CMYK data describes which inks a printer should use to print a color. If a screen should display a color that's supposed to look similar to what the printer produces, it results in a color very different to what Color::from_cmyk() produces. (It's also printer-dependent.) There are many ICC profiles describing printing processes. It doesn't matter too much which one we use -- most of them look somewhat similar, and they all look dramatically better than Color::from_cmyk(). This patch adds a function to download a zip file that Adobe offers on their web site. They even have a page for redistribution: https://www.adobe.com/support/downloads/iccprofiles/icc_eula_win_dist.html (That one leads to a broken download though, so this downloads the end-user version.) In case we have to move off this download at some point, there are also a whole bunch of profiles at https://www.color.org/registry/index.xalter that "may be used, embedded, exchanged, and shared without restriction". The adobe zip contains a whole bunch of other useful and fun profiles, so I went with it. For now, this only unzips the USWebCoatedSWOP.icc file though, and installs it in ${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR}/Root/res/icc/Adobe/CMYK/. In Serenity builds, this will make it to /res/icc/Adobe/CMYK in the disk image. And in lagom build, after #23016 this is the lagom res staging directory that tools can install via Core::ResourceImplementation. `pdf` and `MacPDF` already do that, `TestPDF` now does it too. The final piece is that LibPDF then loads the profile from there and uses it for DeviceCMYK color conversions. (Doing file access from the bowels of a library is a bit weird, especially in a system that has sandboxing built in. But LibGfx does that in FontDatabase too already, and LibPDF uses that, so it's not a new problem.) |
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.devcontainer | ||
.github | ||
AK | ||
Base | ||
Documentation | ||
Kernel | ||
Ladybird | ||
Meta | ||
Ports | ||
Tests | ||
Toolchain | ||
Userland | ||
.clang-format | ||
.clang-tidy | ||
.editorconfig | ||
.gitattributes | ||
.gitignore | ||
.gn | ||
.mailmap | ||
.pre-commit-config.yaml | ||
.prettierignore | ||
.prettierrc | ||
.ycm_extra_conf.py | ||
azure-pipelines.yml | ||
CMakeLists.txt | ||
CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md | ||
SECURITY.md |
SerenityOS
Graphical Unix-like operating system for x86-64 computers.
FAQ | Documentation | Build Instructions
About
SerenityOS is a love letter to '90s user interfaces with a custom Unix-like core. It flatters with sincerity by stealing beautiful ideas from various other systems.
Roughly speaking, the goal is a marriage between the aesthetic of late-1990s productivity software and the power-user accessibility of late-2000s *nix. This is a system by us, for us, based on the things we like.
You can watch videos of the system being developed on YouTube:
Screenshot
Features
- Modern x86 64-bit kernel with pre-emptive multi-threading
- Browser with JavaScript, WebAssembly, and more (check the spec compliance for JS, CSS, and Wasm)
- Security features (hardware protections, limited userland capabilities, W^X memory,
pledge
&unveil
, (K)ASLR, OOM-resistance, web-content isolation, state-of-the-art TLS algorithms, ...) - System services (WindowServer, LoginServer, AudioServer, WebServer, RequestServer, CrashServer, ...) and modern IPC
- Good POSIX compatibility (LibC, Shell, syscalls, signals, pseudoterminals, filesystem notifications, standard Unix utilities, ...)
- POSIX-like virtual file systems (/proc, /dev, /sys, /tmp, ...) and ext2 file system
- Network stack and applications with support for IPv4, TCP, UDP; DNS, HTTP, Gemini, IMAP, NTP
- Profiling, debugging and other development tools (Kernel-supported profiling, CrashReporter, interactive GUI playground, HexEditor, HackStudio IDE for C++ and more)
- Libraries for everything from cryptography to OpenGL, audio, JavaScript, GUI, playing chess, ...
- Support for many common and uncommon file formats (PNG, JPEG, GIF, MP3, WAV, FLAC, ZIP, TAR, PDF, QOI, Gemini, ...)
