HTML5 Canvas drawImage ratio bug iOS
I want to resize the image taken from the iOS camera on the client side with HTML5 Canvas but I keep running in this weird bug where the image has a wrong ratio if bigger than ~1.5mb
It works on the desktop but not in the latest iOS version with the media upload API.
You can see an example here: http://jsbin.com/ekuros/1
Any idea how to fix this please? Is this a memory issue?
$('#file').on('change', function (e) {
var file = e.currentTarget.files[0];
var reader = new FileReader();
reader.onload = function (e) {
var image = $('<img/>');
image.on('load', function () {
var square = 320;
var canvas = document.createElement('canvas');
canvas.width = square;
canvas.height = square;
var context = canvas.getContext('2d');
context.clearRect(0, 0, square, square);
var imageWidth;
var imageHeight;
var offsetX = 0;
var offsetY = 0;
if (this.width > this.height) {
imageWidth = Math.round(square * this.width / this.height);
imageHeight = square;
offsetX = - Math.round((imageWidth - square) / 2);
} else {
imageHeight = Math.round(square * this.height / this.width);
imageWidth = square;
offsetY = - Math.round((imageHeight - square) / 2);
}
context.drawImage(this, offsetX, offsetY, imageWidth, imageHeight);
var data = canvas.toDataURL('image/jpeg');
var thumb = $('<img/>');
thumb.attr('src', data);
$('body').append(thumb);
});
image.attr('src', e.target.result);
};
reader.readAsDataURL(file);
});
If you still need to use the long version of the drawImage function you can change this:
context.drawImage(img, sx, sy, sw, sh, dx, dy, dw, dh);
to this:
drawImageIOSFix(context, img, sx, sy, sw, sh, dx, dy, dw, dh);
You just need to include these two functions somewhere:
/**
* Detecting vertical squash in loaded image.
* Fixes a bug which squash image vertically while drawing into canvas for some images.
* This is a bug in iOS6 devices. This function from https://github.com/stomita/ios-imagefile-megapixel
*
*/
function detectVerticalSquash(img) {
var iw = img.naturalWidth, ih = img.naturalHeight;
var canvas = document.createElement('canvas');
canvas.width = 1;
canvas.height = ih;
var ctx = canvas.getContext('2d');
ctx.drawImage(img, 0, 0);
var data = ctx.getImageData(0, 0, 1, ih).data;
// search image edge pixel position in case it is squashed vertically.
var sy = 0;
var ey = ih;
var py = ih;
while (py > sy) {
var alpha = data[(py - 1) * 4 + 3];
if (alpha === 0) {
ey = py;
} else {
sy = py;
}
py = (ey + sy) >> 1;
}
var ratio = (py / ih);
return (ratio===0)?1:ratio;
}
/**
* A replacement for context.drawImage
* (args are for source and destination).
*/
function drawImageIOSFix(ctx, img, sx, sy, sw, sh, dx, dy, dw, dh) {
var vertSquashRatio = detectVerticalSquash(img);
// Works only if whole image is displayed:
// ctx.drawImage(img, sx, sy, sw, sh, dx, dy, dw, dh / vertSquashRatio);
// The following works correct also when only a part of the image is displayed:
ctx.drawImage(img, sx * vertSquashRatio, sy * vertSquashRatio,
sw * vertSquashRatio, sh * vertSquashRatio,
dx, dy, dw, dh );
}
This will work fine whether it is run on iOS or other platforms.
This is based on the great work by stomita and you should credit him in your work.
There is a JavaScript canvas resize library which works around the subsampling and vertical squash issues encountered when drawing scaled images on canvas on iOS devices: http://github.com/stomita/ios-imagefile-megapixel
There are side issues when scaling images with alpha channel (as it uses the alpha channel for the issues detection) and when trying to resize existing canvas elements, however it's the first solution I've found that actually works with the issue at hand.
stomita is also a StackOverflow user and posted his solution here: https://stackoverflow.com/a/12615436/644048