This module contains a code generator to automatically produce Matlab mex wrappers for other modules within the OpenCV library. Once compiled and added to the Matlab path, this gives users the ability to call OpenCV methods natively from within Matlab.
Build
-----
The Matlab code generator is fully integrated into the OpenCV build system. If cmake finds a Matlab installation available on the host system while configuring OpenCV, it will attempt to generate Matlab wrappers for all OpenCV modules. If cmake is having trouble finding your Matlab installation, you can explicitly point it to the root by defining the `MATLAB_ROOT_DIR` variable. For example, on a Mac you could type:
Once you've added the bindings directory to the Matlab path, you can start using them straight away! OpenCV calls need to be prefixed with a 'cv' qualifier, to disambiguate them from Matlab methods of the same name. For example, to compute the dft of a matrix, you might do the following:
will produce a printout of diagnostic information pertaining to your particular build of OS, OpenCV and Matlab. It is useful to submit this information alongside a bug report to the OpenCV team.
The Matlab bindings come with a set of utilities to help you quickly write your own mex files using OpenCV definitions. By doing so, you have all the speed and freedom of C++, with the power of OpenCV's math expressions and optimizations.
The first thing you need to learn how to do is write a mex-file with Matlab constructs. Following is a brief example:
There are a couple of important things going on in this example. Firstly, you need to include `<opencv2/matlab/bridge.hpp>` to enable the bridging capabilities. Once you've done this, you get some nice utilities for free. `MxArray` is a class that wraps Matlab's `mxArray*` class in an OOP-style interface. `ArgumentParser` is a class that handles default, optional and named arguments for you, along with multiple possible calling syntaxes. Finally, `Bridge` is a class that allows bidirectional conversions between OpenCV/std and Matlab types.
Once you have written your file, it can be compiled with the provided mex utility:
This utility automatically links in all of the necessary OpenCV libraries to make your function work.
NOTE: OpenCV uses exceptions throughout the codebase. It is a **very** good idea to wrap your code in exception handlers to avoid crashing Matlab in the event of an exception being thrown.
The following sections contain information for developers seeking to use, understand or extend the Matlab bindings. The bindings are generated in python using a powerful templating engine called Jinja2. Because Matlab mex gateways have a common structure, they are well suited to templatization. There are separate templates for formatting C++ classes, Matlab classes, C++ functions, constants (enums) and documentation.
The task of the generator is two-fold:
1. To parse the OpenCV headers and build a semantic tree that can be fed to the template engine
2. To define type conversions between C++/OpenCV and Matlab types
Once a source file has been generated for each OpenCV definition, and type conversions have been established, the mex compiler is invoked to produce the mex gateway (shared object) and link in the OpenCV libraries.
The cmake call tree can be broken into 3 main components:
1. configure time
2. build time
3. install time
**Find Matlab (configure)**
The first thing to do is discover a Matlab installation on the host system. This is handled by the `OpenCVFindMatlab.cmake` in `opencv/cmake`. On Windows machines it searches the registry and path, while on *NIX machines it searches a set of canonical install paths. Once Matlab has been found, a number of variables are defined, such as the path to the mex compiler, the mex libraries, the mex include paths, the architectural extension, etc.
**Test the generator (configure)**
Attempt to produce a source file for a simple definition. This tests whether python and pythonlibs are correctly invoked on the host.
**Test the mex compiler (configure)**
Attempt to compile a simple definition using the mex compiler. A mex file is actually just a shared object with a special exported symbol `_mexFunction` which serves as the entry-point to the function. As such, the mex compiler is just a set of scripts configuring the system compiler. In most cases this is the same as the OpenCV compiler, but *could* be different. The test checks whether the mex and generator includes can be found, the system libraries can be linked and the passed compiler flags are compatible.