- Unified style and design philosophy, flexible theming system, custom (bitmap and vector) fonts
- Games (Solitaire, Minesweeper, 2048, chess, Conway's Game of Life, ...) and demos (CatDog, Starfield, Eyes, mandelbrot set, WidgetGallery, ...)
- Every-day GUI programs and utilities (Spreadsheet with JavaScript, TextEditor, Terminal, PixelPaint, various multimedia viewers and players, Mail, Assistant, Calculator, ...)
... and all of the above are right in this repository, no extra dependencies, built from-scratch by us :^)
Additionally, there are over three hundred ports of popular open-source software, including games, compilers, Unix tools, multimedia apps and more.
How do I read the documentation?
Man pages are available online at man.serenityos.org. These pages are generated from the Markdown source files in Base/usr/share/man
and updated automatically.
When running SerenityOS you can use man
for the terminal interface, or help
for the GUI.
Code-related documentation can be found in the documentation folder.
How do I build and run this?
See the SerenityOS build instructions. Serenity runs on Linux, macOS (aarch64 might be a challenge), Windows (with WSL2) and many other *Nixes with hardware or software virtualization.
Get in touch and participate!
Join our Discord server: SerenityOS Discord
Before opening an issue, please see the issue policy.
A general guide for contributing can be found in CONTRIBUTING.md
.
Authors
- Andreas Kling - awesomekling
- Robin Burchell - rburchell
- Conrad Pankoff - deoxxa
- Sergey Bugaev - bugaevc
- Liav A - supercomputer7
- Linus Groh - linusg
- Ali Mohammad Pur - alimpfard
- Shannon Booth - shannonbooth
- Hüseyin ASLITÜRK - asliturk
- Matthew Olsson - mattco98
- Nico Weber - nico
- Brian Gianforcaro - bgianfo
- Ben Wiederhake - BenWiederhake
- Tom - tomuta
- Paul Scharnofske - asynts
- Itamar Shenhar - itamar8910
- Luke Wilde - Lubrsi
- Brendan Coles - bcoles
- Andrew Kaster - ADKaster
- thankyouverycool - thankyouverycool
- Idan Horowitz - IdanHo
- Gunnar Beutner - gunnarbeutner
- Tim Flynn - trflynn89
- Jean-Baptiste Boric - boricj
- Stephan Unverwerth - sunverwerth
- Max Wipfli - MaxWipfli
- Daniel Bertalan - BertalanD
- Jelle Raaijmakers - GMTA
- Sam Atkins - AtkinsSJ
- Tobias Christiansen - TobyAsE
- Lenny Maiorani - ldm5180
- sin-ack - sin-ack
- Jesse Buhagiar - Quaker762
- Peter Elliott - Petelliott
- Karol Kosek - krkk
- Mustafa Quraish - mustafaquraish
- David Tuin - davidot
- Leon Albrecht - Hendiadyoin1
- Tim Schumacher - timschumi
- Marcus Nilsson - metmo
- Gegga Thor - Xexxa
- kleines Filmröllchen - kleinesfilmroellchen
- Kenneth Myhra - kennethmyhra
- Maciej - sppmacd
- Sahan Fernando - ccapitalK
- Benjamin Maxwell - MacDue
- Dennis Esternon - djwisdom
- frhun - frhun
- networkException - networkException
- Brandon Jordan - electrikmilk
- Lucas Chollet - LucasChollet
- Timon Kruiper - FireFox317
- Martin Falisse - martinfalisse
- Gregory Bertilson - Zaggy1024
- Erik Wouters - EWouters
- Rodrigo Tobar - rtobar
- Alexander Kalenik - kalenikaliaksandr
- Tim Ledbetter - tcl3
- Steffen T. Larssen - stelar7
- Andi Gallo - axgallo
- Simon Wanner - skyrising
- FalseHonesty - FalseHonesty
- Bastiaan van der Plaat - bplaat
- Dan Klishch - DanShaders
And many more! See here for a full contributor list. The people listed above have landed more than 100 commits in the project. :^)
License
SerenityOS is licensed under a 2-clause BSD license.