#!/usr/bin/python
#coding=utf-8
# Copyright (c) 2015 Matthew Earl
# 
# Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
# of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
# in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
# to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
# copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
# furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
# 
#     The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included
#     in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
# 
#     THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS
#     OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
#     MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN
#     NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM,
#     DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR
#     OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE
#     USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.

"""
This is the code behind the Switching Eds blog post:

    http://matthewearl.github.io/2015/07/28/switching-eds-with-python/

See the above for an explanation of the code below.

To run the script you'll need to install dlib (http://dlib.net) including its
Python bindings, and OpenCV. You'll also need to obtain the trained model from
sourceforge:

    http://sourceforge.net/projects/dclib/files/dlib/v18.10/shape_predictor_68_face_landmarks.dat.bz2

Unzip with `bunzip2` and change `PREDICTOR_PATH` to refer to this file. The
script is run like so:

    ./faceswap.py <head image> <face image>

If successful, a file `output.jpg` will be produced with the facial features
from `<head image>` replaced with the facial features from `<face image>`.

"""

import cv2
import dlib
import numpy
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt   
import sys

PREDICTOR_PATH = "/Users/chooseme/Documents/dlib-19.0/python_examples/shape_predictor_68_face_landmarks.dat"
SCALE_FACTOR = 1 
FEATHER_AMOUNT = 11

FACE_POINTS = list(range(17, 68))
MOUTH_POINTS = list(range(48, 61))
RIGHT_BROW_POINTS = list(range(17, 22))
LEFT_BROW_POINTS = list(range(22, 27))
RIGHT_EYE_POINTS = list(range(36, 42))
LEFT_EYE_POINTS = list(range(42, 48))
NOSE_POINTS = list(range(27, 35))
JAW_POINTS = list(range(0, 17))

# Points used to line up the images.
ALIGN_POINTS = (LEFT_BROW_POINTS + RIGHT_EYE_POINTS + LEFT_EYE_POINTS +
                               RIGHT_BROW_POINTS + NOSE_POINTS + MOUTH_POINTS)

# Points from the second image to overlay on the first. The convex hull of each
# element will be overlaid.
OVERLAY_POINTS = [
    LEFT_EYE_POINTS + RIGHT_EYE_POINTS + LEFT_BROW_POINTS + RIGHT_BROW_POINTS,
    NOSE_POINTS + MOUTH_POINTS,
]

# Amount of blur to use during colour correction, as a fraction of the
# pupillary distance.  (pupillary:瞳距)
COLOUR_CORRECT_BLUR_FRAC = 0.6

detector = dlib.get_frontal_face_detector()
predictor = dlib.shape_predictor(PREDICTOR_PATH)
 
class TooManyFaces(Exception):
    pass

class NoFaces(Exception):
    pass

def get_landmarks(im):
    rects = detector(im, 1)
    
    if len(rects) > 1:
        raise TooManyFaces
    if len(rects) == 0:
        raise NoFaces

    return numpy.matrix([[p.x, p.y] for p in predictor(im, rects[0]).parts()])

def annotate_landmarks(im, landmarks):
    im = im.copy()
    for idx, point in enumerate(landmarks):
        pos = (point[0, 0], point[0, 1])
        cv2.putText(im, str(idx), pos,
                    fontFace=cv2.FONT_HERSHEY_SCRIPT_SIMPLEX,
                    fontScale=0.4,
                    color=(0, 0, 255))
        cv2.circle(im, pos, 3, color=(0, 255, 255))
    return im

def draw_convex_hull(im, points, color):
    points = cv2.convexHull(points)
    cv2.fillConvexPoly(im, points, color=color)

def get_face_mask(im, landmarks):
    im = numpy.zeros(im.shape[:2], dtype=numpy.float64)

    for group in OVERLAY_POINTS:
        draw_convex_hull(im,
                         landmarks[group],
                         color=1)

    im = numpy.array([im, im, im]).transpose((1, 2, 0))

    im = (cv2.GaussianBlur(im, (FEATHER_AMOUNT, FEATHER_AMOUNT), 0) > 0) * 1.0
    im = cv2.GaussianBlur(im, (FEATHER_AMOUNT, FEATHER_AMOUNT), 0)

    return im
    
def transformation_from_points(points1, points2):
    """
    Return an affine transformation [s * R | T] such that:

        sum ||s*R*p1,i + T - p2,i||^2

    is minimized.

