Provided by: enfuse_4.2-9_amd64 bug

NAME

       enfuse - poor man's HDR

SYNOPSIS

       enfuse [options] [--output=IMAGE] INPUT...

DESCRIPTION

       Fuse INPUT images into a single IMAGE.

       INPUT...  are image filenames or response filenames.  Response filenames start with an "@"
       character.

OPTIONS

   Common options:
       -l, --levels=LEVELS
              limit number of blending LEVELS to  use  (1  to  29);  negative  number  of  LEVELS
              decreases maximum; "auto" restores the default automatic maximization

       -o, --output=FILE
              write output to FILE; default: "a.tif"

       -v, --verbose[=LEVEL]
              verbosely report progress; repeat to increase verbosity or directly set to LEVEL

       --compression=COMPRESSION
              set  compression  of  output image to COMPRESSION, where COMPRESSION is: "deflate",
              "jpeg", "lzw", "none", "packbits",  for  TIFF  files  and  0  to  100,  or  "jpeg",
              "jpeg-arith"  for  JPEG  files,  where "jpeg" and "jpeg-arith" accept a compression
              level

   Advanced options:
       --blend-colorspace=COLORSPACE
              force COLORSPACE for blending operations; Enfuse  uses  "CIELUV"  for  images  with
              ICC-profile  and  "IDENTITY"  for  those  without  and  also for all floating-point
              images; other available blend color spaces are "CIELAB" and "CIECAM"

       -c, --ciecam
              use CIECAM02 to blend colors; disable with "--no-ciecam";  note  that  this  option
              will be withdrawn in favor of "--blend-colorspace"

       -d, --depth=DEPTH
              set  the  number of bits per channel of the output image, where DEPTH is "8", "16",
              "32", "r32", or "r64"

       -f WIDTHxHEIGHT[+xXOFFSET+yYOFFSET]
              manually set the size and position of the output  image;  useful  for  cropped  and
              shifted input TIFF images, such as those produced by Nona

       -g     associated-alpha hack for Gimp (before version 2) and Cinepaint

       -w, --wrap[=MODE]
              wrap  around  image  boundary,  where  MODE is "none", "horizontal", "vertical", or
              "both"; default: none; without argument the option selects horizontal wrapping

   Fusion options:
       --exposure-weight=WEIGHT
              weight given to well-exposed pixels (0 <= WEIGHT <= 1); default: 1

       --saturation-weight=WEIGHT
              weight given to highly-saturated pixels (0 <= WEIGHT <= 1); default: 0.2

       --contrast-weight=WEIGHT
              weight given to pixels in high-contrast neighborhoods (0 <= WEIGHT <= 1);  default:
              0

       --entropy-weight=WEIGHT
              weight given to pixels in high entropy neighborhoods (0 <= WEIGHT <= 1); default: 0

       --exposure-optimum=OPTIMUM
              optimum exposure value, usually the maximum of the weighting function (0 <= OPTIMUM
              <= 1); default: 0.5

       --exposure-width=WIDTH
              characteristic width of the weighting function (WIDTH > 0); default: 0.2

       --soft-mask
              average over all masks; this is the default

       --hard-mask
              force hard blend masks and no averaging on finest scale; this is especially  useful
              for focus stacks with thin and high contrast features, but leads to increased noise

   Expert options:
       --save-masks[=SOFT-TEMPLATE[:HARD-TEMPLATE]]
              save  weight masks in SOFT-TEMPLATE and HARD-TEMPLATE; conversion chars: "%i": mask
              index, "%n": mask number, "%p": full path, "%d":  dirname,  "%b":  basename,  "%f":
              filename,  "%e": extension; lowercase characters refer to input images uppercase to
              the output image default: "softmask-%n.tif":"hardmask-%n.tif"

       --load-masks[=SOFT-TEMPLATE[:HARD-TEMPLATE]]
              skip calculation of weight maps  and  use  the  ones  in  the  files  matching  the
              templates  instead.   These  can be either hard or soft masks.  For template syntax
              see "--save-masks"; default: "softmask-%n.tif":"hardmask-%n.tif"

       --fallback-profile=PROFILE-FILE
              use the ICC profile from PROFILE-FILE instead of sRGB

