Problem with big images ( java.lang.OutOfMemoryError: bitmap size exceeds VM budget )
as a many people i have a problem with big images too. ok,here my code. I found on stackoverflow how to fix this using BitmapFactory.Options. But in my situations i get image not from file. Can anyone tell me how to do this with Bitmap which already created in memory ( i get this picture from camera on phone)
public void getImageAndSend( )
{
Bitmap newbmp开发者_如何学Go ;
newbmp= Bitmap.createBitmap(oBmp.getWidth(), oBmp.getHeight(),oBmp.getConfig());////<----------error here
log("widt oBmp = "+oBmp.getWidth());/// width = 2048
log(" height oBmp = "+oBmp.getHeight());///height 1538
//BitmapFactory.Options options = new BitmapFactory.Options(); // <----- it's possible to do it without `BitmapFactory.decodeFile(pathToFile,options) ??
//options.inTempStorage = new byte[16*1024];
Canvas canvas = new Canvas(newbmp);
//code
System.gc();/// can't right understand but this line fixed this problem on emulator but not on real device
}
please tell me how to fix my problem ? : ( On emulator im not have this error. But on real device i see this error (bitmap size exceeds VM budget) Regards, Peter.
since you are getting image from camera,get the uri of the image you capture in onActivityResult() method as follows
Uri selectedImageUri=intent.getData();
String actualPath=getRealPathFromURI(selectedImageUri);
File file=new File(actualPath);
Bitmap bitmap=decodeFile(file); //this is new bitmap which you can use for your purpose
public String getRealPathFromURI(Uri contentUri) {
String[] proj = { MediaStore.Images.Media.DATA };
Cursor cursor = managedQuery(contentUri, proj, null, null, null);
int column_index = cursor.getColumnIndexOrThrow(MediaStore.Images.Media.DATA);
cursor.moveToFirst();
return cursor.getString(column_index);
}
private Bitmap decodeFile(File f){
try {
//Decode image size
BitmapFactory.Options o = new BitmapFactory.Options();
o.inJustDecodeBounds = true;
BitmapFactory.decodeStream(new FileInputStream(f),null,o);
//The new size we want to scale to
final int REQUIRED_SIZE=70;
//Find the correct scale value. It should be the power of 2.
int width_tmp=o.outWidth, height_tmp=o.outHeight;
int scale=1;
while(true){
if(width_tmp/2<REQUIRED_SIZE || height_tmp/2<REQUIRED_SIZE)
break;
width_tmp/=2;
height_tmp/=2;
scale*=2;
}
//Decode with inSampleSize
BitmapFactory.Options o2 = new BitmapFactory.Options();
o2.inSampleSize=scale;
return BitmapFactory.decodeStream(new FileInputStream(f), null, o2);
} catch (FileNotFoundException e) {}
return null;
}
Hope this helps.This is the very familiar problem when u deal with high quality images taken from phone.check this out too
Here is my BitmpaHelper class that if OutOfMemoryError proof :-)
import java.io.File;
import java.io.FileInputStream;
import android.graphics.Bitmap;
import android.graphics.Bitmap.Config;
import android.graphics.BitmapFactory;
import android.graphics.Canvas;
import android.graphics.Matrix;
import android.graphics.drawable.BitmapDrawable;
import android.graphics.drawable.Drawable;
public class BitmapHelper
{
//decodes image and scales it to reduce memory consumption
public static Bitmap decodeFile(File bitmapFile, int requiredWidth, int requiredHeight, boolean quickAndDirty)
{
try
{
//Decode image size
BitmapFactory.Options bitmapSizeOptions = new BitmapFactory.Options();
bitmapSizeOptions.inJustDecodeBounds = true;
BitmapFactory.decodeStream(new FileInputStream(bitmapFile), null, bitmapSizeOptions);
// load image using inSampleSize adapted to required image size
BitmapFactory.Options bitmapDecodeOptions = new BitmapFactory.Options();
bitmapDecodeOptions.inTempStorage = new byte[16 * 1024];
bitmapDecodeOptions.inSampleSize = computeInSampleSize(bitmapSizeOptions, requiredWidth, requiredHeight, false);
bitmapDecodeOptions.inPurgeable = true;
bitmapDecodeOptions.inDither = !quickAndDirty;
bitmapDecodeOptions.inPreferredConfig = quickAndDirty ? Bitmap.Config.RGB_565 : Bitmap.Config.ARGB_8888;
Bitmap decodedBitmap = BitmapFactory.decodeStream(new FileInputStream(bitmapFile), null, bitmapDecodeOptions);
// scale bitmap to mathc required size (and keep aspect ratio)
float srcWidth = (float) bitmapDecodeOptions.outWidth;
float srcHeight = (float) bitmapDecodeOptions.outHeight;
float dstWidth = (float) requiredWidth;
float dstHeight = (float) requiredHeight;
float srcAspectRatio = srcWidth / srcHeight;
