Sustainability of Digital Formats
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Introduction | Sustainability Factors | Content Categories | Format Descriptions | Contact |
Full name | ISO/IEC 15444-2:2004. Information technology -- JPEG 2000 image coding system: Extensions, Annex M: JPX extended file format syntax (formal name) JPEG 2000 jpf file format (common name) |
Description | Wrapper developed by the Joint Photographic Experts Group (JPEG) for still images using JPEG 2000 extended encoding for digital still images, as well as other encodings (specification p. 177). JPX_FF inherits features from its parent: JP2_FF, JPEG 2000 Part 1 (Core) jp2 File Format. JPX_FF images may be compatible with the JP2 reader specification (backwards compatible), thereby maximizing interoperability, or they may "completely defined" by the extensions in Part 2 of the standard and thus not compatible with JP2 readers. The specification describes a baseline profile (pp. 168-69), a conforming JPX baseline reader would meet the following requirements:
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Production phase | May be used for content in initial, middle, and final states. |
Relationship to other formats | |
May contain | Uncompressed bitmap, not documented at this time |
May contain | ITU-T "Group 3" FAX Compression (T.4), One Dimensional; commonly known as Modified Huffman (MH) encoding, not documented at this time |
May contain | ITU-T "Group 3" FAX Compression (T.4), Two Dimensional; commonly known as Modified READ (MR) encoding, not documented at this time |
May contain | ITU_G4, ITU-T "Group 4" FAX Compression (T.6); commonly known as Modified Modified READ (MMR) encoding |
May contain | JBIG_1, JBIG1 Bitonal Image Format |
May contain | JPEG_DCT, JPEG Lossy (DCT) Compression Encoding |
May contain | JPEG_LS, JPEG Lossless Compression |
May contain | J2K_EXT, JPEG 2000 Part 2, Coding Extensions |
May contain | JBIG_2, JBIG2 Bitonal Image Format |
Has subtype | JPEG 2000 Part 2 Extended File Format with JPEG 2000 (Part 2) Extended Encoding, Lossless, not documented at this time |
Has subtype | JPEG 2000 Part 2 Extended File Format with JPEG 2000 (Part 2) Extended Encoding, Lossy, not documented at this time |
LC experience or existing holdings | None |
LC preference | None established |
Disclosure | Open standard. Developed by Joint Technical Committee ISOAEC JTC 1, Information technology, Subcommittee SC 29, Coding of audio, picture, multimedia and hypermedia information in collaboration with ITU-T. |
Documentation | ISO/IEC 15444-2:2004. Information technology -- JPEG 2000 image coding system: Extensions, Annex M: JPX extended file format syntax. See complete list of ISO/IEC JPEG 2000 documents in JP2_FF. |
Adoption | Although implementations of JPEG 2000 (especially J2K_C Part 1 core coding) increased in 2003 and 2004, and are expected to accelerate markedly in 2005, the compiler of this document is not aware of the extent to which JPX_FF is being implemented. The October 15, 2004, issue of RLG DigiNews (ISSN 1093-5371) refers to "the upcoming adoption of JPEG2000 (and in particular, the JPX File type) by some digital camera manufacturers." |
Licensing and patent claims | Licensing is associated with the encoding; see J2K_EXT |
Transparency | See J2K_EXT |
Self-documentation | All JPEG 2000 files are made up of "boxes," as described in the Notes below, including an XML box typically used for metadata. Regarding JPX_FF, Annex N of Part 2 of the specification provides detail about metadata and offers but does not require a specification based on DIG35 elements. This metadata specification includes four broad metadata categories: (1) image creation ("how," e.g., about the camera), (2) content description ("who," "what," "when," and "where"), (3) history ("how the image got to its present state," i.e., provenance metadata in the digital library lexicon), and (4) intellectual property rights (IPR) metadata (which may be used in conjunction with technological protection systems). Additional boxes inherited from JP2_FF include one for a unique identifier for the image or identifier-references to other digital objects, e.g., a UUID, and another for IPR metadata, possibly redundant with that included in the XML box. |
External dependencies | None |
Technical protection considerations | Like all JPEG 2000 file formats, JPX_FF provides an IPR box for rights management information that may be used as inputs to access management systems. The IPR metadata expressed in the XML box may be redundant. |
Normal rendering | Good support |
Clarity (support for high image resolution) | Depends upon encoding; see list in Relationships to other formats, above. |
Color maintenance | Rich support, detailed in Annex M of the specification. The color space of the decompressed image data is indicated in the Color Specification box inside the Header box, which contains the ICC profile when applicable. JPX_FF permits the establishment of enumerated color space values beyond sRGB, sYCC, and the defined greyscale space. ICC data in JP2_FF are limited to Restricted ICC profiles; in JPX_FF, any ICC method may be used. Other color maintenance features are inherited from JP2_FF, e.g., the Palette box and the Component Mapping box. |
