Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
200 lines (146 loc) · 3.25 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

200 lines (146 loc) · 3.25 KB

Instacam

Filters for your webcam

This is a pet project motivated mostly by my desire to learn both Rust and FFmpeg

It grabs an input video feed (most likely your original webcam, but any video source should work, in theory), and outputs a transformed video feed.

Prerequisites

You need to create a virtual camera device on your system. Currently, I only know how to do this on Linux (instructions below).

If an equivalent tool exists for other systems, there should be no other major blockers to getting this to work (both FFmpeg and Rust are widely available in most systems).

Linux

Setup v4l2loopback, and create a virtual webcam, such as:

sudo modprobe v4l2loopback devices=1 video_nr=2 card_label="Instacam" exclusive_caps=1

On my machine, this creates a /dev/video2 device. Depending on how many you already have, yours might be named differently.

Setup

  1. Clone the repo
# clone the repo
git clone https://github.com/naps62/instacam.git
cd instacam
  1. Create a configuration file under ~/.config/instacam/config.json (changing each value acording to your system):
{
  "input": "/dev/video0",
  "output": "/dev/video2",
  "width": 1280,
  "height": 720,
  "fps": 30,
  "pipeline": [
    {
      "name": "preview"
    }
  ]
}
  1. Start the program:
cargo run

Using filters

After the initial setup, filters are configured mostly through the pipeline of the config file. You can compose the multiple existing filters, and the final image will be output to your output device.

For instance, the following pipeline:

"pipeline": [
  {
    "name": "pixelate",
    "k": 64
  },
  {
    "name": "sharpen"
  },
  {
    "name": "preview"
  }
]

Sample

Available filters

Preview

Does not alter the image, but renders the current frame in a window, allow you to see the result in different stages of the pipeline.

"pipeline": [
  {
    "name": "preview",
  }
]

Preview

Blur

Blurs the image by a given factor

"pipeline": [
  {
    "name": "blur",
    "k": 32
  }
]

Blur

Pixelate

Pixelates the image. k here is maximum desired number of pixels per line.

"pipeline": [
  {
    "name": "pixelate",
    "k": 128
  }
]

Pixelate

Sepia

"pipeline": [
  {
    "name": "sepia"
  }
]

Sepia

Sharpen

"pipeline": [
  {
    "name": "sharpen"
  }
]

Sharpen

Edge Detection

Mostly an experimental filter I was playing with, while learning more about the OpenCV API

"pipeline": [
  {
    "name": "edges",
    "t1": 100,
    "t2": 200
  }
]

Edges

Background Subtraction

Also an experimental filter, with a background subtractor algorithm. This sample image is hurt by my low-quality webcam, as well as the lack of a more prominent foreground in this picture.

"pipeline": [
  {
    "name": "bgsub"
  }
]

BgSub

About

Instacam was authored by Miguel Palhas.

The project is fully open-source. Use it as you wish.