Matlab To Opencv PDF
Matlab To Opencv PDF
Matlab To Opencv PDF
Georgios D. Evangelidis
INRIA Grenoble Rhone-Alpes, 655 Avenue de lEurope, 38330 Montbonnot, France e-mail: georgios.evangelidis@inria.fr
This document is a short guide to connecting Matlab with OpenCV. The main reason to adopt such a connection is the efficiency. Matlab provides a MEX environment in order to write C functions instead of M-files. Recall that MEX (Matlab-EXecutable) files are dynamically linked subroutines from C/C++ code (or Fortran code) that, when compiled, can be run from within Matlab like M-files. Hence, MEX environment offers a way to call your custom C/C++ routines as if they were Matlab built-in function. A detailed MEX Guide is offered by MathWorks [1]. The following description presupposes that, except for Matlab, OpenCV is installed in your system. Note that connection has been verified in a 64-bit machine with Win7, OpenCV2.1 and 32-bit Matlab R2009b. If you have installed a 64-bit Matlab version, try to use OpenCV 2.3 (or 2.3.1) that offers a prebuilt library for both 32-bit and 64bit systems. Otherwise you sould re-build the libraries from source-code using the proper generator (32-bit or 64 bit). Note that 32-bit Matlab works well in 64-bit machines, so I would suggest this version.
example is the simplest case where no input/output arguments are required. For example, image loading is called from within the function and the MEX file returns nothing (it just displays the result). The second case is more interesting since input and output arguments are Matlab variables. The Sun Peng's types convertor [2] that provides bidirectional conversion between C/C++ (OpenCV) types and matlab matrices is used for such a conversion.
Example 1: A simple MEX file without input/output arguments that uses simple OpenCV modules
/******************************************************************* This is a simple MEX file. It just calls OpenCV functions for loading, smothing and diaplaying the results ********************************************************************/ #include #include #include #include <stdio.h> <stdlib.h> <opencv/cv.h> <opencv/highgui.h>
#include "mex.h" int smoothImage(char* filename){ //load the image IplImage* img = cvLoadImage(filename); if(!img){ printf("Cannot load image file: %s\n",filename); return -1; } //create another image IplImage* img_smooth = cvCloneImage(img); //smooth the image img and save the result to img_smooth cvSmooth(img, img_smooth, CV_GAUSSIAN, 5, 5); // create windows to show images cvNamedWindow("Original Image", CV_WINDOW_AUTOSIZE); cvMoveWindow("Original Image", 100, 100); cvNamedWindow("Smoothed Image", CV_WINDOW_AUTOSIZE); cvMoveWindow("Smoothed Image", 400, 400); // show the images cvShowImage("Original Image", img ); cvShowImage("Smoothed Image", img_smooth ); // wait for a key cvWaitKey(0); //destroy windows cvDestroyWindow("Original Image"); cvDestroyWindow("Smoothed Image");
//release images cvReleaseImage(& img); cvReleaseImage(& img_smooth); return 0; }; void mexFunction(int nlhs, mxArray* plhs[], int nrhs, const mxArray* prhs[]){ if (nrhs != 0) { mexErrMsgTxt("Do not give input arguments."); } if (nlhs != 0) { mexErrMsgTxt("Do not give output arguments."); } char *name = "cameraman.png"; smoothImage(name); }
Let us suppose that the above code is saved to displayImage.cpp file. Since this file makes use of OpenCV header files, the compiler must be informed with the appropriate include directories. Moreover, in order to produce the executable file, the necessary libraries should be given. There are two ways to define the required compilation flags: 1. by pre-editing the MEXOPTS.BAT file 2. by defining paths and libraries with the mex command
>> fullfile(prefdir,'mexopts.bat')
In my machine, this file is in C:\users\<username>\AppData\Roaming\MathWorks\MATLAB\R2009b\mexopts.bat Edit the above file and add follow the next steps: 1. set the OpenCV path based on your installation, i.e.
SET OCVDIR=C:\OpenCV2.1
2. Find the INCLUDE variable definition (SET INCLUDE) and add the path that contains the OpenCV include folder (the folder that contains the header files cv.h, cxcore.h etc)
%OCVDIR%\include\opencv %OCVDIR%\include
3. Find the LIB variable definition (SET LIB) and add the path that contains the OpenCV libraries (*.lib files)
%OCVDIR%\lib
4. Find the LINKFLAGS variable definition (SET LINKFLAGS) and add the standard *.lib files of OpenCV (here of OpenCV 2.1)
OCVRoot = C:\OpenCV2.1; IPath = ['-I',fullfile(OCVRoot,'include')]; LPath = fullfile(OCVRoot, 'lib'); lib1 = fullfile(LPath,'cv210d.lib'); lib2 = fullfile(LPath,'cxcore210d.lib'); lib3 = fullfile(LPath,'highgui210d.lib');
Note that Matlab-to-OpenCV convertor needs to define the symbol name HAS_OPENCV to the C preprocessor. I define it in the source code, but one can either add the switch -DHAS_OPENCV to mex command or edit the COMPFLAGS definition in MEXOPTS.BAT (find the SET COMPFLAGS line) and add the /DHAS_OPENCV flag.
Given that the source is saved to the file smoothImage.cpp, you just need to compile it and run it. The command >> mex smoothImage.cpp will create the file smoothImage.mexw32. Then, you can run the Matlab function as follows >> >> >> >> im = imread('cameraman.png'); filterHeight = 7; filterWidth = 7; outImage = smoothImage(im, filterHeight, filterWidht);
Good Luck!
Contact
For any bugs, questions or help, please contact the author. Georgios Evangelidis, e-mail: georgios.evangelidis@inria.fr
References
[1] Mathworks, MEX-files Guide http://www.mathworks.fr/support/tech-notes/1600/1605.html [2] Sun Peng, C/C++ and Matlab types convertor, http://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/fileexchange/20927