    """
    # Solve the procrustes problem by subtracting centroids, scaling by the
    # standard deviation, and then using the SVD to calculate the rotation. See
    # the following for more details:
    #   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orthogonal_Procrustes_problem

    points1 = points1.astype(numpy.float64)
    points2 = points2.astype(numpy.float64)

    c1 = numpy.mean(points1, axis=0)
    c2 = numpy.mean(points2, axis=0)
    points1 -= c1
    points2 -= c2

    s1 = numpy.std(points1)
    s2 = numpy.std(points2)
    points1 /= s1
    points2 /= s2

    U, S, Vt = numpy.linalg.svd(points1.T * points2)

    # The R we seek is in fact the transpose of the one given by U * Vt. This
    # is because the above formulation assumes the matrix goes on the right
    # (with row vectors) where as our solution requires the matrix to be on the
    # left (with column vectors).
    R = (U * Vt).T

    return numpy.vstack([numpy.hstack(((s2 / s1) * R,
                                       c2.T - (s2 / s1) * R * c1.T)),
                         numpy.matrix([0., 0., 1.])])

def read_im_and_landmarks(fname):
    im = cv2.imread(fname, cv2.IMREAD_COLOR)
    w = im.shape[1]
    h = im.shape[0]
    print("%s, w=%d, h=%d" %(fname, w, h))

    #把小边缩放到800
    min_wh = min(w,h)
    ratio = 800.0/min_wh 

    new_w = (int)(im.shape[1] * ratio)
    new_h = (int)(im.shape[0] * ratio)
    print("new_w=%d, new_h=%d" %(new_w, new_h))

    im = cv2.resize(im, (new_w, new_h))

    s = get_landmarks(im)

    return im, s

def warp_im(im, M, dshape):
    output_im = numpy.zeros(dshape, dtype=im.dtype)
    cv2.warpAffine(im,
                   M[:2],
                   (dshape[1], dshape[0]),
                   dst=output_im,
                   borderMode=cv2.BORDER_TRANSPARENT,
                   flags=cv2.WARP_INVERSE_MAP)
    return output_im

def geteye_rect(imgpath):  
    bgrImg = cv2.imread(imgpath)  
    if bgrImg is None:  
        return False  
    rgbImg = cv2.cvtColor(bgrImg, cv2.COLOR_BGR2RGB)  
    facesrect = detector(rgbImg, 1)  
    if len(facesrect) <=0:  
        return False  
  
    for k, d in enumerate(facesrect):  
        shape = predictor(rgbImg, d)  
        for i in range(68):  
            pt=shape.part(i)  
            plt.plot(pt.x,pt.y,'ro')  
        plt.imshow(rgbImg)  
        plt.show()  


def correct_colours(im1, im2, landmarks1):
    blur_amount = COLOUR_CORRECT_BLUR_FRAC * numpy.linalg.norm(
                              numpy.mean(landmarks1[LEFT_EYE_POINTS], axis=0) -
                              numpy.mean(landmarks1[RIGHT_EYE_POINTS], axis=0))
    blur_amount = int(blur_amount)
    if blur_amount % 2 == 0:
        blur_amount += 1
    im1_blur = cv2.GaussianBlur(im1, (blur_amount, blur_amount), 0)
    im2_blur = cv2.GaussianBlur(im2, (blur_amount, blur_amount), 0)

    # Avoid divide-by-zero errors.
    im2_blur += (128 * (im2_blur <= 1.0)).astype(im2_blur.dtype)

    return (im2.astype(numpy.float64) * im1_blur.astype(numpy.float64) /
                                                im2_blur.astype(numpy.float64))

#检测关键点
im1, landmarks1 = read_im_and_landmarks(sys.argv[1])
im2, landmarks2 = read_im_and_landmarks(sys.argv[2])

M = transformation_from_points(landmarks1[ALIGN_POINTS],
                               landmarks2[ALIGN_POINTS])

mask = get_face_mask(im2, landmarks2)
#cv2.imwrite('mask.jpg', mask)
warped_mask = warp_im(mask, M, im1.shape)
#cv2.imwrite('warped_mask.jpg', warped_mask)
combined_mask = numpy.max([get_face_mask(im1, landmarks1), warped_mask], axis=0)

#cv2.imwrite('combined_mask.jpg', combined_mask)

warped_im2 = warp_im(im2, M, im1.shape)
cv2.imwrite('warped_im2.jpg', warped_im2)
warped_corrected_im2 = correct_colours(im1, warped_im2, landmarks1)

output_im = im1 * (1.0 - combined_mask) + warped_corrected_im2 * combined_mask
cv2.imwrite('warped_corrected_im2.jpg', warped_corrected_im2)
cv2.imwrite('output.jpg', output_im)

#显示人脸关键点
geteye_rect(sys.argv[1])


效果图: 



原文: 

http://developer.51cto.com/art/201508/487968.htm


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