float dstAspectRatio = dstWidth / dstHeight;
// recycleDecodedBitmap is used to know if we must recycle intermediary 'decodedBitmap'
// (DO NOT recycle it right away: wait for end of bitmap manipulation process to avoid
// java.lang.RuntimeException: Canvas: trying to use a recycled bitmap android.graphics.Bitmap@416ee7d8
// I do not excatly understand why, but this way it's OK
boolean recycleDecodedBitmap = false;
Bitmap scaledBitmap = decodedBitmap;
if (srcAspectRatio < dstAspectRatio)
{
scaledBitmap = getScaledBitmap(decodedBitmap, (int) dstWidth, (int) (srcHeight * (dstWidth / srcWidth)));
// will recycle recycleDecodedBitmap
recycleDecodedBitmap = true;
}
else if (srcAspectRatio > dstAspectRatio)
{
scaledBitmap = getScaledBitmap(decodedBitmap, (int) (srcWidth * (dstHeight / srcHeight)), (int) dstHeight);
recycleDecodedBitmap = true;
}
// crop image to match required image size
int scaledBitmapWidth = scaledBitmap.getWidth();
int scaledBitmapHeight = scaledBitmap.getHeight();
Bitmap croppedBitmap = scaledBitmap;
if (scaledBitmapWidth > requiredWidth)
{
int xOffset = (scaledBitmapWidth - requiredWidth) / 2;
croppedBitmap = Bitmap.createBitmap(scaledBitmap, xOffset, 0, requiredWidth, requiredHeight);
scaledBitmap.recycle();
}
else if (scaledBitmapHeight > requiredHeight)
{
int yOffset = (scaledBitmapHeight - requiredHeight) / 2;
croppedBitmap = Bitmap.createBitmap(scaledBitmap, 0, yOffset, requiredWidth, requiredHeight);
scaledBitmap.recycle();
}
if (recycleDecodedBitmap)
{
decodedBitmap.recycle();
}
decodedBitmap = null;
scaledBitmap = null;
return croppedBitmap;
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
ex.printStackTrace();
}
return null;
}
/**
* compute powerOf2 or exact scale to be used as {@link BitmapFactory.Options#inSampleSize} value (for subSampling)
*
* @param requiredWidth
* @param requiredHeight
* @param powerOf2
* weither we want a power of 2 sclae or not
* @return
*/
public static int computeInSampleSize(BitmapFactory.Options options, int dstWidth, int dstHeight, boolean powerOf2)
{
int inSampleSize = 1;
// Raw height and width of image
final int srcHeight = options.outHeight;
final int srcWidth = options.outWidth;
if (powerOf2)
{
//Find the correct scale value. It should be the power of 2.
int tmpWidth = srcWidth, tmpHeight = srcHeight;
while (true)
{
if (tmpWidth / 2 < dstWidth || tmpHeight / 2 < dstHeight)
break;
tmpWidth /= 2;
tmpHeight /= 2;
inSampleSize *= 2;
}
}
else
{
// Calculate ratios of height and width to requested height and width
final int heightRatio = Math.round((float) srcHeight / (float) dstHeight);
final int widthRatio = Math.round((float) srcWidth / (float) dstWidth);
// Choose the smallest ratio as inSampleSize value, this will guarantee
// a final image with both dimensions larger than or equal to the
// requested height and width.
inSampleSize = heightRatio < widthRatio ? heightRatio : widthRatio;
}
return inSampleSize;
}
public static Bitmap drawableToBitmap(Drawable drawable)
{
if (drawable instanceof BitmapDrawable)
{
return ((BitmapDrawable) drawable).getBitmap();
}
Bitmap bitmap = Bitmap.createBitmap(drawable.getIntrinsicWidth(), drawable.getIntrinsicHeight(), Config.ARGB_8888);
Canvas canvas = new Canvas(bitmap);
drawable.setBounds(0, 0, canvas.getWidth(), canvas.getHeight());
drawable.draw(canvas);
return bitmap;
}
public static Bitmap getScaledBitmap(Bitmap bitmap, int newWidth, int newHeight)
{
int width = bitmap.getWidth();
int height = bitmap.getHeight();
float scaleWidth = ((float) newWidth) / width;
float scaleHeight = ((float) newHeight) / height;
// CREATE A MATRIX FOR THE MANIPULATION
Matrix matrix = new Matrix();
// RESIZE THE BIT MAP
matrix.postScale(scaleWidth, scaleHeight);
// RECREATE THE NEW BITMAP
Bitmap resizedBitmap = Bitmap.createBitmap(bitmap, 0, 0, width, height, matrix, false);
return resizedBitmap;
}
}
I have same problem in my android app. When you decode a bitmap from a big sized image and set as imageBitmap to an image view probably your application will slow and after a few try you'll get an "out of memory exception"
You can use Universal Image Loader. https://github.com/nostra13/Android-Universal-Image-Loader
String url = "file://" + your_file_path_on_sd_card;
com.nostra13.universalimageloader.core.ImageLoader.getInstance().displayImage(url, ivPicture, options);
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