       --layer-selector=ALGORITHM
              set the layer selector ALGORITHM; default: "all-layers"; available algorithms  are:
              "all-layers":  select  all  layers  in  any image; "first-layer": select only first
              layer in each (multi-)layer image; "last-layer": select only  last  layer  in  each
              (multi-)layer  image;  "largest-layer":  select largest layer in each (multi-)layer
              image; "no-layer": do not select any layer from any image;

       --parameter=KEY1[=VALUE1][:KEY2[=VALUE2][:...]]
              set one or more KEY-VALUE pairs

   Expert fusion options:
       --exposure-weight-function=WEIGHT-FUNCTION
              (1st form) select  one  of  the  built-in  exposure  WEIGHT-FUNCTIONs:  "gaussian",
              "lorentzian", "half-sine", "full-sine", or "bi-square"; default: "gaussian"

       --exposure-weight-function=SHARED-OBJECT:SYMBOL[:ARGUMENT[:...]]
              (2nd form) load user-defined exposure weight function SYMBOL from SHARED-OBJECT and
              optionally pass ARGUMENTs

       --exposure-cutoff=LOWERCUTOFF[:UPPERCUTOFF[:LOWERPROJECTOR[:UPPERPROJECTOR]]]
              LOWERCUTOFF and UPPERCUTOFF are the values below  or  above  of  which  pixels  are
              weighted  with  zero  weight  in  exposure weighting; append "%" signs for relative
              values; default: 0%:100%:anti-value:value

       --contrast-window-size=SIZE
              set window SIZE for local-contrast analysis (SIZE >= 3); default: 5

       --contrast-edge-scale=EDGESCALE[:LCESCALE[:LCEFACTOR]]
              set scale on which to look for edges; positive LCESCALE switches on local  contrast
              enhancement  by  LCEFACTOR  (EDGESCALE,  LCESCALE,  LCEFACTOR  >= 0); append "%" to
              LCESCALE for values relative to EDGESCALE; append "%"  to  LCEFACTOR  for  relative
              value; default: 0:0:0

       --contrast-min-curvature=CURVATURE
              minimum  CURVATURE for an edge to qualify; append "%" for relative values; default:
              0

       --gray-projector=PROJECTOR
              apply gray-scale PROJECTOR in exposure or contrast weighing, where PROJECTOR is one
              of "anti-value", "average", "l-star", "lightness", "luminance", "pl-star", "value",
              or "channel-mixer:RED-WEIGHT:GREEN-WEIGHT:BLUE-WEIGHT"; default: "average"

       --entropy-window-size=SIZE
              set window SIZE for local entropy analysis (SIZE >= 3); default: 3

       --entropy-cutoff=LOWERCUTOFF[:UPPERCUTOFF]
              LOWERCUTOFF is the value below of which pixels are treated as black and UPPERCUTOFF
              is  the  value above of which pixels are treated as white in the entropy weighting;
              append "%" signs for relative values; default: 0%:100%

   Information options:
       -h, --help
              print this help message and exit

       -V, --version
              output version information and exit

       --show-globbing-algorithms
              show all globbing algorithms

       --show-image-formats
              show all recognized image formats and their filename extensions

       --show-signature
              show who compiled the binary when and on which machine

       --show-software-components
              show the software components with which Enfuse was compiled

       Enfuse accepts arguments to any option in uppercase as well as in lowercase letters.

ENVIRONMENT

       OMP_NUM_THREADS
              The OMP_NUM_THREADS environment variable sets the  number  of  threads  to  use  in
              OpenMP parallel regions.  If unset Enfuse uses as many threads as there are CPUs.

       OMP_DYNAMIC
              The  OMP_DYNAMIC  environment variable controls dynamic adjustment of the number of
              threads to use in executing OpenMP parallel regions.

AUTHOR

       Written by Andrew Mihal, Christoph Spiel and others.

REPORTING BUGS

       Report bugs at <https://bugs.launchpad.net/enblend>.

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright © 2004-2009 Andrew Mihal.
       Copyright © 2009-2016 Christoph Spiel.

       License GPLv2+: GNU GPL version 2 or later <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>
       This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it.  There is NO  WARRANTY,
       to the extent permitted by law.