few decades. For example, Brassel's 1979 paper referenced earlier has been produced on a mechanical type writer. Although the paper discusses an algorithm for shading on computer displays, the figures illustrating this algorithm have not been generated by a computer, but drawn by Brassel's assistant\cite{brassel1979analgorithm}. In contrast, modern papers such as Barnes et. al's recent paper on embedding 3d images in PDF documents\cite{barnes2013embeddding} can themselves be an interactive proof of concept. + +In this section we will consider various approaches and motivations to specifying the structure and appearance of a document, including: early interpreted formats (PostScript, \TeX, DVI), the Document Object Model popular in standards for web based documents (HTML, SVG), and Adobe's ubiquitous Portable Document Format (PDF). Some of these formats were discussed in a recent paper ``Pixels Or Perish'' by Hayes\cite{hayes2012pixelsor} who argues for greater interactivity in the PDF standard. + +\subsection{Interpreted Document Formats} +\input{chapters/Background_Interpreted} + + +\begin{itemize} + \item This model treats a document as the source code program which produces graphics + \item Arose from the desire to produce printed documents using computers (which were still limited to text only displays). + \item Typed by hand or (later) generated by a GUI program + \item PostScript --- largely supersceded by PDF on the desktop but still used by printers\footnote{Desktop pdf viewers can still cope with PS, but I wonder if a smartphone pdf viewer would implement it?} + \item \TeX --- Predates PostScript, similar idea \begin{itemize} - \item The lines are becomming increasingly blurred between 1. and 2. - \item In the case of Javascript/HTML, a special DOM element \verb// allows even lower level manipulation of graphics. + \item Maybe if \LaTeX were more popular there would be desktop viewers that converted \LaTeX directly into graphics \end{itemize} -\end{enumerate} + \item Potential for dynamic content, interactivity; dynamic PostScript, enhanced Postscript + + \item Problems with security --- Turing complete, can be exploited easily +\end{itemize} -Can be either human readable\footnote{For some definition of human and some definition of readable} or binary\footnote{So, our viewer is basically a DOM style but stored in a binary format} +\pagebreak +\subsection{Document Object Model}\label{Document Object Model} +\input{chapters/Background_DOM} -\subsection{Modern Graphics Formats} +\subsection{The Portable Document Format} + + +\subsection{Scientific Computation Packages} + +The document and the code that produces it are one and the same. + +\begin{itemize} + \item Numerical computation packages such as Mathematica and Maple use arbitrary precision floats + \begin{itemize} + \item Mathematica is not open source which is an issue when publishing scientific research (because people who do not fork out money for Mathematica cannot verify results) + \item What about Maple? \cite{HFP} and \cite{fousse2007mpfr} both mention it being buggy. + \item Octave and Matlab use fixed precision doubles + \end{itemize} + \item IPython is pretty cool guys +\end{itemize} -PostScript: Not actually widely used now, but PDF is basically the same thing. -PDF: A way for adobe to make money -SVG: Based on the DOM model, vector format -BMP,PNG,GIF: Are these even worth mentioning? +\section{Precision in Modern Document Formats} -HTML: With the evolution of JavaScript and CSS, this has actually become a competitive document format; it can display much more complex dynamic content than eg: PDF. +We briefly summarise the requirements of the standards discussed so far in regards to the precision of mathematical operations: +\begin{itemize} + \item {\bf PostScript} predates the IEEE-754 standard and originally specified a floating point representation with ? bits of exponent and ? bits of mantissa. Version ? of the PostScript standard changed to specify IEEE-754 binary32 ``single precision'' floats. + \item {\bf PDF} has also specified IEEE-754 binary32 since version ?. Importantly, the standard states that this is a \emph{maximum} precision; documents created with higher precision would not be viewable in Adobe Reader. + \item {\bf SVG} specifies a minimum of IEEE-754 binary32 but recommends more bits be used internally + \item {\bf Javascript} uses binary32 floats for all operations, and does not distinguish between integers and floats. + \item {\bf Python} uses binary64 floats + \item {\bf Matlab} uses binary64 floats + \item {\bf Mathematica} uses some kind of terrifying symbolic / arbitrary float combination + \item {\bf Maple} is similar but by many accounts horribly broken + +\end{itemize} -Web based documents still suffer from precision issues (JavaScript is notorious for its representation of everything, even integers, as floats, so you get rounding errors even with integer maths), and it also has other limitations (requires reasonably skilled programmer to create Javascript and/or a disgusting GUI tool that auto generates 10000 lines to display a button (I have seen one of these)). \rephrase{Hate on javascript a bit less maybe.