If any of the configure time tests fail, the bindings will be disabled, but the main OpenCV configure will continue without error. The configuration summary will contain the block:
Matlab
mex: /Applications/MATLAB_R2013a.app/bin/mex
compiler/generator: Not working (bindings will not be generated)
**Generate the sources (build)**
Given a set of modules (the intersection of the OpenCV modules being built and the matlab module optional dependencies), the `CppHeaderParser()` from `opencv/modules/python/src2/hdr_parser.py` will parse the module headers and produce a set of definitions.
The `ParseTree()` from `opencv/modules/matlab/generator/parse_tree.py` takes this set of definitions and refactors them into a semantic tree better suited to templatization. For example, a trivial definition from the header parser may look something like:
The added semantics (Namespace, Class, Function, Argument, name, etc) make it easier for the templating engine to parse, slice and populate definitions.
Once the definitions have been parsed, `gen_matlab.py` passes each definition to the template engine with the appropriate template (class, function, enum, doc) and the filled template gets written to the `${CMAKE_CURRENT_BUILD_DIR}/src` directory.
The generator relies upon a proxy object called `generate.proxy` to determine when the sources are out of date and need to be re-generated.
**Compile the sources (build)**
Once the sources have been generated, they are compiled by the mex compiler. The `compile.cmake` script in `opencv/modules/matlab/` takes responsibility for iterating over each source file in `${CMAKE_CURRENT_BUILD_DIR}/src` and compiling it with the passed includes and OpenCV libraries.
The flags used to compile the main OpenCV libraries are also forwarded to the mex compiler. So if, for example, you compiled OpenCV with SSE support, the mex bindings will also use SSE. Likewise, if you compile OpenCV in debug mode, the bindings will link to the debug version of the libraries.
Importantly, the mex compiler includes the `mxarray.hpp`, `bridge.hpp` and `map.hpp` files from the `opencv/modules/matlab/include` directory. `mxarray.hpp` defines a `MxArray` class which wraps Matlab's `mxArray*` type in a more friendly OOP-syle interface. `bridge.hpp` defines a `Bridge` class which is able to perform type conversions between Matlab types and std/OpenCV types. It can be extended with new definitions using the plugin interface described in that file.
Jinja2 is a powerful templating engine, similar to python's builtin `string.Template` class but implementing the model-view-controller paradigm. For example, a trivial view could be populated as follows:
Thus the style and layout of the view is kept separate from the content (model). This modularity improves readability and maintainability of both the view and content and (for my own sanity) has helped significantly in debugging errors.
mxarray.hpp defines a class called `MxArray` which provides an OOP-style interface for Matlab's homogeneous `mxArray*` type. To create an `MxArray`, you can either inherit an existing array
The MxArray object uses scoped memory management. If you wish to pass an MxArray back to Matlab (as a lhs pointer), you need to explicitly release ownership of the array so that it is not destroyed when it leaves scope:
mxarray.hpp also includes a number of helper utilities that make working in mex-world a little easier. One such utility is the `ArgumentParser`. `ArgumentParser` automatically handles required and optional arguments to a method, and even enables named arguments as used in many core Matlab functions. For example, if you had a function with the following signature:
```cpp
void f(Mat first, Mat second, Mat mask=Mat(), int dtype=-1);
```
then you can create an `ArgumentParser` as follows:
and that will make available the following calling syntaxes:
```matlab
f(first, second);
f(first, second, mask);
f(first, second, mask, dtype);
f(first, second, 'dtype', dtype, 'mask', mask); % optional ordering does not matter
f(first, second, 'dtype', dtype); % only second optional argument provided
f(first, second, mask, 'dtype', dtype); % mixture of ordered and named
```
Further, the output of the `parser.parse()` method will always contain the total number of required and optional arguments that the method can take, with unspecified arguments given by empty matrices. Thus, to check if an optional argument has been given, you can do:
```cpp
int dtype = inputs[3].empty() ? -1 : inputs[3].scalar<double>();
The bridge interface defines a `Bridge` class which provides type conversion between std/OpenCV and Matlab types. A type conversion must provide the following:
The binding generator will then automatically call the conversion operators (either explicitly or implicitly) if your `MyObject` class is encountered as an input or return from a parsed definition.