Support for graphic effects and typography | No support for vector graphics. |
Functionality beyond normal rendering | The JPEG 2000 family offers many extended functionalities, some of which grow out of the options of scalability offered by the various encodings, and which extend to the interactivity provided by JPIP, destined to be Part 9 of the JPEG 2000 standard; see JPIP-Architecture-VCIP2003.pdf |
Tag type | Value | Note |
Filename Extension | jpf | As specified by Annex M.2.1 of the specification. |
Filename Extension | jpx | From The File Extension Source, also mentioned in http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc3745.txt. |
Macintosh type code | jpx\040 [jpm plus the space character] | As specified by Annex M.2.1 of the specification. |
Internet Media Type | image/jpx | From http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc3745.txt |
Magic numbers | None identified | Comments welcome |
File type brand | jp2\040 [jp2 plus the space character] | When compatible with the JP2 reader specification, place this value in the File Type Box (similar to the ISO_BMFF file type box). |
File type brand | jpx\040 [jpx plus the space character] | When "completely defined by" Part 2 (extensions) of the JPEG 2000 standard, place this value in the File Type Box. |
Image header box | 0 | For uncompressed bitmap |
Image header box | 1 | For ITU-T T.4 "Group 3," One Dimensional, aka Modified Huffman (MH) encoding |
Image header box | 2 | For ITU-T T.4 "Group 3," Two Dimensional, aka Modified READ (MR) encoding |
Image header box | 3 | For ITU-T T.6 "Group 4," aka Modified Modified READ (MMR) encoding |
Image header box | 4 | For JBIG bi-level images |
Image header box | 5 | For JPEG encoding |
Image header box | 6 | For JPEG lossless encoding |
Image header box | 7 | For JPEG 2000 wavelet encoding (no specification part number indicated) |
Image header box | 8 | For JBIG2 encoding |
Image header box | 9 | For JBIG images other than bi-level |
General | The JPEG 2000 file format family includes: • JP2_FF, JPEG 2000 Part 1 (Core) jp2 File Format • JPX_FF, JPEG 2000 Part 2 (Extensions) jpf File Format (this document) • JPM_FF, JPEG 2000 Part 6 (Compound) jpm File Format The family is descended from QuickTime. This lineage is shared with ISO_BMFF and its offshoots, which include MP4_FF_2, MP4_FF_AVCE, and MJ2_FF, itself a wrapper for JPEG 2000 core-encoded images that represent sets of film or video frames. From Guide to the Practical Implementation of JPEG 2000, cited in Useful references below: "JP2 was designed to be inherently extensible. The extended file formats that are defined in later parts of the standard all incorporate a degree of backwards-compatibility with JP2: for each extended format it is possible to construct extended files that also conform to JP2. (A JP2 reader would ignore any extensions that it did not understand.) Thus, the definition of JP2 in Part 1 can also be considered an implicit definition of an architecture known informally as the ‘JP family’. . . . A JP family file is a sequence of ‘boxes’. [These are called atoms in the QuickTime specification. -- ed] A box consists of a 4-byte length field followed by a 4-byte type field followed by the content of the box. The content is defined for each box type and may include boxes. A box whose content consists only of boxes is called a superbox. There are two special values of the length field. A value of zero means that the box extends to the end of the file. A value of 1 means that the true length of the box follows the type field (before the content) in an 8-byte extended length field; this permits boxes up to (264 – 1) bytes in length. The length includes the whole box from the start of the length field to the end of the content." |
History |
URLs
Print
The file format described on this page is specified in Annex M of Part 2 of the standard, cited here. Other JPEG 2000 specifications are listed in JP2_FF.
• ISO/IEC 15444-2:2004. Information technology -- JPEG 2000 image coding system: Extensions. Defines a set of lossless (bit-preserving) and lossy compression methods for coding continuous-tone, bi-level, grey-scale, colour digital still images, or multi-component images; specifies extended decoding processes for converting compressed image data to reconstructed image data; specifies an extended codestream syntax containing information for interpreting the compressed image data; specifies an extended file format; specifies a container to store image metadata; defines a standard set of image metadata; provides guidance on extended encoding processes for converting source image data to compressed image data; provides guidance on how to implement these processes in practice.
URLs
• http://www.jpeg.org/jpeg2000/
• JPIP-Architecture-VCIP2003.pdf (http://www.ee.unsw.edu.au/~taubman/publications_files/JPIP-architecture-vcip03.pdf)
• MIME types for JPEG 2000 (http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc3745.txt)
DIG35 metadata information (http://www.i3a.org/i_dig35.html)
Print
• Colyer, Greg and Richard Clark. Guide to the Practical Implementation of JPEG 2000. London: British Standards Institute, 2003. ISBN: 0580412423 BSI: PD 6777:2003. Available as PDF file; link to point-of-sale at http://www.jpeg.org/jpeg2000/index.html.
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