} -\subsection{Precision Limitations} +\rephrase{4. Here is IEEE-754 which is what these standards use} -\section{Representation of Numbers} +\section{Real Number Representations} -Although this project has been motivated by a desire for more flexible document formats, the fundamental source of limited precision in vector document formats such as PDF and PostScript is the use of floating point numbers to represent the coordinates of vertex positions. In particular, implementations of PostScript and PDF must by definition restrict themselves to IEEE binary32 ``single precision'' floating point number representations in order to conform to the standards\cite{plrm, pdfref17}. +We have found that PostScript, PDF, and SVG document standards all restrict themselves to IEEE floating point number representations of coordinates. This is unsurprising as the IEEE standard has been successfully adopted almost universally by hardware manufactures and programming language standards since the early 1990s. In the traditional view of a document as a static, finite sheet of paper, there is little motivation for enhanced precision. -Whilst David Gow will be focusing on how to structure a document format so as to avoid or reduce these limitations\cite{proposalGow}, the focus of our own research will be \rephrase{NUMBERS}. +In this section we will begin by investigating floating point numbers as defined in the IEEE standard and their limitations. We will then consider alternative number representations including fixed point numbers, arbitrary precision floats, rational numbers, p-adic numbers and symbolic representations. \rephrase{Oh god I am still writing about IEEE floats let alone all those other things} -\subsection{Floating Point Number Representations} +\rephrase{Reorder to start with Integers, General Floats, then go to IEEE, then other things} + +\subsection{IEEE Floating Points} + +Although the concept of a floating point representation has been attributed to various early computer scientists including Charles Babbage\cite{citationneeded}, it is widely accepted that William Kahan and his colleagues working on the IEEE-754 standard in the 1980s are the ``fathers of modern floating point computation''\cite{citationneeded}. The original IEEE-754 standard specified the encoding, number of bits, rounding methods, and maximum acceptable errors for the basic floating point operations for base $B = 2$ floats. It also specifies ``exceptions'' --- mechanisms by which a program can detect an error such as division by zero\footnote{Kahan has argued that exceptions in IEEE-754 are conceptually different to Exceptions as defined in several programming languages including C++ and Java. An IEEE exception is intended to prevent an error by its detection, whilst an exception in those languages is used to indicate an error has already occurred\cite{}}. We will restrict ourselves to considering $B = 2$, since it was found that this base in general gives the smallest rounding errors\cite{HFP}, although it is worth noting that different choices of base had been used historically\cite{goldman1991whatevery}, and the IEEE-854 and later the revised IEEE-754 standard specify a decimal representation $B = 10$ intended for use in financial applications. + +\subsection{Floating Point Definition} + +A floating point number $x$ is commonly represented by a tuple of integers $(s, e, m)$ in base $B$ as\cite{HFP, ieee2008-754}: \begin{align*} x &= (-1)^{s} \times m \times B^{e} \end{align*} -$B = 2$, although IEEE also defines decimal representations for $B = 10$ --- these are useful in financial software\cite{ieee2008-754}. +Where $s$ is the sign and may be zero or one, $m$ is commonly called the ``mantissa'' and $e$ is the exponent. +The name ``floating point'' refers to the equivelance of the $\times B^e$ operation to a shifting of a decimal point along the mantissa. This contrasts with a ``fixed point'' representation where $x$ is the sum of two fixed size numbers representing the integer and fractional part. + +In the IEEE-754 standard, for a base of $B = 2$, numbers are encoded in continuous memory by a fixed number of bits, with $s$ occupying 1 bit, followed by $e$ and $m$ occupying a number of bits specified by the precision; 5 and 10 for a binary16 or ``half precision'' float, 8 and 23 for a binary32 or ``single precision'' and 15 and 52 for a binary64 or ``double precision'' float\cite{HFP, ieee2008-754}. + + +\subsection{Precision and Rounding} + +Real values which cannot be represented exactly in a floating point representation must be rounded. The results of a floating point operation will in general be such values and thus there is a rounding error possible in any floating point operation. Goldberg's assertively titled 1991 paper ``What Every Computer Scientist Needs to Know about Floating Point Arithmetic'' provides a comprehensive overview of issues in floating point arithmetic and relates these to the 1984 version of the IEEE-754 standard\cite{goldberg1991whatevery}. More recently, after the release of the revised IEEE-754 standard in 2008, a textbook ``Handbook Of Floating Point Arithmetic'' has been published which provides a thourough review of literature relating to floating point arithmetic in both software and hardware\cite{HFP}. + + +Figure \ref{minifloat.pdf} shows the positive real numbers which can be represented exactly by an 8 bit base $B = 2$ floating point number; and illustrates that a set of fixed precision floating point numbers forms a discrete approximation of the reals. There are only $2^7 = 256$ numbers in this set, which means it is easier to see some of the properties of floats that would be unclear using one of the IEEE-754 encodings. The first set of points corresponds to using 2 and 5 bits to encode $e$ and $m$ whilst the second set of points corresponds to a 3 and 4 bit encoding. This allows us to see the trade off between the precision and range of real values represented. + +\begin{figure}[H] + \centering + \includegraphics[width=0.8\textwidth]{figures/minifloat.pdf} \\ + \includegraphics[width=0.8\textwidth]{figures/minifloat_diff.pdf} + \caption{The mapping of 8 bit floats to reals} +\end{figure} + +\subsection{Floating Point Operations} + +Floating point operations can in principle be performed using integer operations, but specialised Floating Point Units (FPUs) are an almost universal component of modern processors\cite{citationneeded}. The improvement of FPUs remains highly active in several areas including: efficiency\cite{seidel2001onthe}; accuracy of operations\cite{dieter2007lowcost}; and even the adaptation of algorithms originally used in software for reducing the overal error of a sequence of operations\cite{kadric2013accurate}. In this section we will consider the algorithms for floating point operations without focusing on the hardware implementation of these algorithms. + + +\subsection{Some sort of Example(s) or Floating Point Mayhem} + +\rephrase{Eg: $f(x) = |x|$ calculated from sqrt and squaring} + +\rephrase{Eg: Massive rounding errors from calculatepi} + +\rephrase{Eg: Actual graphics things :S} + + +\subsection{Limitations Imposed By Graphics APIs and/or GPUs} + +Traditionally algorithms for drawing vector graphics are performed on the CPU; the image is rasterised and then sent to the GPU for rendering\cite{}. Recently there has been a great deal of literature relating to implementation of algorithms such as bezier curve rendering\cite{} or shading\cite{} on the GPU. As it seems the trend is to move towards GPU -\rephrase{Aside: Are decimal representations for a document format eg: CAD also useful because you can then use metric coordinate systems?} +\rephrase{6. Here are ways GPU might not be IEEE-754 --- This goes *somewhere* in here but not sure yet} -\subsubsection{Precision} +\begin{itemize} + \item Internal representations are GPU dependent and may not match IEEE\cite{hillesland2004paranoia} + \item OpenGL standards specify: binary16, binary32, binary64 + \item OpenVG aims to become a standard API for SVG viewers but the API only uses binary32 and hardware implementations may use less than this internally\cite{rice2008openvg} + \item It seems that IEEE has not been entirely successful; although all modern CPUs and GPUs are able to read and write IEEE floating point types, many do not conform to the IEEE standard in how they represent floating point numbers internally. + \item \rephrase{Blog post alert} \url{https://dolphin-emu.org/blog/2014/03/15/pixel-processing-problems/} +\end{itemize} -The floats map an infinite set of real numbers onto a discrete set of representations. -\rephrase{Figure: 8 bit ``minifloats'' (all 255 of them) clearly showing the ``precision vs range'' issue} -The most a result can be rounded in conversion to a floating point number is the units in last place; $m_{N} \times B^{e}$. +\rephrase{7. Sod all that, let's just use an arbitrary precision library (AND THUS WE FINALLY GET TO THE POINT)} -\rephrase{Even though that paper that claims double is the best you will ever need because the error can be as much as the size of a bacterium relative to the distance to the moon}\cite{} \rephrase{there are many cases where increased number of bits will not save you}.\cite{HFP} +\subsection{Arbitrary Precision Floating Point Numbers} +An arbitrary precision floating point number simply uses extra bits to store extra precision. Do it all using MFPR\cite{fousse2007mpfr}, she'll be right. -\subsection{Alternate Number Representations} +\rephrase{8. Here is a brilliant summary of sections 7- above} -\rephrase{They exist\cite{HFP}}. +Dear reader, thankyou for your persistance in reading this mangled excuse for a Literature Review. +Hopefully we have brought together the radically different areas of interest together in some sort of coherant fashion. +In the next chapter we will talk about how we have succeeded in rendering a rectangle. It will be fun. I am looking forward to it. +\rephrase{Oh dear this is not going well}